OPERA America Announces the Recipients of 2024 Repertoire Development Grants
$185,000 Awarded to Seven Companies to Develop New American Operas
OPERA America is pleased to announce the recipients of its 2024 Repertoire Development Grants.
The biennial Repertoire Development Grant program provides financial support to OPERA America Professional Company Members for the development of new American opera and music theater works. Grants allow creators and producers to refine works-in-progress by offsetting creative fees and other costs including lab productions, workshops, readings, and revisions.
“This investment in the development of new American opera is an investment in the future of the art form,” stated Marc A. Scorca, president/CEO of OPERA America. “These grants ensure the richness and diversity of the opera tradition can continue to evolve and captivate audiences now and in the future.”
A total of $185,000 was awarded to seven new works by these companies (the two works led by Calgary Opera and Pittsburgh Opera are being developed as co-productions):
- American Lyric Theater (New York, NY)
She Who Dared (Jasmine Barnes/Deborah D.E.E.P. Mouton) - Calgary Opera (Calgary, AB, Canada)
in consortium with Vancouver Opera (Vancouver, BC, Canada)
Namwayut (Ian Cusson/Parmela Attariwala/Yvette Nolan) - Des Moines Metro Opera (Des Moines, IA)
American Apollo (Damien Geter/Lila Palmer) - Long Beach Opera (Long Beach, CA)
Asunción (San Cha/McCall Cadenas) - Opera Parallèle (San Francisco, CA)
Hello, Star (Carla Lucero/Jarrod Lee) - Pittsburgh Opera (Pittsburgh, PA)
in consortium with Opera Santa Barbara (Santa Barbara, CA), Intermountain Opera Bozeman (Bozeman, MT), and Boston Conservatory at Berklee (Boston, MA)
Time to Act (working title) (Laura Kaminsky/Crystal Manich) - The Santa Fe Opera (Santa Fe, NM)
Interplanetary Opera (working title) | The Santa Fe Opera Commissions New Opera from All Indigenous Team that Takes the Question of Colonization Into Space (Brent Michael Davids/Mary Kathryn Nagle)
The 2024 Repertoire Development Grant recipients were selected from among 47 applications by a panel of industry leaders consisting of Kitty Brazelton, composer; Nataki Garrett, co-artistic director of One Nation/One Project and the national arts and health initiative #ArtsforEveryBody; Carolyn Kuan, conductor; Gene Scheer, librettist; and Mo Zhou, director.
Repertoire Development Grants are made possible through OPERA America’s Opera Fund, an endowment dedicated to supporting the creation and production of new work. The Opera Fund has helped to support new classics like Nixon in China (John Adams/Alice Goodman), Little Women (Mark Adamo), Moby-Dick (Jake Heggie/Gene Scheer), Silent Night (Kevin Puts/Mark Campbell), As One (Laura Kaminsky/Mark Campbell/Kimberly Reed), and Fellow Travelers (Gergory Spears/Greg Pierce).
Recent works supported by the Opera Fund include The Central Park Five (Anthony Davis/Richard Wesley), which premiered in 2019 and won the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for Music; Blue (Jeanine Tesori/Tazewell Thompson); Fire Shut Up in My Bones (Terence Blanchard/Kasi Lemmons); and El último sueño de Frida y Diego (Gabriela Lena Frank/Nilo Cruz). These works have met with critical acclaim and enjoyed subsequent productions at companies across the country.
OPERA America’s Opera Fund was launched by the National Endowment for the Arts, with support from the Helen F. Whitaker Fund, Lee Day Gillespie, Lloyd and Mary Ann Gerlach, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, and the George Cedric Metcalf Charitable Foundation.
The next round of Repertoire Development Grants will open in summer 2023. More information about OPERA America’s grant programs is available at operaamerica.org/Grants.