Recovered Voices project The company's multi-year project Recovered Voices, begun during the 2006–2007 season, is dedicated to presenting little known operas by the lost generation of composers whose lives and careers were cut short by the
Third Reich. To date, the company has presented
Alexander von Zemlinsky's
Eine florentinische Tragödie (
An Italian Tragedy) and
Der Zwerg (
The Dwarf), the U.S. premiere of
Viktor Ullmann's
Der zerbrochene Krug (
The Broken Jug),
Walter Braunfels'
Die Vögel (
The Birds) and the U.S. premiere of
Franz Schreker's
Die Gezeichneten (
The Stigmatized) as part of this mission, as well as children's performances of
Hans Krása's
Brundibár. In 2024,
Der Zwerg (
The Dwarf) was revived in a double bill with
Highway 1, USA by William Grant Still.
Der Ring des Nibelungen The company presented its first presentation of
Richard Wagner's complete
Der Ring des Nibelungen in the summer of 2010. New productions of
Das Rheingold and
Die Walküre were performed in early 2009, followed by
Siegfried (September–October 2009) and
Götterdämmerung (April 2010). Three full cycles were produced from May 29 through June 26, 2010, accompanied by the citywide
Ring Festival LA. The innovative production was directed and designed by German theater artist
Achim Freyer and conducted by
James Conlon. The principal artists included
Linda Watson,
Vitalij Kowaljow,
Michelle DeYoung,
Plácido Domingo,
John Treleaven,
Graham Clark,
Richard Paul Fink, Eric Halfvarson,
Alan Held and
Jennifer Wilson, among others. The festival drew criticism from Los Angeles County Supervisor
Michael D. Antonovich, who argued that Wagner's work was the "soundtrack to the
Holocaust", a reference to Wagner's anti-Semitic views. Wagner's music was played by guards at concentration camps and through loudspeakers. Antonovich requested that the company broaden the scope of the festival to include other classical and operatic performers, while the company argued that proper attention was made to educate festival-goers on Wagner's racist views, and that broadening the scope would be inappropriate. On a 3–1 vote, the other supervisors rejected Antonovich's motion to have the
Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors send a letter to the company to shift the focus away from Wagner. Subsequently, partly as a result of the cost of producing the
Ring, the company requested an emergency $14 million loan from the board of supervisors due to reduced sponsorships and escalating costs. The board approved the loan 4–1, with Antonovich dissenting. In January 2012, LA Opera repaid half of the loan, with the balance repaid in December 2012.
Education and Community Engagement For over 20 years, the company has produced a wide variety of education and outreach programs designed to bring opera to people of all backgrounds, from young children experiencing opera for the first time to experienced opera lovers of all ages. These include "In-School Operas" performed for and by elementary school students; full-scale student matinées and a summer "Opera Camp" for secondary school students; accredited teacher training programs; large-scale, free community performances for families; a popular lecture series for ticket holders before every mainstage performance; and open dress rehearsals for senior centers. In 2008, these programs were enjoyed by an all-time high of more than 159,000 students, teachers and community members. == Selected recordings ==