In 1996 a drop in world oil prices caused Caltex NZ to cut back its support of the company, and
Creative New Zealand reduced its funding in 1997 and 1998. Wellington City Opera began to look at other sponsorship arrangements. In 1995
Auckland Opera had renamed itself Opera New Zealand, which gave the impression that Wellington City Opera and Canterbury Opera were regional companies. To counter that perception Wellington City Opera renamed itself The National Opera of Wellington in February 1998, with that year's production,
La bohème, its first at the
St. James Theatre, a venue that cost twice as much to hire as the Opera House.
La bohème had a young cast, with Sarah Hills and Jae-Woo Kim as Mimi and Rodolfo, and
Jonathan Lemalu in his professional opera debut as Colline. It was theatre director
Colin McColl's first opera, and the contemporary setting prompted one critic to call it "Puccini as
Trainspotting". Popular and successful, it was followed later that year by Verdi's
Otello, with seasoned performers Suzanne Prain and her real-life husband
Christopher Doig, in a rare return to the stage, as Desdemona and Othello (They had previously appeared together as Mimi and Rodolfo in the 1991 production of
La bohème). The production was seen as competent and traditional, but made a loss. Financial circumstances forced the company to cut one of its three planned 1999 productions.
Mozart's The Magic Flute opened in March 1999, with Debbie Wai Kapohe as Pamina and Mark Pedrotti as Papageno; it used the sets and costumes from the 1996 Canterbury Opera production. In October it was followed by a very successful co-production with Canterbury Opera of
Madame Butterfly, with Patrick Power (Pinkerton) and
Malvina Major (Butterfly). Butterfly's mother was played by Heather Taylor, who had played the title role in the company's 1983 production of the same opera. Directed by Phillip Mann, it was the last production of The National Opera of Wellington as an independent company. In 1999 the company merged with Auckland-based Opera New Zealand to form a new national opera company, which launched on 15 October 1999 as
The National Business Review New Zealand Opera (the
National Business Review had paid $1,000,000 for naming rights for the next three years). The Wellington chorus was renamed The Chapman Tripp Opera Chorus, and The National Opera of Wellington became a support organisation to manage its investment in New Zealand Opera. The first production of the new merged company was
Aida in 2000. == References ==