The Romanian Opera was officially opened on 18 September 1919, simultaneously with the
National Theatre and the Gheorghe Dima Music Academy. On 13–14 May 1920 the first two performances - 2
symphonic concerts - were conducted there by Czech conductor
Oskar Nebdal. The first opera performance took place on 25 May 1920 with the Romanian version
Giuseppe Verdi's
Aida, with
Alfred Novak as conductor, and
Constantin Pavel as stage director. Famous artists of the early days of the institution include Constantin Pavel, the first director of the institution and the first tenor to sing the role of Radames in the Cluj-Napoca Romanian Opera, Italian conductor
Egisto Tango, composer
Tiberiu Brediceanu, baritone
Dimitrie Popovici-Bayreuth. The Romanian Opera managed to establish in a very short period of time a very good and prolific artistic team. In just its first 2 years (1919–1921), it staged 99 performances, including
Giuseppe Verdi's
Aida,
Charles Gounod's
Faust,
Giacomo Puccini's
Madama Butterfly,
Nicolae Bretan's
Luceafărul,
Pietro Mascagni's
Cavalleria rusticana,
Richard Wagner's
Tannhäuser and 15
symphonic concerts of the Opera's own orchestra. In 1940, as a result of the
Second Vienna Award, the Opera, like other Romanian institutions, had to move to the Romanian part of a divided
Transylvania. While the
local university moved to
Sibiu, the Romanian Opera moved to
Timișoara and became
Cluj-Napoca Romanian State Opera at Timișoara (). In December 1945, at the end of
World War II, as Cluj became again part of Romania, the Opera returns to Cluj and restarted its activity. During its existence, the Cluj-Napoca Romanian Opera staged more than 200 operas, operettas and ballets from all over the world and more than 40 Romanian performance art-forms, including the premieres of
George Enescu's
Oedipe and
Sigismund Toduță's
Meșterul Manole. The Cluj-Napoca Romanian Opera established itself as an important European opera company, due to prestigious artistic tours in
Italy (more than 22 tours starting from 1971), the
Netherlands,
France,
Germany,
Belgium,
Luxembourg,
Austria,
England,
Switzerland,
Turkey,
Bulgaria,
Ukraine, then-
Czechoslovakia, etc.. ==Building==