Event—Public Programming

An Eternal Story of Love and Loss: Orpheus and Opera

Orphée et Euridice, Tragédie, Opéra en trois Actes ... Par Monsieur le Chevalier Gluck, 1774

Orphée et Euridice, Tragédie, Opéra en trois Actes ... Par Monsieur le Chevalier Gluck, 1774

Orphée et Euridice, Tragédie, Opéra en trois Actes ... Par Monsieur le Chevalier Gluck, 1774

From János Zsámboki, Emblemata, Antwerp 1564

Listen to the audio-recording of this program.

This fall Lyric Opera of Chicago, in collaboration with The Joffrey Ballet, is mounting an exciting new production of the 1774 Paris version of Christoph Gluck's Orphée et Eurydice. But the myth of Orpheus journeying to the Underworld to find his deceased wife Eurydice has inspired composers from the first surviving opera by Jacopo Peri in 1600 to the Canadian composer John Robertson's recent Orpheus masque, premiered in 2015.

Early music experts Linda Austern and David Buch will engage in discussion with Gerard Charles, Director of Artistic Operations for the Joffrey Ballet, to reflect upon the importance of Orpheus in the history of opera and how this story of love, loss, and loss yet again continues to resonate today.

Linda Phyllis Austern, associate professor of musicology at Northwestern University, specializes in sixteenth-, seventeenth-, and early eighteenth-century musical-cultural relations; music in the early modern English theater; gender and sexuality studies; and music as related to the visual arts.

David Buch, emeritus professor of music history at the University of Northern Iowa, has received international attention for his new discoveries and interpretations about Mozart operas, and he often presents pre-opera talks and community workshops for the Lyric Opera.

Gerard Charles is an accomplished dancer, choreographer, teacher and artistic director. After 26 years with BalletMet in Columbus, Ohio, most recently as Artistic Director, he joined the Joffrey Ballet as Ballet Master in 2012 and took on the role of Director of Artistic Operations in 2014.

Download a PDF flyer for this event, to post and distribute, and explore related Newberry materials with our Collection Quick Guide on Orpheus and opera.

Cosponsored with Lyric Unlimited, The Joffrey Ballet, and the Newberry Center for Renaissance Studies.

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