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Arts

15 February, 2024

Martha on stage this weekend

Lyster Theatre Company opens its 2024 season in Inglewood this Saturday with the performance of Martha. It will be the company's first ever performance on the stage of Inglewood Town Hall on Saturday night. Opera in four acts, by Friedrich von...


Martha on stage this weekend - feature photo

Lyster Theatre Company opens its 2024 season in Inglewood this Saturday with the performance of Martha.

It will be the company's first ever performance on the stage of Inglewood Town Hall on Saturday night.

Opera in four acts, by Friedrich von Flotow; words by Wilhelm Friedrich Riese, the plot based on a French ballet pantomime by Jules H. Vernoy and Marquis St. Georges (see p. 559). Produced at the Imperial Opera House, Vienna, November 25, 1847. Covent Garden, London, July 1, 1858, in Italian; in English at Drury Lane, October 11, 1858. Paris, Théâtre Lyrique, December 16, 1865, when was interpolated the famous air "M’Appari," from Flotow’s two-act opera, "L’Ame en Peine," produced at the Grand Opéra, Paris, June, 1846. New York, Niblo’s Garden, November 1, 1852, with Mme. Anna Bishop; in French, at New Orleans, January 27, 1860.

Lyster Opera derives its name from William Saurin Lyster (1828-1880), an Irish born entrepreneur who made it his mission to provide opera to the growing population of Australia.

Under Lyster’s auspices, Australians were given their first taste of operatic composers as diverse as Mozart, Donizetti, Auber, Meyerbeer and Wagner. Local stars such as Marie Carandini and Fanny Simonsen brought these works to a new public. Lyster’s extraordinary life and career were documented by Harold Love in his book The Golden Age of Australian Opera (Currency Press, 1981) and today the Melbourne suburb of Lysterfield is named in his honour.

Today, Lyster Opera perpetuates this vision by bringing opera to new audiences, often in remote areas. Since 2018, Lyster Opera has toured productions of Mozart’s Don Giovanni, Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’Amore and Don Pasquale to areas such as Tarnagulla, Avoca, Daylesford, Warrnambool, Albury-Wodonga and Oxley. These country performances have been augmented by performances at various Melbourne venues. Some of Melbourne’s finest singers, musical directors and designers have been engaged.

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