Zürich Opera House
The Zurich Opera House is the largest in Switzerland. It can accommodate 1,100 visitors. The Zurich Opera House has been led by artistic director Andreas Homoki, general music director Fabio Luisi, and ballet director Christian Spuck since 2012.
The history of the Zurich Opera House begins with the «Actien-Theater» (shared theatre), which opened in 1834 with Mozart’s «Zauberflöte». Zurich’s first permanent theatre was established in the form of a joint stock company by theatre-loving citizens. The joint stock company (today known as Opernhaus Zürich AG) still runs the institution and celebrated its 175th anniversary in 2009. The Canton of Zurich has been the main subsidiser since 1995. The old «Actien-Theater» burnt down in 1890 and was replaced by a new building designed by Fellner and Helmer. This theatre, located not far from Bellevue on Lake Zurich, was financed almost entirely by private means. It was inaugurated with Wagner’s «Lohengrin» under the name of «Stadttheater» (town theatre) in 1891. Musical theatre and drama have gone their separate ways in Zurich since 1921. The old «Stadttheater» has been known as the Opera House since 1964. Now with a seating capacity for approximately 1,100, the theatre was renovated entirely between 1982 and 1984, and an extension was added on Uto-Quai to accommodate a second, studio stage. In 1985 the opera orchestra was separated from the Tonhalle Orchestra, thus bringing the Philharmonia Zürich into being. Zurich Opera has had its baroque ensemble («La Scintilla») since 1995, formed by members of the opera orchestra. You will find the commemorative publication on the 175th anniversary of the «Theater-Actiengesellschaft» here. To the scrollable Festschrift.
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