Opera News
Live it up in a private suite at the Fort Worth Opera's La Bohème
In what is surely the penultimate production, Fort Worth Opera General & Artistic Director Angela Turner Wilson has chosen one of the most enchanting operas in the traditional repertory: Giacomo Puccini’s 1896 masterpiece, La Bohème.
It's part of the 2023/2024 season and will be performed twice - on Friday, April 5 and Sunday, April 7 - at Bass Performance Hall.
It's a popular choice - the Dallas Symphony Orchestra is doing it as well in February 2025 - and a favorite of opera lovers and novices alike. It tells the classic love story of star-crossed lovers Mimi and Rodolfo, set against the backdrop of bohemian Paris - a tale that has also inspired modern works such as the 1996 stage musical Rent, and movies such as 1987's Moonstruck and 2001's Moulin Rouge.
In a statement, Wilson explains why it's so meaningful.
“With a nuanced plot, modern applicability, gorgeous period costumes and achingly lovely music, La Bohème truly has it all,” Wilson says. “People always think opera is one thing. Then they’re surprised when they get a chance to see it in person. It’s so much more like soap opera — people love and die, and it’s all terribly exciting.”
According to a release, the Fort Worth Opera production will be semi-staged, with the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra and conductor Miguel Harth-Bedoya sharing the performance space with the singers.
“With our La Bohème, you’ll get the full theatrical experience with the singers, the plot, glorious period costumes, and fully physical staging as the performers occupy the entire space on platforms set up inside the orchestra and around the musicians,” Wilson says. “There won’t be any sets or painted backdrops, but you’ll gain a new level of theatricality by witnessing the interaction of every performer, including the musicians and conductor, live on stage.”
The release also offers advice from Courtney Kennebeck, Director of Development and Special Events on what to wear. Jeans are OK!
"You can dress to see and be seen like the ladies of HBO’s The Gilded Age, which recounts the scrappy founding of the now-iconic Metropolitan Opera in New York," she says. "Or dress to soak in the music in comfort in your favorite jeans and fleeces — though if you want to pair those jeans with the crystal-studded boots you wore to see Taylor Swift, that would be perfect, too. Opera is a little like Vegas: there is no over the top.”
Tickets for the remainder of the 2023/2024 Fort Worth Opera season, including La Bohème, are available on the Fort Worth Opera website at www.fwopera.org. Prices range from $60 to $210. Patrons can also purchase private boxes with seating for 6 to 9 people, which come with champagne, light bites, a photographer visit, plus Green Room meet & greet with the cast. Those range from $2,500 to $4,000.
La Bohème will be performed on Friday, April 5 at 7:30 pm and Sunday, April 7 at 2 pm at Bass Performance Hall, 525 Commerce St. The production is in Italian with English supertitles. There is one intermission. Chuck Hudson directs with Miguel Harth-Bedoya conducting the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra. The production features renowned Cuban-American soprano Elizabeth Caballero as Mimì and star-on-the-rise Alok Kumar as Rodolfo, both making their Fort Worth opera debuts.