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Luck Be An Arizona Lady Tonight! Arizona Opera Opens Season With U.S. Opera Company Premiere of Arizona Lady

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Arizona Opera opens its 2015/16 Season as the first U.S. opera company to present the comic operetta Arizona Lady. The story revolves around leading lady Lona Farrell, whose hopes and dreams ride on the back of one horse, "Arizona Lady", winning the Kentucky Derby. Set on a historic ranch in Tucson and reminiscent of the greatest Golden-age Hollywood musical comedies, Arizona Lady is full of lively, upbeat music, cheerful, soaring arias and a wacky libretto, sure to make you smile as bright as the Arizona sun.

 

Arizona Lady is an operetta by Hungarian composer Emmerich Kálmán who fled Europe to escape Nazi persecution. In 1953, he wrote Arizona Lady as a love letter to the Southwest where he had sought refuge.  Kálmán was one of numerous composers who escaped Europe and moved to the United States. Many of these composers landed in Hollywood where they began composing for the movie studios.  Arizona Lady harks back to those classic films with grand scenery, screwball comedy and the big Hollywood sound we think of today.

 

Arizona Opera will be the first major U.S. opera house to perform Arizona Lady.  The piece has recently received international attention as the  Komische Oper Berlin presented a new production in December 2014.

 

Arizona Lady's cast is led by Angela Fout (Lona Farrell) whose "soaring spinto voice takes a high C easily, trills beautifully, and handles coloratura like a dream" (Post and Courier). Robert Orth, beloved by Arizona Opera audiences in 2013's H.M.S. Pinafore, returns as Sheriff Harry Sullivan and Octavio Moreno, who starred in last season's smash mariachi opera,  Cruzar la Cara de la Luna, takes the role of rancher Lopez Ibañez. 

 

   

Conductor Kathleen Kelly and Arizona Poet Laureate Alberto "Tito" Rios have created a brand new English, German and Spanish translation of the libretto, which was originally written by Alfred Grünwald and Gustav Beer.

 

Tickets for Arizona Lady start at $25 and go on sale August 23.  Tickets will also be available at azopera.org or by calling 602.266.7464 (Phoenix) or 520.293.4336 (Tucson). Tickets will also be on sale at the Arizona Opera Center Box Office at 1636 N. Central Ave., Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

 

A limited number of tickets for Student Night in Tucson (October 8) are available to schools and community groups. Click here for details and ticket reservation information.

 

Click here to hear sound clips from Arizona Lady

Click here for Conductor Kathleen Kelly's Essential Arizona Lady Playlist

Click here to download Arizona Lady Ringtones (for Android and iPhone)

 

 

Arizona Lady

Music by Emmerich Kálmán

New English/German/Spanish translation by Kathleen Kelly and Alberto "Tito" Rios

Original libretto by Alfred Grünwald and Gustave Beer

 

Tucson Performance Information

October 10, 7:30 p.m.

October 11, 2 p.m.

Tucson Music Hall

260 S. Church St., Tucson

 

Phoenix Performance Information

October 16 & 17, 7:30 p.m.

October 18, 2 p.m.

Symphony Hall

75 N. 2nd St., Phoenix

 

Arizona Lady 

Rediscovered Voices Festival

(September 17 - October 18)

 

Arizona Opera's Rediscovered Voices Festival celebrates and explores Arizona Lady and the inspiring story of Emmerich Kálmán's  - a Jewish-Hungarian composer who fled Europe in WWII and wrote Arizona Lady as a love letter to his new home in the Southwest.

All Redicsoverd Voices Festival events are free to the public unless indicated otherwise.

Arizona Opera's Rediscovered Voices Festival is supported by the Jewish Community Foundation of Phoenix.

 

Phoenix Events

  • Brown Bag Lunch Recital

September 17, 12:15-12:45 p.m.

Bring a bagged lunch and listen to opera highlights.

Arizona Opera Center

1636 N. Central Ave., Phoenix

  • The Music & Stories of the West

September 24, 11 a.m.

Free concert and lecture with composer Craig Bohmler

Scottsdale Museum of the West

3830 N. Marshall Way, Scottsdale

  • Brundibár by Hans Krása 

September 27, 1 p.m.

One-act children's opera that premiered in the Theresienstadt concentration camp

Valley of the Sun Jewish Community Center

12701 N. Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale

  • Coffee @ Kerr

September 30, 10:30 a.m.

Free lecture discussion open to the community
Kerr Cultural Center

6110 N. Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale

  • Operátif

October 2, 6:30 p.m.

Glass of wine and behind the scenes tour

Arizona Opera Center

1636 N. Central Ave., Phoenix

$25; RSVP at 602.266.7464

  • The Music & Stories of Jewish Composers

October 7, 7 p.m.

Free concert and lecture about Jewish refugee composers

Congregation Beth Israel

10406 N. 56th St., Scottsdale

  • Arizona Opera Book Club Meeting: Lazy B:  Growing Up on a Cattle Ranch in the Southwest

October 12, 7 p.m.

Discussion of Sandra Day O'Conner's Lazy B:  Growing Up on a Cattle Ranch in the Southwest

Changing Hands Bookstore

300 W. Camelback Rd., Phoenix

  • Film Festival: Calamity Jane

October 13, 7 p.m.

Film about the life of Calamity Jane in the American West

Arizona Opera Center

1636 N. Central Ave., Phoenix

  • Film Festival: Cowgirls: Portrait of American Ranch Women

October 15, 7 p.m.

Film celebrating women who pioneered the Western frontier

Arizona Opera Center

1636 N. Central Ave., Phoenix

 

Arizona Opera is proud to partner with No Festival Required for the Rediscovered Voices film screenings.

 

Tucson Events

  • Brundibár by Hans Krása 

September 20, 3 p.m.

One-act children's opera that premiered in the Thresiendstadt concentration camp

Tucson Jewish Community Center

3800 E. River Rd., Tucson

  • The Music & Stories of Jewish Composers

September 26, 2 p.m.

Free concert and lecture about Jewish refugee composers

Tucson Museum of Art

140 N. Main Ave., Tucson

  • Say Hello to Opera

September 30, 3 p.m.

University of Arizona vocal arts students sing arias from Arizona Lady

Oro Valley Library

1305 W. Naranja Dr., Oro Valley

  • Film Festival: The Brothers Warner

September 30, 7 p.m.

Film about filmmakers Harry, Albert, Sam and Jack Warner

Tucson Jewish Community Center

3800 E. River Rd., Tucson

  • Brown Bag Lunch Recital

October 2, noon

Bring a bagged lunch and listen to arias from Arizona Lady

Grace St. Paul Episcopal Church

2331 E. Adams St., Tucson

  • Arizona Opera Book Club Meeting: Lazy B: Growing Up on a Cattle Ranch in the Southwest

October 5, 7 p.m.

Discussion of Sandra Day O'Conner's Lazy B: Growing Up on a Cattle Ranch in the Southwest

Antigone Books

411 N. 4th Ave., Tucson

  • Translation with Alberto "Tito" Rios

October 6, 7 p.m.

Arizona poet laureate Albert "Tito" Rios discusses the art of translation

The University of Arizona Poetry Center

1508 E. Helen St., Tucson

  • Student Night

October 8

Lecture begins at 6 p.m.

Performance begins at 7 p.m.

Tucson Music Hall

260 S. Church Ave., Tucson

 

Registration is required for all Student Night performances.  Visit www.azopera.org to register.

 

About Arizona Opera
Founded in 1971, Arizona Opera is our state's only professional opera company that produces fully-staged opera performances as well as in-school touring productions, and outreach programs to reach over 70,000 schoolchildren and adults annually. Since its inception, Arizona Opera has produced over 200 fully-staged operatic masterpieces and concerts including Richard Wagner's complete Ring Cycle; and in 2014 the company embarked on a new artistic initiative, "Arizona Bold" which incorporates new repertoire into each season, works that celebrate the rich cultural fabric that makes up our diverse state.