When:
September 14, 2019 @ 7:30 pm – 10:00 pm
2019-09-14T19:30:00-04:00
2019-09-14T22:00:00-04:00
Where:
Ariel Opera House
426 Second Ave
OPERA GALA-POLIS! @ Ariel Opera House

The Ariel Opera House lives up to its name at the season opener on September 14th when Opera Gala-polis kicks off the season with acclaimed mezzo-soprano Katherine Rohrer under the able direction of Maestro Steven Huang. Katherine’s Carmen sizzles!

Conductor Steven Huang

Maestro Steven Huang has conducted orchestras and operas across the country and throughout the world. At the age of twenty-one, he served as Music Director of the Bach Society Orchestra of Harvard University, where he received his undergraduate degree. While at Harvard, Mr. Huang also directed the Lowell House Opera (the oldest continuously running opera company in New England), in a critically acclaimed production of Kurt Weill’s The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny.

Mr. Huang has worked with musicians around the world, including California, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, Massachusetts, Ohio, Haiti, and Romania. He has held the position of Music Director of the University of Chicago Chamber Orchestra, the Central Illinois Youth Symphony, the Gilbert and Sullivan Players of Chicago, and the Bradley University Orchestra. In America, he has guest conducted professional ensembles such as the Illinois Symphony Orchestra, the Lake Shore Symphony (IL), and the Four Seasons Symphony (CA). Abroad, he has led the National Philharmonic and “Organ Hall” Chamber Orchestra of the Republic of Moldova; the Pitesti Philharmonic of Romania; the Tiraspol Philharmonic; the New Symphony Orchestra of Bulgaria; the Attergau Kultursommer Orchestra in Austria, where he conducted for their twentieth anniversary concert; the Jeunesses Musicales Festival Orchestra in Romania; and L’Orchestre Philharmonique de Sainte Trinité, Haiti, where he has volunteered since 2000.

Mr. Huang has studied conducting in Europe as well as the United States with such teachers as Dumitru Goia, Michael Jinbo, Kenneth Kiesler, Gustav Meier, and Rossen Milanov. He earned the Master of Music degree in Orchestral Conducting from the University of Michigan, where he was the recipient of the Marian W. and Ernest A. Jones Conducting Scholarship. Huang twice received the Herbert von Karajan Fellowship for Young Conductors for study at the Salzburg Festival, and the Fulbright Fellowship for study at the National University of Music in Bucharest, where he received an Artist’s Diploma. Mr. Huang has also studied with Mr. Leonard Slatkin at the National Conducting Institute.

Mr. Huang has served on faculty at Ohio University since 2004. He appears as conductor on two professional recordings, “Sticks & Stones: Music for Percussion and Strings” and “Double Life: Music for Strings by Rozsa” (Equilibrium). Recent engagements include the Brasov Philharmonic (Romania), Tantrum Theater’s production of “Little Shop of Horrors,” for which he won the 2017 Theatre Roundtable award for Excellence in Music Direction; North Carolina State Honors Orchestra, and recurring appearances at the “Queen Violin” International Festival in the Republic of Moldova. He is also Director of the nonprofit educational organization International Conducting Masterclasses, Inc., which sponsors conducting seminars in Europe and the U.S.

Katherine Rohrer, mezzo-soprano

Mezzo-soprano Katherine Rohrer has been impressing audiences internationally with her warm, expressive tone, vocal agility, and dramatic, emotionally gripping performances. Balancing the rigors of traditional and mainstream repertoire with some of today’s most celebrated composers, Katherine garnered critical acclaim in recent performances as Nicklausse/Muse in Les Contes d’Hoffmann with Opera Colorado and Florida Grand Opera, Marguerite in La Damnation de Faustwith Oper Frankfurt, the Malaysian Philharmonia, and the Saint Louis Symphony, the role of Lady Macbeth in Bloch’s rarely-heard Macbeth with London’s University College Opera, and her first Pilgrim in Saariaho’s L’Amour de Loin with Vlaamse Opera. In her debut in the title role of Carmen with Glyndebourne on tour, the Times Online acclaims, “…she has already deeply assimilated the strength and complexity of this Carmen. And her minutely expressive mezzo-soprano traces every nerve ending of Bizet’s writing.” Previous roles with Glyndebourne opera include Mercedes in Carmen and Nadine in the world premiere of John Lunn’s Tangier Tattoo. Highlights of previous seasons include performances of Princess Clarice in Prokofiev’s L’Amour des Trois Oranges with Thèâtre de Genève (2010), the role of Sonyetka in Shostakovich’s Lady Macbeth of Mzensk with the Teatro Municipal in Santiago de Chile (2009), Clara in Prokofiev’s Betrothal in a Monastery in Valencia, Spain (2008), and Stella in Elliott Carter’s opera What Next? at the Miller Theatre in New York City (2007). Ms. Rohrer returned to the San Francisco Opera after her residency as an Adler Fellow and former Merolini for the 2007-2008 and 2006-2007 seasons performing the roles of Dorebella in Cosi Fan Tutte, Pauline in The Queen of Spades and Maddalena in Rigoletto. This was followed by her debut as Stephano in Roméo et Juliette with the Lyric Opera of Chicago; the Chicago Sun Times proclaims her as “the standout in the supporting cast…she showed a voice and spirit alive.” Ms. Rohrer has shown a dynamic affinity for early opera since her debut as Oberto in Alcina with San Francisco Opera (2002), a role she later reprised at the Opera Lyon (2005). Her New York debut with Gotham Chamber Opera in the role of Teseo in Arianna in Creta was ecstatically received by the New York press, prompting Ann Midgette of the New York Times to remark, “…the role of Teseo…is one of the hardest in the book, every aria a flood of notes spewing out as if from a fire hydrant. Katherine Rohrer…was deeply impressive, playing it convincingly as an angry teenage boy of about 16, and hurling her agile voice (full but not dark) up and down the scale as she executed various bits of stage business, like brushing her teeth without any break in the cascade of notes.” She returned to New York for her debuts with New York City Opera (2006) in a rarely performed Handel opera Flavio as Vitage and with Glimmerglass Opera (2007) in the role of Messenger, and Proserpine in Monteverdi’s Orfeo.

Recent and previous concert engagements include Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dreamin Japan with the Mito Chamber Orchestra under the baton of Seiji Ozawa (released internationally on CD and DVD), Mozart’s C Minor Mass with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra conducted by Donald Runnicles, Verdi’s Messa da Requiem with the Alabama Symphony Orchestra, and a Gala Concert with New Orleans Symphony under the baton of Kauspeter Siebel. Her Carnegie Hall debut was for the Marilyn Horne Foundation followed by recitals in Louisville, Kentucky and Bradford, Pennsylvania. The Louisville Courier-Journal’s review of the performance praises her “luscious, ringing voice” and notes that she displayed “just enough sass to convert you immediately to her cause.”She made her New York City Ballet debut as the mezzo soloist in Brahms’ Liebesliederwalzer at Lincoln Center as well as at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. She has also been featured in two recitals with the 2003 Schwabacher Debut Recital Series, both with collaborative artist Steven Blier.

Ms. Rohrer has collaborated with many of the world’s leading directors and conductors including Michail Jurowski, Seiji Ozawa, Donald Runnicles, Patrick Summers, Daniel Oren, Steven Lord, David Agler, Dimitri Jurowski, Jakub Hrůša, Marco Armiliato, David McVicar, John Copley, David and Christopher Alden, Stephen Langridge, John Cox, Roy Rallo, Ian Judge and James Robinson. Recipient of Central City Opera’s John Moriarty Apprentice Encouragement Award, her other credits include first place in the Rose Palmer Mobile Opera Competition, finalist in the Eleanor McCollum Competition at Houston Grand Opera, and finalist in the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions. Ms. Rohrer was an Adler Fellow at the San Francisco Opera from 2004-2006. She has a BM in music education from Stetson University as well as a MM in performance from New England Conservatory and a Ph.D from Ohio University. In autumn 2013 she joined the faculty at The Ohio State University as an assistant professor of voice.

Repetoire

Prelude to Pique DameCarmen Suite #1

Habanera

Paulina’s Arie (Pique Dame)

What A Movie (Trouble in Tahiti)

Meditation

Voi che sapete (Figaro)

Ah quel diner (La Perichole)

Rosenkavalier Suite

TchaikovskyBizet

Bizet

Tchaikovsky

Bernstein

Massenet

Mozart

Offenback

Strauss

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