World and U.S. Premieres
Opera Omaha is internationally known for its productions of world and U.S. premieres of a number of classical and modern works:
1988: The company staged the U.S. premiere of the 1730
George Frideric Handel opera seria
Partenope under music director
John DeMain and stage director Stephen Wadsworth.
1988: The company staged the U.S. premiere of the 1967
Udo Zimmermann piece
Weiße Rose under music director
John DeMain and stage director Stephen Wadsworth.
1992: The company staged the world premiere of "Autumn Valentine: Dorothy Parker's General Review of the Sex Situation." The New York Times called it "an unclassifiable collaboration by Angelina Reaux and Michael Sokol, singers;
Ricky Ian Gordon, composer and pianist; and
Keith Warner as director."
1992: The company presented the world premiere of the 1959
Hugo Weisgall work
The Gardens of Adonis, based on the eponymous poem by William Shakespeare. It was staged by Opera Omaha's associate artistic director at the time,
Keith Warner. Soprano Melanie Helton originated the "fiendishly difficult role of Venus."
1994: The company staged the world premiere of
Andrew Lloyd Webber's
Requiem Variations under the baton of Lionel Friend, who for 13 years was chief conductor of the
English National Opera. Lloyd Webber attended the final performance; the production ran for 10 performances at the
Creighton Orpheum Theater and drew a total of 21,546 people, according to an August 1994 Omaha World-Herald article. "It certainly seems that I'd like to come to Omaha and have another show again if they like me," Weber told The World-Herald.
2004: The company staged the world premiere of the locally written "Bloodlines," a work whose music and libretto were composed by Deborah Fischer Teason. Teason collaborated with students from majority-Latino
Omaha South High School on the work.
2004: The company staged the world premiere of the "Dream of the Pacific," with music by Stephen Mager and a libretto by
Elkhanah Pulitzer. == Collaboration with Jun Kaneko ==