Lowell House Opera

The Lowell House Opera has a mission:

  • To educate undergraduates at Lowell House and Harvard University by providing a rich array of performance, production, classroom, and other opportunities overseen by a staff of experienced students and working professionals;
  • To support the careers of emerging young professional operatic singer-actors by providing valuable performance and teaching opportunities;
  • To foster intense collaborations in an inclusive creative environment between singers, instrumentalists, production and technical staff at Lowell House, at Harvard University, and from around the world;
  • To present affordable opera performances of the highest caliber and host other interactive events to educate and entertain students at Lowell House and Harvard University and residents of Cambridge and the greater Boston community.

About the Lowell House Opera

Established in 1938, the Lowell House Opera is the longest continually performing opera company in New England, featuring a mix of Harvard students and Boston area students and professionals. Every year dozens of artists and student artists volunteer their time to create a production with full orchestra, costumes, sets, and lighting. The operas are performed in their original language, with English supertitles projected in front of the stage. The hall presents a more intimate performance venue which is particularly suited to lighter voices and audience members to see opera up close.

Lowell House Opera offers educational opportunities on many levels and is dedicated towards developing professional skills on many fronts. Experienced directors and production staff direct workshops and individual coachings to enhance performance skills. Singers are able to learn and perform their roles in their original language, and explore the literary basis and historical context for the work. For undergraduates in particular, it offers a unique opportunity to work with and create contacts with more experienced artists who have made or have begun to make opera and theater their life's work.

Lowell House Opera is a community effort involving artists within and outside of Harvard University. It is seen by audience members from throughout the Boston area, over 1500 people each season, and is critically acclaimed as Harvard University’s flagship annual opera.

Recent activities of the Lowell House Opera’s 2007–2008 season include:

  • Fully staged and costumed opera production of Puccini’s Turandot, including the original completion by Franco Alfano
  • Orchestra concert of Italianiate opera preludes, intermezzi, and soprano arias, where undergraduates and community members had the opportunity to play great works which are not often performed except in full-length operas and in recordings
  • Two undergraduate opera workshops where participants learn acting, stage movement, diction, character development, costume design, musicianship, and other facets of opera and give a final performance in one or more opera scenes
  • Two master classes for undergraduate opera singers, taught by an experienced singer/teacher and an accomplished opera conductor
  • Symposium on Puccini’s Turandot with presentations and performances led by an internationally known Puccini scholar and noted opera conductor

Many Lowell House Opera alumni have continued in opera and music. An incomplete list:

  • Alan Gilbert ’89, who conducted the 50th anniversary production of Lowell House Opera, Otto Nicolai’s The Merry Wives of Windsor (1988), was the former Music Director of the Santa Fe Opera and begins his first season as Music Director of the New York Philharmonic in 2009–2010.
  • Hugh Wolff ’75, who was one of two conductors of the 1974 production of Richard Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos, is former Music Director of the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra and the Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra and current Director of Orchestras at the New England Conservatory.
  • Sara Jobin ’91, who played harpsichord in The Marriage of Figaro in 1989, made history in 2004 as the first woman to conduct mainstage subscription performances at San Francisco Opera, and has returned to conduct the company four times since then. She has served as guest conductor at Anchorage Opera, Wolf Trap Opera, Tacoma Opera, and Arizona Opera, and made recent débuts with Symphony Silicon Valley and the Dayton Philharmonic.
  • Evan Christ ’93, who was one of two conductors of the 1993 performance of Rossini’s The Italian Girl in Algiers, is Generalmusikdirektor at the Brandenburg State Opera House in Cottbus, Germany, and Associate Music Director of the Wuppertal Opera in Germany.
  • Sarah Hicks ’93, who also conducted the The Italian Girl in Algiers (1993), returned to Lowell House to conduct La bohème in 1995; she is now Assistant Conductor of the Minnesota Orchestra, where she conducts the innovative series “Inside the Classics”, and Staff Conductor at the Curtis Institute of Music.
  • Soprano Ilana Davidson, who sang Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro (1989), will sing Amor in Gluck’s Orphée et Euridice with the Orchestre Symphonique de Québec as well as Haydn’s Creation with the Harrisburg Symphony in 2009–2010.
  • In the 2009–2010 season, tenor Vincent Wolfsteiner, who sang Don José in Bizet’s Carmen (2002), performs his first Siegmund in Wagner’s Die Walküre in the Staatsoper Hannover in Germany; and Florestan in Beethoven’s Fidelio and Aegisth in Richard Strauss’s Elektra at the Anhaltisches Theater Dessau in Germany.
  • Lee Poulis ’02, baritone, who sang Mr. Lockit in Britten’s The Beggar’s Opera (2000), Marcello in Puccini’s La bohème (2001), and Escamillo in Carmen (2002), is now ensemble soloist at the Theater Bonn in Germany, where in 2009–2010 he sings Wolfram in Tannhäuser, Father in Hänsel und Gretel, Belcore in L’elisir d’amore, Marcello in La bohème, and Pantalon in Prokofiev’s The Love for Three Oranges.
  • Baritone Joshua Benaim ’97, who sang Colline in La bohème (1995), makes his Metropolitan Opera début in 2009–2010 as Journalist in Alban Berg’s Lulu.
  • Sarah Meyers ’02, who stage directed the 2004 production of Ravel’s L’enfant et les sortilèges, is Guest Stage Director at the Metropolitan Opera.
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Lowell House Opera, 559 Lowell Mail Center, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138 USA
Telephone: 617-466-9045 | LHO@hcs.harvard.edu
Tickets: 617-496-2222 | ofa.fas.harvard.edu/boxoffice