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THE INVESTOR

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21

LIFESTYLE

singers and musicians,’ says Haddock.

‘I think

Carmen

looks a million dollars,

but it doesn’t cost a million dollars.’

Despite the need to be commercial,

OperaUpClose believes in developing

new talent. Because the shows are

staged in smaller venues, younger

singers whose voices have not yet fully

matured but who are the correct age

for the role, can perform the key parts.

‘The character of Mimi in

La Bohème

is

in her mid-20s, and for a person to die

so young is very moving. But the role is

normally sung by someone in their 40s

or 50s, making it considerably less

powerful,’ says Haddock.

The charity also runs an annual

competition, called Flourish, to select

and produce a brand new opera.

Composers and librettists from around

the world are invited to write a piece for

up to seven performers, including the

musicians. Extracts from five shortlisted

operas are then performed in a showcase

at Kings Place in London and the winner

is given a year to develop the piece into

a full-length opera, which is then

produced by OperaUpClose.

The 2014 winner,

Ulla’s Odyssey

, was

written for a family audience. It tells the

story of 14-year-old Ulla who sets off to

sail round the world single-handed with

only her cat for company, encountering

mythical creatures en route.

Children as young as seven have been

to see the opera.The charity also runs

workshops for schools, involving

members of the cast and orchestra, to

help children understand what opera is;

to recognise the different voices and

instruments, and why the composer

would use them in a particular moment

or place.‘To do that with seven-year-

olds is amazing,’ says Haddock.‘We want

to catch them before they think opera is

not for them.’

For more information about tickets and supporting

OperaUpClose, visit

www.operaupclose.com

We have to produce

work that peoplewant

to see. We also run

a very tight ship

Balance sheet

OperaUpClose is looking to nurture

a new generation of opera-lovers with its prestige

productions at affordable prices.

Y

ou might expect a trip to

the opera to experience

Bizet’s

Carmen

to cost

somewhere in the region

of £200 for the best seats

in the house, but at theTheatre Royal in

Bury St Edmunds, the top price ticket is

a modest £26.

Comedian Chris Addison, who has

been performing a speaking role in

L’Étoile

at the Royal Opera House,

recently told

Channel 4 News

that you

could buy tickets to this opera for just

£6,‘which is cheaper than going to

watchArsenal, and no one’s waving a big

flag in front of you during the good bits!’

However, Dominic Haddock,

Executive Producer of OperaUpClose,

the charity that has brought

Carmen

to

Bury St Edmunds, does not believe this

is a particularly good comparison.‘Yes,

you can go to Covent Garden for under

£10, but if you do, you’ll be sitting a long

way away from the action and not getting

the full experience,’ he says.‘It’s a big

part of why OperaUpClose was started

– by a group of artists and producers

who loved opera but weren’t going as

much as they would like because the

tickets were so expensive.’

The charity, which was founded

initially as a company in 2009,

immediately set to work to find out why

regular theatregoers were not also

buying opera tickets.The general

response was:‘It’s not for me.’ Many

were uncomfortable with the grand

surroundings.Then there’s the opera

itself, usually performed in a foreign

language; even if it’s been translated into

English, the diction can be an issue.

OperaUpClose has tried to resolve

these problems by staging performances

in English and taking its productions to

small and medium-sized venues around

the country – mostly to theatres, but

also to arts centres, festivals and schools.

It even performs in workplaces to

company staff, as well as private parties

and weddings – in fact, anywhere

that will help to expand the audience

for opera.The artists’ acting skills

and clear articulation mean it is

possible for the first-time opera-goer

to follow a storyline simply from the

performance, rather than the synopsis

in the programme.

But perhaps the biggest transformation

has been to ticket prices. OperaUpClose

started off by charging £10 for all its

tickets, then gave 10% of tickets away

via charities to ensure that people who

would not normally get the opportunity

to see a live opera due to cost concerns

could do so. Now the company has taken

to the road and ticket prices range from

£10 to £26. Sustaining prices at this low

level is impressive, especially when you

consider that ticket sales account for 70%

of the charity’s funding.

‘It means we have to be commercial,’

says Haddock.‘We have to produce

work that people want to

see.We

also

run a very tight

ship.We

question every

single thing we buy.’

OperaUpClose is able to control

ticket prices by scaling down the cast

and orchestra.

Carmen

, for example, has

eight singers, and the ‘orchestra’ consists

of a piano, violin, cello and flute.This

does not compromise the quality,

however.‘We rely heavily on good

reviews for marketing, so we work with

great designers and use the very best

Matthew Stylianou, OperaUpClose/Andreas Grieger