The company was founded in 1972 by a group that included Edward T. Peter and the conductors
Kurt Frederick (the company's first music director), and James Bratcher. Bratcher, a former tenor and later choral conductor, served as the company's artistic and music director from 1979 to 1987 and again in the mid-1990s. The company's first production,
Così fan tutte, was staged in January 1973 in the
University of New Mexico's Popejoy Hall. From the early 1980s, the newly restored
KiMo Theater was a regular performing venue for the company. In 2009, the Opera Southwest received the Albuquerque Arts Alliance Bravo Award and concluded its season at the KiMo Theatre with the company's first performance of
Lucia di Lammermoor. It now performs at the Albuquerque Journal Theatre (part of the
National Hispanic Cultural Center) where it stages two to three opera productions per year. While the majority of Opera Southwest's productions have been from the standard operatic repertoire, the company has regularly presented both new and relatively rarely performed works. These include:
Bononcini's
Polifemo (1982), a
zarzuela double bill of
Ruperto Chapí's
La revoltosa and Tomás Bretón's
La verbena de la Paloma (1993), revivals of
Henry Mollicone's
The Starbird and
The Face on the Barroom Floor (2004/2005), Rossini's
Otello (2012), and Franco Faccio's
Amleto (2014). The first of the three performances of
Otello presented both the original and the alternative "happy" ending. Prior to the second and third performances, the audience voted for the ending they preferred, and the chosen version was then performed. On 26 October 2014, Faccio's forgotten opera
Amleto was given its American premiere and its first fully staged performance in 143 years by Opera Southwest. The performances were conducted by Anthony Barrese using a critical edition of the score which he had reconstructed from Faccio's original manuscript. In 2015, the production was nominated for the
International Opera Awards in the Rediscovered Work category. ==World premieres==