Opera Company of Middlebury


Opera Company of Middlebury is an American opera company in Middlebury, Vermont, founded in 2004. The company presents two operas per year at Town Hall Theater. All productions are presented in their original language, with surtitles projected over the stage. The June 2018 production was André Previn's A Streetcar Named Desire. In October 2018 OCM toured its recent production of Donizetti's L'Elisir d'Amore to three Vermont cities. OCM also presents the Metropolitan Opera HD Broadcasts in conjunction with Town Hall Theater; each opera is preceded an hour ahead by a talk about it by an OCM board member.

History

The company was established in 2004 by artists Douglas Anderson, Carol Christensen, Beth Thompson, Meredith Parsons McComb and Greg Vitercik. The OCM’s first performance was Carmen, which was adapted by Douglas Anderson and featured Meredith Parsons McComb, Stephanie Weiss, Yonghoon Lee and Steven Marking. Yonghoon Lee returned the following year in the company's second production, Tosca, with Beth Thompson.
The Town Hall Theater underwent a $5 million renovation from 2005 to 2008. During the renovation, the OCM shifted its performances to the Vergennes Opera House and artist Fran Bull's Brandon studio. The Company returned to the Town Hall Theater in June 2008 with Puccini's La bohème .
The company now annually presents two productions under the artistic direction of Douglas Anderson. Production manager is Mary Longey. Recently the June productions have been conducted by Michael Sakir and the fall productions by Jeffrey Rink. The fall production features the chorus of Middlebury College under the direction of Dr. Jeffrey Buettner.

Productions

The most recent production was André Previn's Streetcar Named Desire:
Cast