BYU 100+ years of Opera – Opera has been part of the curriculum offerings since at least 1903, when BYU was known as BY Academy. An opera producing machine, over 100 operas were offered by BYA between 1903-1916. In 1917, BYU offered their first academic major in music and they haven’t looked back. Currently, BYU’s School of Music is led by over 50 full-time faculty and offers over 550 majors. For more on this, check out this article: History – BYU School of Music.
BYU’s Madsen Opera Theatre – The theatre is named after the husband and wife School of Music Directors, Florence Jepperson Madsen and Franklin Madsen, with their own unique love story borne of tragic events that created their family. The couple consecutively directed operas and led the School of Music for over sixty years, first Florence, then Franklin.
BYU’s Newest Opera Director – Learn more about the 2021-2022 incoming Opera Director at BYU, Shea Owens, on 4thWallDramaturgy.
BYU’s Next Opera – For Fall Semester 2022, BYU’s School of Music will be celebrating 50 years of opera in the deJong Theatre with the large cast of The Merry Widow! The new BYU Music Building, which began construction June 15, 2020, is expected to be completed in 2023. (Check here for construction updates.)
After months of rehearsing on a taped cement floor with acting blocks in place of benches and frames in place of doors, the company finally moves to the theatre space, to a stage with levels and furniture, working doors and chairs out in the audience. The beloved cherry orchard feels so much more real now.
Near the end of his life, Anton Chekhov who had suffered from tuberculosis and depression throughout his life, decided to move to the seaside town of Yalta in order to heal. On January 18, 1904, he wrote to his wife, the actress Olga Knipper, “I’m writing The Cherry Orchard very slowly. Sometimes I feel it’s a success, sometimes a failure…It’s all very ordinary, but that’s how things are, unfortunately.”
For this production we are trying something new! You'll still see some dramaturgical information in your printed program, including the dramaturg's note, "The Weight of Waiting in The Cherry Orchard."