Summary

  • Eight hours of live streams and special events from across the UK

  • Highlights include an opera singer breaking a wine glass with her voice, plus a spine-tingling performance from Lesley Garrett

  • Partners include the Royal Opera House, English National Opera, English Touring Opera, Opera North, Glyndebourne, Welsh National Opera, Scottish Opera and Northern Ireland Opera

  • BBC Arts Digital is also working with the V&A, BBC Radio 3, Tomorrow’s World and Manchester’s Museum of Science and Industry, supported by the British Council

  1. How many Nessun Dormas in #OperaPassion?published at 11:10 BST 23 October 2017

    #OperaPassion

    Tomorrow's World
    Life's big questions answered

    PS - the final answer was FIVE: Radio 3 snuck in an extra one on In Tune Mixtape, just before the broadcast of Tosca...

  2. Last orders!published at 19:26 BST 19 October 2017

    #OperaPassion

    BBC Radio 3

    We're reaching the end of our #OperaPassion LiveBlog.

    It's been an amazing eight-and-a-half hours since curtain up at 11am this morning!

    We thank the Victoria and Albert Museum, the British Council, all our opera company partners, and everyone listening, watching, tweeting and posting.

    Everything from #OperaPassion remains available online, here and on the websites and social media platforms of our partner organisations.

    So we leave you now in the capable hands of Sara Mohr-Pietsch who will introduce the Royal Opera's performance of Puccini's Tosca which Radio 3 listeners voted for.

    As Canio sings at the end of Pagliacci, "La commedia è finita!"

    Arrivederci!

    Tosca: Angela Gheorghiu as Tosca and Bryn Terfel as ScarpiaImage source, Catherine Ashmore/ROH
    Image caption,

    Angela Gheorghiu as Tosca and Bryn Terfel as Scarpia

  3. Get the lowdown on Toscapublished at 19:15 BST 19 October 2017

    #OperaPassion

    BBC Radio 3

    Dubbed a "shabby little shocker" in a 1950s critique, Puccini’s Tosca, after a shaky start at its Rome premiere in January 1900, quickly became a firm audience favourite, and has remained a staple of the repertoire ever since.

    It’s not hard to understand why: a passionate affair between an artist and republican, Mario Cavaradossi, and a beautiful, fiery singer, Floria Tosca, is pitted against the lustful designs of an evil, royalist chief of secret police, Baron Scarpia.

    When Cavaradossi is arrested, tortured and condemned to death, Tosca agrees to surrender herself to Scarpia in exchange for her lover's free pardon.

    After Scarpia authorises a mock execution for Cavaradossi at Rome’s Castel Sant’Angelo, Tosca stabs him to death.

    A spectacular posthumous double-cross (spoiler alert!) leads to Cavaradossi’s execution for real, and Tosca’s dramatic suicide by flinging herself off the battlements of the castle.

    The Royal Opera’s 2011 production stars Angela Gheorghiu as Tosca, Jonas Kaufmann as Cavaradossi and Bryn Terfel as Scarpia.

    Hear Tosca on Radio 3 at 7.30pm

    Tosca: Bryn Terfel as ScarpiaImage source, Catherine Ashmore/ROH
    Image caption,

    Bryn Terfel as Scarpia

  4. Sing-a-long at the stationpublished at 18:57 BST 19 October 2017

    It's our last stop of the day and we're at St Pancras station in London as commuters join the Royal Opera Chorus in a sing-a-long of 'Va Pensiero' - the Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves.

    William Spaulding leads commuters in a chorus of Va Pensiero
    Image caption,

    William Spaulding leads commuters in a chorus of Va Pensiero

    Commuters join in at St Pancras
    Image caption,

    Commuters join in at St Pancras

    All together now
    Image caption,

    All together now

    In full voice
    Image caption,

    In full voice

  5. Soprano Sarah-Jane Lewis hits the sweet spot...published at 18:48 BST 19 October 2017

    #OperaPassion

    ... in the Easter Hymn from Mascagni's Cavalleria Rusticana. Well, St Pancras does look a bit like a cathedral....

    Sarah Jane LewisImage source, ROH
  6. Soprano to Bass: Can you find your voice?published at 18:46 BST 19 October 2017

    Joining in the sing-a-long at St Pancras? Everyone has a range of notes within the natural confines of their voice – broadly, these are soprano and alto (for women, though some men can also sing alto) and tenor and bass (for men).

    But which one are you? Find out more

    Tim Rhys-Evans
    Image caption,

    With Tim Rhys-Evans

  7. Can your voice fill an opera house?published at 18:44 BST 19 October 2017

    Gustav Klimt. Auditorium in the Old Burgtheater in Vienna 1888
    Image caption,

    Gustav Klimt. Auditorium in the Old Burgtheater in Vienna 1888

    Most of us sing, generally to ourselves in the car or the shower, blissfully unaware of the whole process. It’s as instinctive as talking – we just form the thought, open our mouths and out it comes.

    When you sing, you start by taking in breath then sending it up through the larynx into the head and out into the atmosphere.

    But to make yourself heard in a large space without amplification, as opera singers do, something else has to happen...

    Find out more

  8. Heavy Metalpublished at 18:34 BST 19 October 2017

    Royal Opera House

    Hammering home how good opera is at St Pancras. They wanted to use the train tracks to bang on but Network Rail weren't so keen...

    Anvil playing
  9. Anyone got a spare anvil?published at 18:27 BST 19 October 2017

    #OperaPassion

    Royal Opera House

    The Royal Opera Chorus are limbering up at St Pancras Station for this evening's pop-up performance and singalong of the Anvil Chorus from Verdi's Il trovatore and the moving 'Va pensiero' chorus from Nabucco. They'll be at it hammer and tongs from about 640pm...

    ROH Chorus at St PancrasImage source, ROH
  10. Postpublished at 18:26 BST 19 October 2017

    Royal Opera House

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  11. All together nowpublished at 18:35

    Royal Opera House

    Royal Opera House

    We'll soon head over to St Pancras train station for a pop up performance by the Royal Opera Chorus. It has been the backbone of The Royal Opera, performing in an average of 20 productions each season, in a wide repertory ranging from Baroque through to newly commissioned works. Find out about the chorus here, external.

    Royal Opera House ChorusImage source, Royal Opera House
    Image caption,

    Royal Opera House Chorus

  12. Postpublished at 18:23 BST 19 October 2017

    Welsh National Opera

    Touch tour at Die Fledermaus at the Mayflower Theatre in Southampton
    Image caption,

    Touch tour at Die Fledermaus at the Mayflower Theatre in Southampton

  13. Brush up on your opera knowledgepublished at 18:20 BST 19 October 2017

    Free online course

    Victoria and Albert Museum

    Opera performanceImage source, V&A
    Image caption,

    Les Fêtes Vénitiennes, an opéra-ballet by André Campra Costume design by Petra Reinhardt. Directed by Robert Carsen, 2014. Théâtre National de l’Opéra Comique

    How does opera work? How has it changed over 400 years? And most importantly, is opera relevant today?

    Get the answers to these questions and more with this free online course devised by experts in the field: Kings College London, the Royal Opera House and the V&A.

    The course takes you behind opera’s velvet curtain, so if you’ve never been to an opera, or assumed it’s not for you, you’ll learn the basics in a new and exciting way. Or, if you already enjoy opera and want to learn more, this course will enrich your future experiences, helping you to develop a toolkit of operatic concepts to draw on long after you have finished the course.

    Find out more, external

  14. Scottish Opera and TeenCanteenpublished at 18:18 BST 19 October 2017

    Carla J. Easton from TeenCanteen, who released their debut album in 2016, collaborates with Scottish Opera Emerging Artists Alex Otterburn and Laura Zigmantaite on ‘Impossible Stuff’. One of two special collaborations between Scottish Opera and musicians from Scotland for #OperaPassion day.

    Media caption,

    Carla J. Easton from TeenCanteen, with Alex Otterburn and Laura Zigmantaite.

  15. Touch Tourpublished at 18:14 BST 19 October 2017

    Welsh National Opera

    We're on a touch tour of Die Fledermaus set at the Mayflower Theatre in Southampton before curtain up tonight. The tour lets visually impaired audience members explore the set ahead of the audio described performance.

    Touch Tour in Southampton
    Image caption,

    Touch Tour in Southampton

    Members of the audience on a touch tour of the Die Fledermaus set
    Image caption,

    Members of the audience on a touch tour of the Die Fledermaus set

  16. Behind the scenes at Die Fledermauspublished at 18:09 BST 19 October 2017

    With the WNO in Southampton

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    Touch tour
  17. Nessun Dorma: A shiver-down-the-spine momentpublished at 18:00

    Tomorrow's World
    Life's big questions answered

    The Tomorrow's World team demonstrate how Puccini's aria from Turandot has the power to move the soul - sung by Iain Henderson.

    Media caption,

    Demonstrating how Puccini's aria from Turandot has the power to move the soul.

  18. Having a Hallowe'en costume nightmare?published at 17:57 BST 19 October 2017

    Welsh National Opera

    Let Welsh National Opera sort you out. Watch how make-up transforms a chorus member into a Siberian prisoner in their production of Janáček's From the House of the Dead.

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  19. A touch tour of Die Fledermaus with WNOpublished at 17:55 BST 19 October 2017

    Welsh National Opera

    Coming up at 6 o'clock we join a Live Touch Tour of Welsh National Opera's Die Fledermaus set at the Mayflower Theatre in Southampton.

    For blind and partially sighted audiences this is a part of the overall theatre experience, providing opportunities to touch and explore the set ahead of the performance.

    Props are set for the touch tourImage source, Welsh National Opera
    Image caption,

    Props are set for the touch tour

  20. Steve Speirs pops his opera cherrypublished at 17:54

    Welsh National Opera

    Welsh National Opera

    Merthyr-born comic actor Steve Speirs has had roles in blockbusters such as Star Wars and Pirates of the Caribbean, among other films, but he's taken on a new challenge - appearing for the first time in an opera. As a recent convert, Welsh National Opera asked him to explore some myths around the art form... with hilarious results.

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