WILL OPERA SINK OR SING?
Published:
14 September 1999 y., Tuesday
Thanks to debts that have ballooned to 1.76 million lats ($3 million), the Latvian National Opera announced that it may be forced to suspend performances before the end of the year. At a news conference Sept. 7, Indra Lukina, the operais acting director, said there is no way the opera can repay its debt to the Latvian government, which has been accumulating for two years. In addition, she said 600 opera employees have yet to draw their wages for last month. Already, several planned new productions for this season, which opens Sept. 17, have been scrapped. Only a production of Prokofievis ballet "Romeo and Juliet" will go on as planned, since the opera company is already well into rehearsals. Money for guest artists has dried up as well, Lukina said. The Latvian National Opera has received high praise in recent years, including kudos from foreign observers and publications. This yearis opera festival was heralded by organizers as a grand success; opera buffs from Sweden, Germany and Russia have already expressed interest in participating in future events. Lukina said there have been thoughts about changing the status of the opera from a state-run institution to a joint-stock company, a move that would require the opera to change its name.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Madonna recently signed a five book publishing deal with Calloway Editions
more »
143 films from around the world will grace the city's screens, when this year's NatFilm festival gets underway in Copenhagen
more »
Today Kaunas Music Theatre is the second largest theatre in Lithuania
more »
The EU has enlisted the help of celebrities from entertainment and sport in its initiative that seeks to educate young people on the dangers of smoking
more »
Latvian Television has named Riga’s Skonto Hall as the venue for the 2002 Eurovision Song Contest
more »
Little by little the most exciting and the most merry of all summer holidays is drawing nearer.
more »
Lithuania is rich with ancient traditions and the Lithuanian language is most archaic one in Europe. Pagan faith is reviving now.
more »
Poland plans Warsaw museum on Polish Jewish history
more »
British author J.K. Rowling, scribe of the immensely popular Harry Potter series, has wed for the second time.
more »
Admitted Killer's Role in Kandahar Film Outrages Victim's Family
more »