Thomas de Mallet Burgess | |
---|---|
Born | 1964 59) UK | (age
Occupation | Opera director |
Website | demalletburgess |
Thomas de Mallet Burgess (born 1964) is a theatre, musical theatre, and opera director from the United Kingdom. He founded the Perth opera company Lost & Found, and was General Director of New Zealand Opera from 2018 to 2023 before selected as artistic director of Finnish National Opera.
Burgess grew up in Barnstaple, North Devon, where he was involved with amateur theatre. [1] He was educated at St Edmund Hall, Oxford, where he studied Philosophy and Modern Languages, graduating with a BA and MA. [2]
Burgess began his career as a theatre director in London, staging in pub venues. He went on to produce and direct works at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. [1] His first production as an opera director at around the age of 30 was a student production of Menotti's The Medium . [1] [3] As he later put it, "The first opera I directed was the first I listened to." [4]
He was Staff Director and Revival Director at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, directing Thomas Hampson in his Royal Opera House debut. [1]
He has been a visiting professor and guest director at several music academies and conservatories, including the Royal Academy of Music, California State University, Fresno, the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, and the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts. [2] In 2000–2004 he was visiting professor of Opera at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. [1]
Burgess was Creative Director at the Wexford Opera House in Ireland, now the National Opera House, Ireland's first purpose-built opera house and home of the Wexford Festival Opera. [2]
As well as directing opera, Burgess has been a theatre director in Belgium, Romania, and the UK, and has commissioned and developed plays by new Irish writers. [2]
As Education Consultant with English Touring Opera he pioneered a three-year programme on music with the Deaf Community, and worked on community outreach programmes to bring opera to deprived communities in the UK. [1] [2]
In 2012 Burgess moved to Perth, Australia, with his wife, Perth-raised soprano Fiona McAndrew, with the aim of setting up his own opera company. [3] In 2013 with conductor and musical director Christopher van Tuinen he founded Lost & Found Opera, a company which revived unusual operas and performed them in unconventional spaces, and for five years was its artistic director. [2] At the same time he was Coordinator of Cultural Services for the City of Joondalup, where he gained experience in arts administration and directed the Joondalup Festival. [1] [5]
In July 2018 Burgess was appointed General Director of New Zealand Opera, succeeding Stuart Maunder. [1] The company was in financial difficulties and needed to rebuild its relationship with sponsors and funding agencies. [6] One of Burgess's tasks was to respond to a 2015 review of the company and create a new strategic direction. [7] This involved producing smaller-scale operas in unconventional spaces, such as Wellington and Auckland productions of Eight Songs for a Mad King staged in a corporate boardroom with an audience both inside and outside, the latter listening via headphones. [1] In 2020 he staged Handel's Semele in Auckland's Holy Trinity Cathedral, with soprano Emma Pearson as Semele and Amitai Pati, in his NZ Opera debut, as Jove. [8] [9] The live performance was filmed by Rebecca Tansley from Greenstone TV and distributed internationally on DVD/Blu-Ray, winning Best Entertainment Programme at the 2022 New Zealand Television Awards. [10] [11]
As part of the new strategic direction, Burgess commissioned a comic opera based on the saga of the "unruly tourists", a group of British travellers who were the focus of a New Zealand media frenzy in the summer of 2019. [12] The novel production attracted much media attention and controversy, and a six-part Stuff documentary series, Unruly, was commissioned to follow the course of the production. [13] [14] In 2021 three New Zealand Opera board members resigned, stating concerns about New Zealand Opera's general artistic direction, and the staging of new operas at the expense of the standard repertoire. [15] Burgess stated that "opera as a global form must be supporting the writing of new operas if the art form is to remain relevant to time and place." [15]
In October 2022 Burgess was selected as the new artistic director of Finnish National Opera, taking up the position on 1 August 2023. [16]
Burgess's career as an opera director has focussed on making opera relevant and accessible. He believes opera needs to remain vibrant and alive: "It may be a controversial view, but I believe some operas, even beloved ones, should be shelved, at least for the time being—even though a lot of people simply want productions they already know and love.…New generations shouldn't feel they need carry the baggage from the past 200 years into the present and instead should look at creating new works." [15] [17]
Burgess has worked extensively in opera for over 30 years, directing productions for the Royal Opera House Covent Garden, Wexford Festival Opera, the Canadian Opera Company, Malmö Opera, English Touring Opera, and Opera Ireland, amongst others. Some of the productions he has directed include: [2] [18]
Semele is a 'musical drama', originally presented "after the manner of an oratorio", in three parts by George Frideric Handel. Based on an existing opera libretto by William Congreve, the work is an opera in all but name but was first presented in concert form at Covent Garden theatre on 10 February 1744. The story comes from Ovid's Metamorphoses and concerns Semele, mother of Bacchus. Handel also referred to the work as 'The Story of Semele'. The work contains the famous aria "Where'er you walk".
Pinchgut Opera is a chamber opera company in Sydney, Australia, presenting opera from the 17th and 18th centuries performed on period instruments. Founded in 2002, Pinchgut stages two operas each year in Sydney's City Recital Hall. It also performs concerts in both Sydney and Melbourne.
Wexford Festival Opera is an opera festival that takes place in the town of Wexford in south-eastern Ireland during the months of October and November.
The Royal New Zealand Ballet is a ballet company based in Wellington, New Zealand. It was originally known as The New Zealand Ballet Company.
Paolo Rotondo is a New Zealand director, writer and actor of stage and screen.
New Zealand Opera is New Zealand's only full-time professional opera company, formed in 2000 from the merger of companies in Auckland and Wellington. New Zealand Opera is headquartered in Parnell, Auckland, stages several productions a year, runs educational programmes, and supports early-career opera singers with the Dame Malvina Major Foundation.
Formerly known as Auckland Festival, Auckland Arts Festival or Te Ahurei Toi o Tāmaki Makaurau is an annual arts and cultural festival held in Auckland, New Zealand. The Festival features works from New Zealand, the Pacific, Asia and beyond, including world premieres of new works and international performing arts events.
Colin William McColl is a New Zealand director in theatre, opera and television. He is a leading figure in the world of professional theatre in the country, winning numerous awards as well as working internationally with major national companies. McColl's career spans more than 30 years in the performing arts where he has also been an actor and a producer. He has won Best Director at the Chapman Tripp Theatre Awards three times, received the prestigious Arts Laureate Award in 2007 and was made an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit in 2010. McColl was born in Lower Hutt in Wellington, the country's capital.
Simon Prast is a director and actor from Auckland, New Zealand. Prast was the founder of the Auckland Theatre Company and director of the first Auckland Festival AK03.
Lindy Hume is an Australian opera and festival director, who has worked throughout Australia and internationally.
Pop-up Globe was a New Zealand theatre production company, based in Auckland, New Zealand. It produced Jacobean theatre, particularly the works of Shakespeare, in specially-built temporary replicas of the second Globe, the theatre Shakespeare and his company built and used. The company’s theatre is the world's first full-scale reconstruction of the Second Globe Theatre (1614–44).
Tomer Zvulun is an Israeli stage director. Since 2013 he is the General and Artistic Director of Atlanta Opera.
Miles Gregory is a New Zealand / UK theatre director and theatrical producer.
Raymond Benjamin Thomas Hawthorne is a New Zealand theatre director, and is regarded as one of the country's most senior performing arts practitioners.
That Bloody Woman is a 2015 punk-rock musical written by Luke Di Somma and Gregory Cooper. It is based on the life of Kate Sheppard and charts the suffragism struggle in New Zealand and its opposition by Richard Seddon. The musical was commissioned by Christchurch Arts Festival and premiered there in August 2015. It played in Auckland and Christchurch in 2016, and toured New Plymouth, Wellington and Dunedin in 2017. An original cast recording was made and released in 2016. A production is planned in Dunedin for July 2021.
Nisha Madhan is a New Zealand actor, director and producer with experience in film, theatre and television. She appeared on the New Zealand soap opera Shortland Street for three years. She is a regular performer in theatres in New Zealand and has appeared both nationally and internationally in theatre productions including with the Indian Ink Theatre Company. Madhan has also created, produced and directed theatre shows including co-creating and directing the award-winning Working On My Night Moves.
John Campbell Thomas was a New Zealand theatre director, designer and artist. He was based at the Dallas Theater Center in Texas from 1964 to 1984, before returning to New Zealand where he was Artistic Director at the Fortune Theatre, Dunedin, between 1985 and 1999.
Silo Theatre is a theatre production company based in Auckland, and was established in 1997.
Jason Te Kare is a New Zealand director, playwright and actor.
Helen Medlyn is a New Zealand mezzo-soprano opera singer, musical theatre actor, media producer and gardener. She is particularly known for her comic roles and for her cabaret performances.