The Royal Opera House is an opera house and performing arts venue in London. It is also sometimes referred to as "Covent Garden" after the London neighbourhood in which it is located. The building serves as the home of the Royal Opera, the Royal Ballet and the Orchestra of the Royal Opera House.
The current edifice is the third theatre on the site. The façade, foyer and auditorium date from 1858, but almost every other element of the present complex dates from a reconstruction in the 1990s. The Royal Opera House seats 2,268 people and consists of four tiers of boxes and balconies and the Amphiteatre gallery. The proscenium is 12.20m wide and 14.80m high.
The main auditorium is a Grade I listed building. [http://www.bdp.co.uk/projects/roh/default.asp
For the first hundred years or so of its history the theatre was primarily a playhouse; the Letters Patent granted by Charles II had given Covent Garden and Drury Lane virtually exclusive rights to present spoken drama in London.
During the First World War the theatre was requisitioned by the Ministry of Works for use as a furniture repository. During the Second World War it became a dance hall. There was a possibility that it would remain so after the war but, following lengthy negotiations, the music publishers Boosey and Hawkes acquired the lease of the building.
David Webster was appointed General Administrator, and Sadler's Wells Ballet was invited to become the resident ballet company. The Covent Garden Opera Trust was created, which laid out plans "to establish Covent Garden as the national centre of opera and ballet, employing British artists in all departments, wherever that is consistent with the maintenance of the best possible standards..." (as quoted in Rosenthal, below)
The Royal Opera House reopened on February 20, 1946 with a performance of The Sleeping Beauty in an extravagant new production designed by Oliver Messel. Webster, with his music director Karl Rankl, immediately began to build a resident company. In December, 1946, they shared their first production, Purcell's The Fairy-Queen, with the ballet company. On January 14, 1947 the Covent Garden Opera Company gave its first performance of Bizet's Carmen.
In 1975 the Labour government gave land adjacent to the Royal Opera House for a long-overdue modernisation, refurbishment and extension. By 1995, sufficient funds had been raised to enable the company to embark upon a major reconstruction of the building, which took place between 1996 and 2000. This involved the demolition of almost the whole site except for the auditorium itself, including several adjacent buildings to make room for a major increase in the overall scale of the complex. In terms of volume, well over half of the complex is new.
The new venue has the same traditional horseshoe-shaped auditorium as before, but with greatly improved technical, rehearsal, office and educational facilities, a new studio theatre called the Linbury Theatre, and much more public space. The inclusion of the adjacent old Floral Hall, long a part of the old Covent Garden Market but in general disrepair for many years, into the actual opera house created a new and extensive public gathering place. The venue is now claimed by the ROH to be the most modern theatre facility in Europe.
Events in the history of opera at Covent Garden after 1945 are covered in the article on the Royal Opera.
After a revealing TV fly-on-the-wall documentary, The House, that coincided with the run-up to the rebuilding (and closure) of the Opera House during Jeremy Isaacs' tenure as general director, it was evident that much effort was required to revitalize the finances and prospects of the Opera House. Isaacs resigned a year early, protesting about a lack of subsidy although he had helped to raise much of the funding needed for the major refurbishment that took place. This eventually cost £216m including £78.5m lottery money but a temporary opera house to operate during the period of closure never happened and the pre-closure box office receipts proved disappointing.
Genista McIntosh, his successor, found the job too stressful and also resigned in 1997, causing quite a challenge for the new Labour Culture Secretary, Chris Smith. Following a meeting with Lord Chadlington, the chairman, Smith agreed that Mary Allen, then Secretary General of the Arts Council, should take over. She did so briefly, but her appointment was controversial (and broke the Arts Council's own guidelines) and she also resigned in 1998, after a critical Select Committee report into the mismanagement of funds over the previous years. This triggered a complete clear-out of the board, including Lord Chadlington.
Allen, who as Secretary General of the Arts Council of England had a leading role in authorising the Opera House's regular funding agreement and approving the National Lottery grant, has written a book, A House Divided, recording her perspectives on the events and personalities involved.
Lord Chadlington was succeeded as chairman by Sir Colin Southgate who, with a new chief executive, managed to bring the house back from a financial brink and to see the refurbished house opened. Teething troubles in the new house began to be resolved under the directorship of American Michael Kaiser, who has since moved on to direct the Kennedy Center in Washington DC (and who, revealingly, made clear that he was not interested in taking over the same post at the Met in New York when it became vacant in 2006).
However, the Floral Hall's conversion to use as a magnificent dining and drinking space pre-theatre and during intervals, combined with the construction of additional (more affordable) seating at the back of the old amphitheatre, has helped to attract new and younger audiences and added pizazz to what had come to be seen as an all-too-venerable institution.
And after years of disruption and personality conflicts, the arrival of an exciting new music director, Antonio Pappano, young and British notwithstanding his Italian roots, preceded by a new chief executive in May 2001, Tony Hall (formerly of the BBC) has widened the attractions of the company's productions and pulled in new talent that keeps the house full almost all the time. However, full houses are not enough to pay for the opera house.
Funding remains an issue in a country which is only gradually learning how to attract the private sponsorship for opera that its elite image makes essential, despite the huge allocation of public funds (£25m per year as of 2006) to its support. The re-involvement of key fund-raisers such as Lord Sainsbury of Preston Candover and Dame Vivien Duffield has proved central to this endeavour. The failure of Alberto Vilar to pay money he pledged to the Royal Opera House has, however, resulted in removal of his name from the young artists' programme and the Floral Hall, which had been named after him.
The management has been innovative in a variety of ways: the provision of large-screen relays of live performances not only to the public in the Covent Garden Market area, but also to other parts of the country, seems to have proved a success.
1660 establishments | Grade I listed buildings in London | Opera houses in the United Kingdom | Opera houses | Opera in London | Theatres in London | Westminster
Royal Opera House | Royal Opera House | Royal Opera House | בית האופרה המלכותית, קובנט גארדן | Royal Opera House | ロイヤル・オペラ・ハウス | Royal Opera House
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