Opera Scotland

Inés de Castro returns!

Posted 21 Jan 2015

Acclaimed Scottish composer, James MacMillan will conduct his opera, Inés de Castro for the first time at performances in Glasgow and Edinburgh this January. Hailed "a major triumph" when it was premiered by Scottish Opera in 1996, this new production has given MacMillan the chance to revisit, and refine, the original score.

There are to be only four performances - wonder enough, when a second run for any new opera is rare.  OperaScotland cannot recommend this work too highly.

Composer and conductor, James MacMillan said: "In the 20 years that have lapsed since composing the work I have been able to rethink some of it for this revival, and I hope that it will communicate even more strongly second time round. Inés was my first large-scale theatrical work and I've been able to bring subsequent experience, in terms of theatrical pacing, musical expression and various different approaches to music drama, to bear on the way I approached the trimmings and tightenings that I now feel were necessary for Inés.

"I am proud to be able to work with Scotland's national opera company, Scottish Opera, and I hope that our performances will draw our audiences into the drama and emotion of this great, tragic love story from long ago."

Based on the play by Jo Clifford – itself rooted in historical events – Inés de Castro tells the tragic and horrifying story of Inés, Spanish mistress to the Portuguese crown prince, who finds herself in a nightmare of deadly political and personal intrigue as the two kingdoms go to war. Director, Olivia Fuchs' new production explores the idea of 'the enemy within' and is inspired by the 1970s dictatorships of South America, Spain and Portugal - societies characterised by torture, oppression and civil rights abuse - and the staging reflects a world of concrete, steel and ash.

Stephanie Corley (Pirates of Penzance, 2013) returns to Scottish Opera to sing the role of Inés, while former Royal Opera House principal Peter Wedd makes his debut with the Company. Soprano Susannah Glanville, praised for singing with "rapturous intensity" (Tosca 2012), sings Blanca. Paul Carey Jones, whose performances with Scottish Opera in Hansel & Gretel were hailed as "outstanding", will sing the role of scheming Pacheco, while world-renowned bass Brindley Sherratt takes on the role of the King. 

Check out performance details in our listings and click through to book here.

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