Connecticut Opera was a professional, non-profit, opera company based inHartford, Connecticut, and a member ofOPERA America. The company presented three fully staged opera productions during an annual season. It was founded in 1942 under the directorship ofFrank Pandolfi and was the sixth oldest professional opera company in the United States.[1] Pandolfi served as general manager of the company for 32 years and brought most of the major international opera stars of that time to Hartford. The first opera produced wasCarmen which opened in theBushnell Theatre on April 14, 1942, and starredmezzo-soprano Winifred Heidt in the title role. Connecticut Opera went on to feature opera stars such asPlácido Domingo,Beverly Sills,Risë Stevens, andMary Dunleavy.
After Pandolfi left the company, Connecticut Opera shifted direction, moving away from the star system towards hiring young and talented rising artists. The company also became interested in cutting-edge theatrical sets, lighting, costumes, and other technical areas of theater before such a move became in vogue within the opera world. In the mid-1970s, the company founded Opera Express, an award-winning touring company that focused on bringing operatic programs to more than 3 million youths, seniors, and disadvantaged citizens in the region. During the early 1980s, Connecticut Opera received national and international recognition through pioneer arena productions ofAida andTurandot.
In the spring of 1999, the board of trustees embarked on an aggressive path of growth and re-invention for the company. This change in direction was marked by a change in management structure as well. The artistic and administrative activities of the company were split. A single General Director was replaced with a management team headed by Artistic Director, Willie Anthony Waters, and managing director, Maria Levy (a position later held by Linda Jackson).[2]
In February 2009, after 67 seasons, Connecticut Opera closed down. Citing adverse economic conditions, John E. Kreitler, chairman of the opera board toldThe Hartford Courant:
"We have ceased business and we are trying to work out the arrangements with our secured creditor about what will be done with our very few remaining assets."[3][4]
By its final season, Connecticut Opera had a yearly budget of about $2 million and 2,000 subscribers. Ticket prices for its performances ranged from $25 to $100. Their last production wasDon Giovanni, which opened at the Palace Theater inWaterbury, Connecticut, on November 8, 2008. The poor turnout for that production coupled with the drying up of corporate and individual donations led to the company's bank accounts being frozen.[5] The final two productions of the 2008–09 season were to have beenThe Daughter of the Regiment andLa bohème.