Phantom of the Opera returns to Sydney Harbour amid Opera Australia woes
The season will kick off the beloved Andrew Lloyd Webber musical's 40th anniversary year in March and promises a lucrative box office – the 2022 Handa Opera on the Harbour season sold 61,580 tickets, despite being dogged by wild rain and unpredictable weather, narrowly missing the record 65,000 tickets sold to West Side Story in 2019.
It comes at a crucial time for the national opera company, which posted a $10 million operating deficit this year, following disappointing returns for its 2024 production of Sunset Boulevard.
Opera Australia chair Rod Sims said that when the results were released in May, the company was committed to 'better programming', trimming procurement costs and 'taking a stronger look at musicals'.
'We'll need to be sure of their financial success, and if we can't be, we just won't do them [musicals]. We won't be taking the sort of risks we took with Sunset Boulevard, so that won't happen again,' he said.
However, the return of the Simon Phillips-directed production of Phantom of the Opera is a surefire winner – at the time of its premiere season, Herald critic Lenny Ann Low gave it four stars.
'Watching this fantastical, old-school stage spectacle outdoors, with a backdrop of twinkling planes, bats soaring overhead and the reflections in the harbour of glowing skyscrapers, is simply glorious,' she wrote.
'Director Simon Phillips and conductor Guy Simpson have charged Andrew Lloyd Webber's best-known work with a thrilling force that merges grandeur, nuance and old-fashioned fun.'
She said: 'Georgina Hopson shines as Christine Daaé' while Joshua Robson as the Phantom brought 'lusty fury and sinewy heartbreak to the role'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
7 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Don't miss this marriage made in heaven
The Marriage of Figaro Opera Australia Sydney Opera House, July 31 Reviewed by PETER McCALLUM ★★★★★ Driven by a minute focus on the follies of human motivation that unsettle the rigid force fields of class, gender and power, David McVicar's 2015 production of Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro has become a jewel in Opera Australia's repertoire. It is helped in no small way by Jenny Tiramani's design, which incrementally places each act in a closet, a bedroom, a grand hall and the great outdoors, and clothes the characters in the warm drabness of unbleached fabric. At the start and end of each act, female servants run to draw a large fraying curtain, like an aging window drape that doesn't really conceal anything, while the army of prying servants primarily occupy themselves with eavesdropping through the nearest keyhole. It somehow becomes heartwarming that things always go wrong and to see the lies piled upon lies in the great act two finale collapse into joyous chaos. Yet this on its own would not sustain this revival were it not for an equally bejewelled cast in which each character is defined and refined by distinctive vocal fabric. Each number enveloped the listener anew in the bright freshness of Mozart's seemingly endless melodic inspiration. With the single word ' Cinque' ('Five' – he is measuring a bed) baritone Michael Sumuel established a robust, rich vocal presence that immediately caught the ear. His Non piu andrai at the end of act one had well-edged articulation and buoyant rhythmic vigour, and he animated the stage throughout with naturally responsive musical and dramatic energy, as though always on the brink of some new lame idea. As Susanna, Siobhan Stagg was the musical opposite, establishing the character with the simple beauty and attractiveness of her voice. It had ample power when needed but was at its most touching in moments like her act four aria, Deh vieni,sung in front of the curtain, where she revealed hidden soft lights against the orchestra's transparently coloured wind solos. Against such honest straightforward tones, it fell to Kiandra Howarth to find a new sound for the Countess's woe. In her act two aria, Porgi amor, she insinuated a loftier shade, swelling to blushing colour yet always with an immaculately smooth surface, and developed these shades with further depth and nuance in Dove sono in act three.

The Age
7 hours ago
- The Age
Don't miss this marriage made in heaven
The Marriage of Figaro Opera Australia Sydney Opera House, July 31 Reviewed by PETER McCALLUM ★★★★★ Driven by a minute focus on the follies of human motivation that unsettle the rigid force fields of class, gender and power, David McVicar's 2015 production of Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro has become a jewel in Opera Australia's repertoire. It is helped in no small way by Jenny Tiramani's design, which incrementally places each act in a closet, a bedroom, a grand hall and the great outdoors, and clothes the characters in the warm drabness of unbleached fabric. At the start and end of each act, female servants run to draw a large fraying curtain, like an aging window drape that doesn't really conceal anything, while the army of prying servants primarily occupy themselves with eavesdropping through the nearest keyhole. It somehow becomes heartwarming that things always go wrong and to see the lies piled upon lies in the great act two finale collapse into joyous chaos. Yet this on its own would not sustain this revival were it not for an equally bejewelled cast in which each character is defined and refined by distinctive vocal fabric. Each number enveloped the listener anew in the bright freshness of Mozart's seemingly endless melodic inspiration. With the single word ' Cinque' ('Five' – he is measuring a bed) baritone Michael Sumuel established a robust, rich vocal presence that immediately caught the ear. His Non piu andrai at the end of act one had well-edged articulation and buoyant rhythmic vigour, and he animated the stage throughout with naturally responsive musical and dramatic energy, as though always on the brink of some new lame idea. As Susanna, Siobhan Stagg was the musical opposite, establishing the character with the simple beauty and attractiveness of her voice. It had ample power when needed but was at its most touching in moments like her act four aria, Deh vieni,sung in front of the curtain, where she revealed hidden soft lights against the orchestra's transparently coloured wind solos. Against such honest straightforward tones, it fell to Kiandra Howarth to find a new sound for the Countess's woe. In her act two aria, Porgi amor, she insinuated a loftier shade, swelling to blushing colour yet always with an immaculately smooth surface, and developed these shades with further depth and nuance in Dove sono in act three.

The Age
6 days ago
- The Age
‘Sydney is not a shallow city': Major change for Sydney Writers' Festival
The Sydney Writers' Festival will deliver year-round storytelling at a new dedicated literature hub to be established at Australia's oldest library amid warnings that without paid speaking gigs professional writing will become an unviable occupation within 20 years. Almost 30 years after launching at the State Library of NSW in 1997, the festival is to become a resident company of the Macquarie Street institution in the same way that Opera Australia performs mostly in the Concert Hall of the Sydney Opera House. Arts Minister John Graham has awarded $1.5 million to the writers' festival for the first year for events at the library – outside its one-week annual May festival at Carriageworks – starting from September. The investment precedes the upcoming launch of the state's writing and literature strategy – the first time an Australian government has put together a comprehensive plan to support writing and literature, Graham said. 'I see Sydney as a city of ideas. I don't accept that Sydney is a shallow city,' he said. 'We've got some of the best writers, some of the most engaged readers and writers and, with the library and the festival working together, it will strengthen both institutions.' Festival-led talks and events at the library will rise from the current trial of six to 10 a year to between 75 and 80 events annually, confirming the library as the festival's second home. It's all part of the evolution of the writers' festival into a literary institution that conducts year-round events programs for local and international thinkers and a platform for new and diverse voices in the manner of Melbourne's Wheeler Centre. 'That's huge growth for Sydney Writers' Festival, and presents increased opportunities and access both for the literature sector and for NSW,' the festival's chief executive Brooke Webb said. 'There are shrinking paid opportunities for writers right now and, if we don't address this now, in 20 years' time writing just won't be a viable choice for people.' In Australia, writers are among the poorest paid creatives, earning on average $18,500 a year, yet reading and writing remain vital to personal wellbeing, and economic and social prosperity.