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Friday April 7th and Saturday 8th, 2017

Opera South East presents...
​The Magic Flute – by W A Mozart 
Sung in English with Chorus and Orchestra

Opera South East will be performing Mozart's The Magic Flute with the Sussex Concert Orchestra
at Hastings White Rock Theatre on Friday April 7th and Saturday 8th, 2017 at 7.30pm


Director: Fraser Grant
Conductor: Kenneth Roberts
Mozart’s humanist masterpiece is more popular than ever. It is filled with Freemason symbols and references, and aims to show us the majestic power of art and music, a force that can change people and tame beasts.

All the magic and wonder in this production has been created by a chorus of children, in collaboration with the director and design team. Join us in our wonderful adventure as we explore this timeless masterpiece through the eyes of a child. Don’t miss it.


Tickets from the White Rock Theatre at £20, £16 and £12 plus a £1 per ticket  booking fee (unless groups of 8 or more, or White Rock Friend). Concessions £2 off.  Children under 16 are free when accompanied by an adult.

For ticket holders on either night, there will also be a pre-show talk by the Artistic Director on the Saturday evening at 6pm.  This talk by the Director on the Saturday evening has proved a popular event in recent years and will give you an insight into how and why this particular production is presented in the way it is.
​

Fast link to White Rock Theatre Box office tickets
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This production takes on an international flavour, strongly fortified by a local chorus. Making their Opera South East debut are South African Fae Evelyn (The Queen of the Night) American Mark Bonney (Tamino), James Williams (Papageno) and Marina Ivanova (Papagena). Local professionals joining the production include Lucy Ashton (Pamina), Toby Sims (Sarastro) and Jeremy Vinogradov (Monostatos). Also included in the cast are Julia Bovee as First Lady, Philippa Thomas as Second Lady and Karen McInally as Third Lady. The Three Genii are sung by pupils of Claremont Preparatory School.

We are delighted that many young students from Theatre Sense, a Hastings based theatre school and Claremont Preparatory School are joining the cast for this production. All the magic and wonder of this production has been created by the children, in collaboration with the director and design team. The children are at its core, they propel the story forward and introduce us to the magical characters within the opera. It is the perfect introduction to opera, especially for children, so do join us on our wonderful adventure as we explore this timeless masterpiece through the eyes of a child. Don’t miss it.


The Cast

​In order of appearance:
  • Mark Bonney  -  Tamino (a Prince and the Head Boy)
  • Julia Bovee, Phillipa Thomas, Karen McInally - Three Ladies (Sixth Form Prefects)
  • James Williams  -  Papageno (a bird-catcher and School Groundsman)
  • Fae Evelyn  -  Queen of the Night (The Headmistress)
  • Jeremy Vinogradov  -  Monostatos (the laboratory rat!)
  • Lucy Ashton  -  Pamina (daughter of the Queen of the Night, and the Head Girl)
  • Marina Ivanova  -  Papagena (School librarian)
  • Toby Sims  -  Sarastro (Science Professor)
  • Leslie Brissett  -  The Speaker (Head Laboratory Technician)
  • 3 students at Claremont Preparatory School - Three Genii (past school Professors)
  • Gerry Turner, John Rycroft  -  Priests/Men in Armour (PE Teachers)
  • ‘The Squad’ of School Children - 12 students from Theatre Sense, a Hastings based theatre school
  • The Chorus of Opera South East (Chorus of  Laboratory Technicians): -
    Sue Beaney, Judith Bevan, James Caspian, Clare Calcott-James, Kim Clarke, Eddie Fownes, Andy Gale, Tina Goddard, Andy Gale, Tina Goddard, Eleanor Grosvenor Sear, Gerald Hewson, Pat Horwill, Gillian Muhlemann, Karennina Page, John Rycroft, Greg Solomon, Sarah Taylor, David Thompson, Gerald Turner, Juliette Vane, Maxine Wright-Moore
  • The Sussex Concert Orchestra, conducted by Kenneth Roberts: -
    First Violins - Andrew Laing, Lynne Ratciff, Lisa Knights, Simon Smith
    Second Violins - Brian Knights, Yvonne Cane-Hardy
    Violas - Cecy Kemp, Neil Robinson   Cellos - Ian Gill, Sally-Ann Thorkildsen
    Double Bass - Susan Denyer   Flute/Piccolo - Mark Esmonde
    Oboe - Ruth Elias   Clarinet - Richard Eldridge    Bassoon - Tanya Charlesworth
    Trumpet - Russell Kemp   Horn - Trevor Denyer   Trombone - Rosie Wilcock
    Timpani - Royston Hunt    Bells - Nigel Howard 

Pre-show talk on Saturday 8th April 2017

​​Fraser Grant, the Artistic Director, will be presenting a pre-show talk before the Saturday evening’s performance. This will be given in the auditorium of the White Rock Theatre at 6pm, and is free of charge to all ticket holders from either night's performance. This has proved a popular event in recent years and will give you an insight into how and why this particular production is presented in the way it is!

Biographies

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Fraser Grant
Artistic Director
​

Fraser studied French at Edinburgh University and trained as a director at Drama Studio London. After five years as artistic director of the Drayton Court Theatre Company, he went on to become head of Music Theatre at The London College of Music and Media as well as Head of Drama at the Junior College. He is now Head of Drama at Harvington Prep School in Ealing coupling this with a continuing career in professional Opera and Music Theatre directing.


Fraser has Directed 18 prior operas for Opera South East, as well as many for Oyster Opera, LCMM, Unicorn Theatre, and has been Theatre Director for productions of many plays in the UK and Italy.  Amongst his works he has won several awards for Best Production on the Edinburgh Fringe.  He also works as a lyricist and translator, frequently collaborating with the cabaret duo Opera Tottie. 

A fuller biography of Fraser can be found here...

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Audience Comments

Audience reaction of OSE's production of Verdi's Macbeth (April 2016) :-
  • ... a superb operatic experience, beautifully sung, costumed and staged …
  • ... a missed opportunity for many who might have shared in this fantastic experience ... 
An overheard audience comment from Verdi's Il Trovatore (Friday 22nd April 2015) :-
  • ​ was  'It's just like Glyndbourne and only 20 quid'!

Booking information

Ticket prices:
  • £20, £16 and £12
  • plus a £1 booking fee per ticket when purchasing under 7 tickets.  Groups of 8 or more need no booking fee - phone the box office for group bookings. White Rock Theatre Friends are exempt from booking fees
  • concessions £2 off
  • under-16s FREE when accompanied by an adult - call the box office

The White Rock Theatre Box Office is open now!  
  • visit  in person on White Rock, Hastings,
    East Sussex, TN34 1JX
  • or phone 01424 462288
  • or visit online at: 
    The White Rock 
    Theatre Box Office website
Link to Press Release text...

The Company - The Magic Flute 2017

The Sussex Concert Orchestra
Director Fraser Grant
Conductor Kenneth Roberts
Assistant Musical Director Nigel Howard
Stage Manager for White Rock Theatre Adam Harkin
Stage Manager for Opera South East Kit Calcott-James
Assistant Stage Manager Amelia Calcott-James
Deputy Stage Manager Amy Schiwitz
Set Construction Karen McInally
Lighting Design Fraser Grant
Lighting Technician Clifton Hollister
Costume Design Julia Bovee 
​Properties Clare Calcott-James, assisted by Amelia Calcott-James 
Make up and Hair, under the direction of Juliette Vane Production Secretary Greg Solomon
Programme John Rycroft
Artwork Julia Bovee
Programme Consultant Simon Page
Printed by Impact Design & Print 
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Make a weekend of it in Hastings?

There's lots of hotel choice in the area, e.g. 
  • The White Rock Hotel (next door to the theatre).  They have in the past offered ticket holders for either nights a 10% discount on their advertised prices if you stay for at least two nights - 01424 422 240
  • Hastings House - Boutique Hotel – Bed & Breakfast
  • Zanzibar International Hotel (a bijou option)
  • Many other options from LateRooms, Bookings.com and Expedia
(These tips are for guidance only - OSE make no guarantees for external organisations.)
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Kenneth Roberts
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Conductor/Musical Director
​

Kenneth Roberts was born in Hastings and educated at York University where he gained BA and MA degrees in music. He works as Musical Director for numerous companies at home and abroad and has conducted over 250 opera, ballet and other theatrical productions. He has played and conducted at many prestigious venues including The Royal Albert Hall, The Festival Hall, The Britten Theatre, Kensington Palace and Hampton Court. His second opera, Mister Butterfly, which he wrote in 1994 was premiered in Hong Kong and subsequently performed at the Edinburgh Festival, and featured in a documentary shown by BBC television and BBC World Service Satellite. Between 2001-2011 he worked at the University of New Hampshire, USA, where he directed a new African Musical which he was commissioned to write and also composed music for an award-winning ‘international’ children’s piece. He was also musical director and conductor for Plymouth State University’s Educational Theatre Collaborative. In 2002 he fulfilled a commission from the Purcell School in association with the Vaughan-Williams Trust as part of their centenary celebrations to mark the birth of Sir William Walton and in 2005 he completed a commission to write a ballet based on the novel The Trumpet Major by Thomas Hardy. In 2010 he also contributed music for the recently published musical version of 'Pollyanna' and also became a BIFF (British and International Federation of Festivals) adjudicator.
His highly acclaimed reduced orchestral arrangements of operatic scores by Mozart, Rossini, Verdi, Puccini and others are currently being played all over the world and are available from www.smallscores.com
In between times he has enjoyed giving his series of lecture recitals around the country at music clubs, and on cruise liners on subjects ranging from Mozart to ‘Jelly Roll’ Morton and has just released a CD of piano music entitled ‘Around the World in 80 Minutes’. 

A fuller biography of Ken can be found here...

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The Sussex Concert Orchestra will feature a 21 piece band for this production of The Magic Flute

Principal Role Biographies

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​James Williams
Papageno, a bird-catcher and School Groundsman

​James was born in London and studied at the Royal Academy of Music under Glenville Hargreaves and Jonathan Papp. Since graduating, James has distinguished himself as a successful artist on the operatic stage as well as in concert and recital.

In 2015-16, James completed the trilogy of the Mozart/Da Ponte operas, performing the title role of Don Giovanni, Don Alfonso/Così fan tutte and Il Conte/Le nozze di Figaro in fully-staged productions across the UK with Dulwich Opera Company and Opera Seria, shortly before reprising the role of Don Alfonso in an English version of Così fan tutte as a returning artist for Opera Loki. James will be making his debut with Opera South East in April 2017 as Papageno in their production of Mozart's Magic Flute.

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Previous roles include: Schaunard/La Bohème (Focus Opera and Lambeth Orchestra), Figaro/Il barbiere di Siviglia (East London Opera), Falke/Die Fledermaus and Aeneas/Dido and Aeneas. In 2015, James was selected for the Georg Solti Accademia, where he received coaching from Richard Bonynge on the study of bel canto arias.

In oratorio, James has performed as baritone soloist in Bach's Weihnachtsoratorium, Brahms's Ein deutsches Requiem, Finzi's Et in terra pax, Handel's Messiah, Haydn's The Creation, Mozart's Requiem, and Jonathan Rathbone's Christmas Truce. Song cycles include Die schöne Müllerin, Dichterliebe, Five Mystical Songs, and Songs of Travel. He was awarded the Charles Dibdin Prize at the 2014 John Kerr Award for English Song and First Prize at the Elisabeth Schumann Lieder Competition
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Mark Bonney
Tamino, a Prince and Head Boy in love with Princess Pamina

Anglo-American tenor Mark Bonney performs in the UK, United States and Europe. His repertoire includes Bach's St. John and St. Matthew Passions and Mass in B Minor, Handel's Messiah and Acis and Galatea, Monteverdi’s Vespers of 1610, Heinrich Schütz’ St. John Passion (Evangelist), Schumann's Dichterliebe and Vaughan Williams' On Wenlock Edge. Recent stage credits include Aeneas in Purcell's Dido and Aeneas, Mengone in Haydn’s Lo Speziale, Bajazet in Handel’s Tamerlano (scenes) and Ulisse in Monteverdi’s Il Ritorno d’Ulisse in Patria (scenes). In addition to pursuing a Masters in Music at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, he is an alumnus of the Franz Schubert Institut, a renowned lieder course in Austria, and the American Bach Soloists Academy in San Francisco.

At Guildhall, Mark studies with Gary Coward and is supported by the School Scholarship Fund. Over the past year, he has participated in master classes with Elly Ameling, Olaf Bär, and Emma Kirkby, among others, and has coached with Eugene Asti, Lada Valešová and Nicholas Mulroy. He was previously based in San Francisco, performing as a soloist with the California Bach Society, Chora Nova, the Albany Consort, the San Francisco Bach Choir and as a member of the American Bach Choir and Cappella SF.

Mark began his musical training as a treble in the Grace Cathedral Choir of Men and Boys. He went on to study voice and Political Science at Stanford University and then balanced careers in international development and music for several years before specializing in vocal performance.

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Lucy Ashton 
Pamina, object of the noblest and basest of desires - daughter of the Queen of the Night and the Head Girl

Lucy graduated from the Royal College of music last summer having studied both the Bachelor of Music and Master of Perfomance Studies qualifications there.  Performance roles included Zerlina in Don Giovanni, Fiordiligi in Cosi fan tutee, Susanna in Le nozze di Figaro.  Separately a number of soloist concert and oratorio roles have been performed every year since 2013.

Living in Battle and am saving funds in order to study further at opera school whilst continuing as Choir mistress of Crowhurst Community choral group and privately teaching singing and piano.

Forthcoming Engagements include roles of Belinda in Dido and Aeneas in July in Rye, and the roles of Destino in La Calisto in August for our friends Barefoot Opera.

A fuller biography of Lucy can be found here...

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Fae Evelyn
Queen of the Night (mother) -  The Headmistress

Fae is a South African Soprano. In 2008 she graduated with a BMus (summa cum laude) from the University of Kwa-Zulu Natal. She moved to England in 2009 to undertake an MMus in Solo Performance at the Royal Northern College of Music, under the tuteladge of Sandra Dugdale, which she completed with Distinction.

During her two years in Manchester, Fae performed Geraldine in Barber’s A Hand of Bridge, Valencienne in Lehar’s The Merry Widow, and Second Woman in Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas.  In opera excerpts at the RNCM she played Helena in Paride ed Helena and Iphigenie in Iphigenie en Tauride by Gluck, and Äanchen in Der Freischütz by Weber. She was also a chorus member for productions of Handel’s Belshazzar, Mozart’s La Clemenza Di Tito, and Bizet’s Carmen. 

In 2012, Fae moved to London. Highlights of the last two years include playing the title role in Susannah by Floyd, and Rosalinde in Strauss’ Die Fledermaus, in the Spring Opera Programme Showcase highlights with Associated Studios. She was a member of the 2013 Holland Park Chorus for Puccini’s Madama Butterfly, Bizet’s Les Pêcheurs de Perles,  and I gioielli della Madonna by Wolf-Ferrari and singing the role of Second Niece in Britten’s Peter Grimes with Elemental Opera. Additionally, she performed the role of Countess in Mozart’s Le Nozze Di Figaro in Associated Studio’s Showcase for the Three Month Intensive Opera Course.

Fae is currently an ENO Extra Chorus Soprano, and is working with Graeme Danby as her principal tutor. This summer, she will be performing as a member of the Grange Park Opera Chorus in Don Quichotte, Massenet, and La Traviata, Verdi.

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Toby Sims
Sarastro (father) - Science Professor

​Toby's unusual career has been a broad and eclectic mix of experiences. Having first sung for Opera South East (then Hastings Opera) in 1982, as Masetto in Don Giovanni, and then extensively for touring opera companies throughout the UK, in 1997 Toby moved to Russia, becoming principal baritone at the State Opera and Ballet Theatre, in Krasnoyarsk, Siberia.

In 2001, on returning to England he was ordained to the diaconite and later the priesthood of the Russian Orthodox Church, while continuing to sing. He was parish priest at the Greek Church of St Mary Magdalene, St Leonards, before serving for a year at the Holy Trinity, St Sergey Lavra [monastery) in Russia.   As Fr Tobias Sims he recorded the part of the priest in the Rachmaninov Liturgy for EMI Classics with the Choir of Kings College, Cambridge, under Stephen Cleobury.  

In 2011 he founded Opera Mayhem, which provides high energy entertainment at two London restaurants. This gorgeous long-haired singer climbed all over the restaurant, up on tables, hanging on to columns, giving us Figaro big time. Trip Adviser: Toby is a trustee of the Guild of Pastoral Psychology, a place for people to explore the borderland of spirituality and Jungian
psychology. 

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PictureJulia Bovee
Julia Bovee
First Lady,
 Sixth Form Prefect

​
Julia has been singing with Opera South East for the past ten years. She has been cast in many principal roles over the last few years with some of her favourites being Clorinda in La Cenerentola, Anna in Nabucco and Diana in Orpheus in the Underworld, and as Frasquita in Carmen, enabling her to release her inner gypsy! Most recently outside chorus roles she was Inez (Leonora's confidante) in Il Trovatore.  

Julia is also the company's costume designer and maker. She works as a freelance music engraver and book designer and studies singing locally with Elizabeth Ramsay.

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Phillipa Thomas
Second Lady, Sixth Form Prefect

Phillipa Thomas studied music at the University of York, winning the York University Concerto Prize. Following her MA, she continued her vocal training at Birmingham Conservatoire where she was a prizewinner in the Edward Brooks English Song Competition, a finalist in the Cecil Drew Oratorio competition and winner of the Birmingham Conservatoire Singing Prize. In 2014, she was a finalist at the John Kerr Award for English Song.

In 2016 Phillipa performed the roles of Orlofsky in Die Fledermaus with Fulham Opera,Dorabella in Così fan tutte with Dulwich Opera Company and Giovanna in Rigoletto for Nevill Holt Opera. Past operatic credits include Carmen (cover) (Carmen, Nevill Holt Opera), Meg (cover) (Falstaff, Fulham Opera – GrimebornFestival), Olga (Eugene Onegin, Aylesbury Opera), Marcellina (Le nozze di Figaro, Opera Seria), Sorceress (Dido and Aeneas, Opera Up Close), Carmen (Carmen, Guildford Opera and Opera at Bearwood), Mercedes (Carmen, Choir 2000), Ino (Semele, Jackdaws Young Artists) and Dido (Dido and Aeneas, Operamus).
 
Recent solo engagements include Mahler’s Symphony No.2 (Kings College Cambridge under Stephen Cleobury), Duruflé's Requiem (Rushmoor Choir), Dvořak’s Mass in D (Ceramic City Choir), Handel’s Dixit Dominus (Dorking Choral Society), Bach’s Weihnachtsoratorium (Newark Choral Society) and Mozart’s Requiem and Vespers (Aberdeen Bach Choir).
​

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Karen McInally
Third Lady, Sixth Form Prefect​

​Karen is a regular soloist and chorus member of Opera South East. Operatic roles include Azucena ‘Il Trovatore’, Suzuki ‘Madame Butterfly’, Zita ‘Gianni Schicchi’, Prince Orlofsky ‘Die Fledermaus’, Carmen ‘Carmen’ and most of the contralto roles in G&S operettas including Katya in the recent world premiere of ‘Buxton or Bust’. She has performed at Covent Garden (St Paul’s Church!) as Arnalta ‘L’incoronazione di Poppea’ and made her Glyndebourne debut in 2013 as Elizabeth Taylor in the world premiere of ‘Imago’ by Orlando Gough and Stephen Plaice. She has assisted/directed productions for OSE including ‘Orpheus and Eurydice’. She is a keen recitalist and performs regularly at Holy Trinity Church lunchtime recital series.
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Karen trained privately with Jane Metcalfe and has a Diploma in Opera Performance Studies from Birkbeck College. She currently works as a Voice Therapist and Macmillan Speech & Language Therapist.

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Marina Ivanova​
Papagena (in love with Papageno) - the School Librarian

​Bulgarian soprano, Marina Ivanova read European Economics and French at the University of Kent, Canterbury. Marina was a holder of Music and Performance scholarship, studying with Peter Cox. Marina received the University of Kent Music Prize 2012 and the Canterbury Festival Price 2014 for making an outstanding contribution to music. She now studies with Michell Harris. As a concert soloist Marina has performed at Canterbury Cathedral, Gulbenkian Theatre, Colyer-Fergusson Hall, St James's Church, London and more recently in Leichlingen, Germany. Marina made her operatic debut at Brent Opera, London as the Singer in Puccini's Manon Lescaut. Her solo repertoire includes Mozart Requiem, Haydn The Creation, Vivaldi Gloria and Nulla in Mundo Pax Sincera and Schubert Shepherd on the Rock. Marina is currently appearing as Papagena in South East Opera's production of Mozart's The Magic Flute. 

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Jeremy Vinogradov
Monostatos (Sarastro's henchman) - the laboratory rat

Jeremy Vinogradov studied in Australia before winning a major scholarship to the Vienna Konservatorium in Austria. He has since gained a breadth of operatic experience as a baritone for UK companies including English Touring Opera, Birmingham Opera Company, British Youth Opera, Carl Rosa and D'Oyly Carte Opera Companies, Early Opera Company, Grange Park Opera, Longborough Festival Opera, Iford Arts and Pimlico Opera.

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Noted for his strong stage persona, which aided a more recent into character tenor repertoire, he sang Orlofsky Fledermaus for Opera della Luna, and played his first Gilbert and Sullivan, with the Learned Judge Trial by Jury and Joseph Porter HMS Pinafore with Heritage Opera and Opera South East, and Major General Stanley Pirates of Penzance for Opera Anywhere.

​He made his operatic tenor debut as Mayor Upfold in Britten's 
Albert Herring with Surrey Opera, and sang Offenbach’s Orpheus and Goro Madam Butterfly with Opera South East; Goro with Lambeth Orchestra; Ringmaster The Bartered Bride with Kentish Opera; Gastone Traviata with New London Opera Players; and more recently Basilio and Curzio Le nozze di Figaro with Dulwich Opera Company, Tisiphone in Rameau’s Hippolyte et Aricie with Linden Baroque Opera, and Flute A Midsummer Night’s Dream with Surrey Opera. In the Autumn he will perform Dr Blind in Fulham Opera’s Fledermaus

The Three Genii
 Past school professors

All three are students at Claremont Preparatory School
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Leslie Brissett
Speaker/Orator

This is Leslie’s second Principal role with Opera South East. He came to opera through Jenny Miller of the Barefoot Opera Company where he played Papageno in an abridged version at her international school for vocalists. He has played roles in musical theatre, Lion in the Wizard of Oz, The voice of the plant in Little Shop of Horrors, as well as singing backing vocals for jazz and gospel artists. Having played Mars in Orpheus in the Underworld, the challenge of this production and working with the amazing company and especially the talented children have been a delight. Due to his shyness, he would love to do voiceovers!

Gerry Turner
Priest/Man in Armour 1

​Gerald worked for many years as a translator in Prague where he sang with the Kuhn Mixed Voice Choir. He moved to Hastings in 2016 and this will be his first performance with Opera South East. 

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John Rycroft
Priest/Man in Armour 2
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John Rycroft moved to Hastings in the autumn of 1999. He is now Chairman of Opera South East. He has been a member for twelve years, and for a similar length of time has also been a member of the Hastings Philharmonic Choir, of which he serves on the committee.

John’s interest in singing started young, winning a talent competition at the De la Warr Pavilion in the mid fifties (1950s).  He started singing seriously at the age of ten and hasn’t looked back.  At school he was a member of the choral society, the chapel choir and madrigal group. On leaving school, and living in London, John soon became involved with major London Choirs, becoming Chairman of the City of London Choir. This involvement with London choirs, alongside the City of London Choir, were with the Philharmonia Chorus, Goldsmiths Choral Union, London Concert Choir and Chelsea Opera Group and continued for almost thirty years until he moved to Hastings. 
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‘The Squad’
of School Children


12 students from Theatre Sense,
​a Hastings based theatre school...
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The Magic Flute - Synopsis of the plot, act by act

The synopsis of an opera is always worth reading before an opera performance, so do buy a programme on the night and get there in time to read it.  
The programme will also contain some gaelic translations that you may find helpful to better understand the set!


The Plot

ACT I
A mythical land between the sun and the moon. Three ladies in the service of the Queen of the Night save Prince Tamino from a serpent. When they leave to tell the queen, the bird-catcher, Papageno appears. He boasts to Tamino that it was he who killed the creature. The ladies return to give Tamino a portrait of the queen’s daughter, Pamina, who they say has been enslaved by the evil Sarastro. Tamino immediately falls in love with the girl’s picture. The queen, appearing in a burst of thunder, tells Tamino about the loss of her daughter and commands him to rescue her. The ladies give a magic flute to Tamino and silver bells to Papageno to ensure their safety on the journey and appoint three spirits to guide them.

Sarastro’s minion, Monostatos, pursues Pamina but is frightened away by Papageno. The bird-catcher tells Pamina that Tamino loves her and is on his way to save her. Led by the three spirits to the temple of Sarastro, Tamino learns from a high priest that it is the Queen, not Sarastro, who is evil. Hearing that Pamina is safe, Tamino charms the wild animals with his flute, then rushes off to follow the sound of Papageno’s pipes. Monostatos and his men chase Papageno and Pamina but are left helpless when Papageno plays his magic bells. Sarastro enters in great ceremony. He punishes Monostatos and promises Pamina that he will eventually set her free. Pamina catches a glimpse of Tamino, who is led into the temple with Papageno.

Interval of up to 25 minutes

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ACT II
Sarastro tells his associates that Tamino will undergo initiation rites. Left alone in darkness, Tamino and Papageno are accosted by the three ladies who want to know why they have not rescued Pamina. The ladies are chased away by thunder and lightning. Meanwhile,  Monostatos tries to kiss the sleeping Pamina but is surprised by the appearance of the Queen of the Night. The Queen gives her daughter a dagger and orders her to murder Sarastro.
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Sarastro finds the desperate Pamina and consoles her, explaining that he is not interested in vengeance. Tamino and Papageno are told by a priest that they must remain silent and are not allowed to eat, a vow that Papageno immediately breaks when he takes a glass of water from a flirtatious old lady. When he asks her name, the old lady vanishes. The three spirits appear to guide Tamino through the rest of his journey and to tell Papageno to be quiet. Tamino remains silent even when Pamina appears. Misunderstanding his vow for coldness, she is heartbroken.
 
The associates inform Tamino that he has only two more trials to complete his initiation. Papageno, who has given up on entering the brotherhood, longs for a wife instead. He eventually settles for the old lady. When he promises to be faithful she turns into a beautiful young Papagena but immediately disappears.
 
Pamina and Tamino are reunited and face the ordeals of water and fire together, protected by the magic flute.
 
Papageno tries to hang himself but is saved by the three spirits, who remind him that if he uses his magic bells he will find true happiness. When he plays the bells, Papagena appears and the two start making family plans. The Queen of the Night, her three ladies, and Monostatos attack the temple but are defeated and banished. Sarastro blesses Pamina and Tamino as all join in hailing the triumph of courage, virtue, and wisdom.

Director's notes

It was always our intention to bring a childlike innocence to this production of The Magic Flute-we wanted a show filled with wonder and magic, whilst retaining a little of the gravitas that is inherent in the themes of courage, wisdom and virtue. We also wanted a production that would appeal to all ages, especially the younger generations, who, after all, are the opera-goers of the future. But how to bring about this youthful vigour and energy, without being patronising or condescending? The answer lay in one simple and obvious conceit: in order to view the wonders and magic of the Flute through the eyes of a child all we needed to do was enlist the help of children.

So we invited a whole gang of kids to join us on our adventure as we rehearsed, and gave them 'almost' Carte Blanche to design the show, direct it and also perform in it. At the start of each rehearsal they would meet with me and my production team to discuss the design and dramatic.  challenges of the scene ahead. 
  • How do we kill a serpent? (Answer - with a glitter bomb!)
  • How do we dress the queen of the night? (Answer - as a giant star, with a moon for a head!)
  • Should Tamino kiss Pamina? (Answer - girls YES, boy-NO!)
  • What about the magic flute? What should it be? (Answer - doh, it's a flute.)
  • And Papageno's bells, just a set of bells? (Answer - no! They should be giant glitter balls from the sky.)

And so the production took shape, and tonight, what you see on stage is our response to those requests. So join us as Prince Tamino falls asleep during detention, rescues Pamina from the mad science master Sarastro, fighting off Chinese dragons and lab rats to do so, before realising that three prefects are actually in cahoots with the evil headmistress Queen of the Night. Mozart's Magic Flute seen through the eyes of the children that were in the performance is a wonderful place to be for a few hours.
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Theatre Box Office Tickets here!
Members of the audience are warmly invited to a Pre-performance Talk given by Director, Fraser Grant, on Saturday 8th April at 6pm in the auditorium at the White Rock Theatre. A valid ticket for either night will ensure admission, for which there is no charge. This talk takes the form of a short presentation, then a Question and Answer session.

Special thanks

Special Thanks and acknowledgements to:
  • David Holloway,
  • Sue Pybus
  • Betty Muffitt
  • Mark Duncan, Press photos
  • Mike Alan Video
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