The Savonlinna Opera Festival has grown into an internationally recognised festival lasting a month. Each year it performs to a total audience of around 60,000, an estimated quarter of whom come from abroad. Each year the Festival has, in addition to staging leading works from classical operatic repertoire, staged its own productions.
Premieres Thirteen operas have been premiered at the Savonlinna Opera Festival since 1967:
The Horseman (1975),
The King Goes Forth to France (1984, commissioned jointly by
Covent Garden and the BBC),
The Palace (1995) and
Linna vedessä (2017) by
Aulis Sallinen,
The Knife (1989) by
Paavo Heininen,
Aleksis Kivi (1997) by
Einojuhani Rautavaara,
The Age of Dreams (2000–2001) by Herman Rechberger,
Olli Kortekangas and
Kalevi Aho,
Koirien Kalevala (2004) by
Jaakko Kuusisto,
Hui kauhistus (2006) by
Jukka Linkola,
Isän tyttö (2007) by Olli Kortekangas,
Seitsemän koiraveljestä (2008) by
Markus Fagerudd,
La Fenice (2012) by
Kimmo Hakola, and
Norppaooppera (2013) by Timo-Juhani Kyllönen.
Visits by foreign opera companies For over a decade, the Savonlinna Opera Festival has hosted foreign opera companies: The first of these was the
Estonia Theatre from
Tallinn. This was followed for the next three seasons by the world-famous
Mariinsky (Kirov) Theatre from
St. Petersburg, by
Covent Garden from
London in 1998, the
Opéra national du Rhin from
Strasbourg in 1999, the
New Israeli Opera in 2000,
Los Angeles Opera in 2001, the
Deutsche Oper am Rhein in 2002, and the Choir and Orchestra of the
Municipal Theatre of Santiago in 2003, with a staging of
Sergio Ortega's
Fulgor y Muerte de Joaquín Murieta, after a libretto by
Nobel Prize winner
Pablo Neruda. The
Welsh National Opera (UK) performed Nabucco and Manon Lescaut at the festival in 2014. ==See also==