Your Essential Guide to the Royal Opera Winter 2015-16 Season

The new Royal Opera House Winter 2016 season is open for booking. Here is our guide to the best shows

Legendary soprano Angela Gheorghiu, a returning Covent Garden favourite
After an autumn season full of bold new productions, the Royal Opera House Winter 2015/16 programme might seem less immediately exciting. Of the five opera planned for the main stage, only one is a new production - Emmanuel Chabrier's L'Etoile, which marks the Covent Garden debut of French director Mariame Clement (Hansel und Gretel).
Look a little closer, however, and you'll find an astounding amount of talent on display. Angela Gheorghiu and Amanda Echalaz star in Tosca, while Maria Agresta and rising star Venera Gimadieva split Violetta in La Traviata. Puccini's Il trittico sees baritone Lucio Gallo take on two very different roles, while Eugene Onegin returns with one of the world's foremost conductors of Russian music, Seymon Bychkov.

General booking opened 9am on Wednesday October 21; book fast to avoid disappointment.

Eugene Onegin (19 Dec 2015 - 7 Jan 2016)

Dmitri Hyorostovsky (Un ballo de maschera), a celebrated Covent Garden regular, takes the title role

Kasper Holten's (Don Giovanni) production of Tchaikovsky's opera split critics when it first appeared - some loved his device of casting both older singers and younger actors in the two lead roles, while others found it baffling. It will be fascinating to see how these issues are addressed in this first revival.


Amanda Echalaz, Tosca for the second half of the production's run

Puccini's 'shabby little shocker' has gone on to become of the most popular operas ever composed. Gloriously melodramatic and full of excitement, it returns in director Jonathan Kent's sleek, low-lit version with an all-star cast. Be prepared for a gut-ripping torture scene and a heart-wrenching finale.


Christophe Mortagne, tenor, takes the role of King Ouf I

Acclaimed French director Mariame Clement makes her Royal Opera debut with an unjustly unknown comedy by the hugely influential composer Emmanuel Chabrier (Espana). Wild and wicked, it is a twisting romp through a fantastical kingdom, set to music that contains the seeds of impressionism.


Lucio Gallo, who takes on both a tragic and a comic lead role across Il trittico's three tales

Richard Jones (Meistersingers of Nuremberg) has slowly risen to become one of Britain's most consistent and respected directors. His Il trittico, updated to post-war Italy, deserves to become a Covent Garden standard. Puccini's great late work places three one-act operas together, each of which is remarkably distinct in narrative, music and tone.


Rising mezzo-soprano Stephanie Mitchell, who reprises the role of Gwendolen

You'd be an April fool to miss this. For five nights, the Barbican Centre plays host to Ramin Grey's 2013 production of The Importance of Being Earnest. With utterly madcap staging matched by composer Gerald Barry's gloriously eccentric music, this is Wilde as you've never seen him before.


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