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The Netherlands Opera Fidelio
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# : |
10139 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
Date : |
8 / 1986 |
1,262 Words |
| Author
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Christpher V. Davies Christopher V. Davies is a free-lance writer based in
Amsterdam. |
The Netherlands Opera does not have a reputation as one of the great opera companies of the world, but there is a hope, an expectation, and a determination that this will change beginning in the autumn of this year. Until now the company, based in Amsterdam, has never had a theater of its own; indeed, it has not had its own permanent orchestra. Plans were put forward a hundred years ago for a national opera house but nothing happened, and the Netherlands Opera itself was not formed until 1964.
This September, however, will see the Opera performing in its own permanent home, Het Muziektheater, at Amsterdam's Waterlooplein. The stage capacity of the new theater is twice that of the Stadsschouwburg, where the company normally performs in Amsterdam, and storage and rehearsal facilities will give a new freedom to the creative spirit. The Opera will share the theater, with its 1,600-plus seating capacity, with the Dutch National Ballet. Foreign companies will also present performances there.
At the same time, the Opera will also acquire its own permanent orchestra, to be called the Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra, drawn from members of the Amsterdam Philharmonic, the Netherlands Chamber Orchestra, and the Utrecht Symphony. Of equal, if not greater significance, is the appointment, for the first time in fifteen years, of a new intendant, or general manager. The new appointee, Jan van Vlijmen, is currently head of the Conservatorium in The Hague and is a composer in his own right. He has a great interest in the music of the first thirty years of this century, and his influence should help attract a new generation to the opera.
The opening of the
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