The National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts (Weiwuying) is to present Wagner's Lohengrin in full this week, marking its premiere in Taiwan and the first time a Wagnerian opera has been performed in southern Taiwan.
With many years of experience, the Weiwuying team is confident in taking on the challenging four-and-a-half-hour masterpiece, Chien Wen-pin (簡文彬), the performing center's general and artistic director, told a news conference on Tuesday.
Chien, who also serves as conductor, is to lead the production in collaboration with the creative team behind the 2014 staging of Lohengrin at Germany's Opera on the Rhine.
Photo courtesy of the National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts
It is to be performed four times from this evening through Sunday.
Lohengrin follows a mysterious knight who weds Elsa on the condition that she never ask his name.
When the vow is broken, he must depart — revealing a haunting meditation on love, trust, power and desire.
The production brings together leading vocalists from Taiwan and abroad.
Vincent Wolfsteiner and Brenden Gunnell, two internationally renowned tenors known for their Wagnerian performances, share the title role of Lohengrin.
Members of the 2014 Opera on the Rhine premiere join the production, including soprano Sylvia Hamvasi as Elsa and mezzo-soprano Heike Wessels as Ortrud.
Taiwanese singers are to make their Wagnerian Lohengrin debuts, with soprano Keng Li (耿立) and mezzo-soprano Weng Jo-pei (翁若珮) taking on the same roles respectively.
Meanwhile, emerging Taiwanese vocal talents Chao Fang-hao (趙方豪), James Lai (賴恩予), Chien Cheng-yu (簡正育), Hu Ting-wei (胡庭維) and Cheng Yu-hsuan (鄭 又瑄) also join the cast, reflecting Weiwuying's support for local talent on the international stage, the organizers said.
The first of 10 new high-capacity trains purchased from South Korea’s Hyundai Rotem arrived at the Port of Taipei yesterday to meet the demands of an expanding metro network, Taipei Rapid Transit Corp (TRTC) said yesterday. The train completed a three-day, 1,200km voyage from the Port of Masan in South Korea, the company said. Costing NT$590 million (US$18.79 million) each, the new six-carriage trains feature a redesigned interior based on "human-centric" transportation concepts, TRTC said. The design utilizes continuous longitudinal seating to widen the aisles and optimize passenger flow, while also upgrading passenger information displays and driving control systems for a more comfortable
Taiwan's first indigenous defense submarine, the SS-711 Hai Kun (海鯤, or Narwhal), departed for its 13th sea trial at 7am today, marking its seventh submerged test, with delivery to the navy scheduled for July. The outing also marked its first sea deployment since President William Lai (賴清德) boarded the submarine for an inspection on March 19, drawing a crowd of military enthusiasts who gathered to show support. The submarine this morning departed port accompanied by CSBC Corp’s Endeavor Manta (奮進魔鬼魚號) uncrewed surface vessel and a navy M109 assault boat. Amid public interest in key milestones such as torpedo-launching operations and overnight submerged trials,
Quarantine awareness posters at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport have gone viral for their use of wordplay. Issued by the airport branch of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Agency, the posters feature sniffer dogs making a range of facial expressions, paired with advisory messages built around homophones. “We update the messages for holidays and campaign needs, periodically refreshing materials to attract people’s attention,” quarantine officials said. “The aim is to use the dogs’ appeal to draw focus to quarantine regulations.” A Japanese traveler visiting Taiwan has posted a photo on X of a poster showing a quarantine dog with a
Taiwan’s coffee community has launched a “one-person-one-e-mail” campaign, calling for people to send a protest-e-mail to the World Coffee Championships (WCC) urging it to redesignate Taiwanese competitors as from “Taiwan,” rather than “Chinese Taipei.” The call followed sudden action last week after the WCC changed all references to Taiwanese competitors from “Taiwan” to “Chinese Taipei,” including recent World Latte Art champion Bala (林紹興), who won the World Latte Art Championship in San Diego earlier this month. When Bala received the trophy, he was referred to as representing Taiwan, as well as in the announcement on the WCC’s Web site, until it