Melbourne Opera Presents The Ring Cycle Cultural Festival

The festival runs 24 March – 30 April.

By: Feb. 01, 2023
Enter Your Email to Unlock This Article

Plus, get the best of BroadwayWorld delivered to your inbox, and unlimited access to our editorial content across the globe.




Existing user? Just click login.

Melbourne Opera Presents The Ring Cycle Cultural Festival

Made possible by Melbourne's most distinguished and committed arts patrons led by Patron in Chief Lady Primrose Potter, Melbourne Opera will present The Ring Cycle Cultural Festival, a regional Australian first coming to Bendigo in March-April.

The festival presents three Ring Cycles alongside recitals featuring star-singers, gala dinners on stage, talks, exhibitions and a full day Wagner symposium. All four Ring operas will be staged in full at the acoustically impressive Ulumbarra Theatre, and will be conducted by Wagner specialist Anthony Negus and David Kram AM. Drawing attention from international opera lovers, over half of the full cycle tickets have already been sold, including 30% to interstate and international buyers.

The company began tackling the Ring Cycle in 2021, staging the first two of the four Ring operas in full over two years, to resounding critical and public acclaim. Melbourne Opera's staging is the first entirely Australian generated production since 1913.

The not-for-profit arts organisation's $5 million production will employ over 250 Australian singers, musicians, creatives and technicians. The exclusively regional production is expected to drive major tourism to Bendigo with three full Ring Cycles performed over six weeks from 24 March - 30 April.

Australian opera goers and curious new audience members most recently had a final chance to preview Melbourne Opera's Ring via a special Sunday performance of Siegfried in Concert. The concert featured the 90-piece Melbourne Opera Orchestra, and directly followed Wagner specialist conductor Anthony Negus' highly successful productions of Die Walküre with the English National Opera at London's famed Colosseum, and at his famous Longborough Festival Opera.

A superb Australian cast has been assembled for The Ring Cycle Cultural Festival, many of whom also appeared in Melbourne Opera's Siegfried in Concert last September and past Ring productions.

Warwick Fyfe will reprise his role as Wotan alongside Antoinette Halloran and Zara Barrett as Brünnhilde. Bradley Daley will appear as Siegfried, Lee Abrahmsen as Sieglinde and Freia, Simon Meadows as Alberich, James Egglestone as Siegmund and Loge, and Adrian Tamburini as Hunding and Hagen. Steven Gallop as Fafner, Deborah Humble as Erda, and Rosamund Illing as Gerhilde and a Norn rounds out the magnificent cast of performers.

Anthony Negus describes how Siegfried's score references The Ring's first opera Das Rheingold, which he travelled to Australia to conduct at the Regent Theatre in February 2021.

"The mysterious opening over a long deep timpani roll and Mime's brooding bassoon thirds leads into a reliving of the great build up in Rheingold scene four, where the gold is brought up to Wotan and Loge by the Nibelungs," says Negus.

Siegfried follows a quest for identity, culminating in the third act; "there is an enormous exhilaration to this closing scene in which Brunnhilde's resistance is finally conquered, and the mountain top is bathed in blazing C major light," says Negus.

The Ring Cycle Cultural Festival features an all-Australian cast accompanied by internationally acclaimed singers, and led by creatively gifted director, Suzanne Chaundy. Suzanne is excited to crown her immense staggered staging of Wagner's epic Ring with an even bigger undertaking, a season of three full cycles. She discussed her direction of Siegfried, ahead of the concert performance.

"Siegfried emerges - both literally and metaphorically - from darkness to light as he pieces together who he is and meets his destiny. We will tell this tale as an adult fairy-tale, full of mythical horror and deep-seated psychological yearning," says Chaundy.

Wagner's Ring totals 17 hours of stage time across four operas, and is known to be the inspiration behind many great themes, stories and soundtracks across the ages. The plot is understood to have inspired Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, and the score includes highlights such as Siegfried's Rhine Journey and Funeral March, Wotan's Farewell and the infamous Ride of the Valkyries, known to modern audiences for its memorable use in iconic films such as Apocalypse Now.

Each Ring Cycle will be performed over two weekends at the Ulumbarra Theatre, encouraging longer stays in the booming Bendigo region, which has hosted a range of international arts and culture exhibitions and events in recent years.

Melbourne Opera continues its successes as one of Australia's busiest opera companies with Mozart by Moonlight in the Royal Botanic Gardens in partnership with Australian Shakespeare Company in February.




Videos