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Cairo Opera Company
According to chronicles, opera
performances were staged by visiting
artists in Egypt as early as 1840, but
the first official Cairo Opera House was
constructed in 1869. However, the “Cairo
Opera Company”, a purely Egyptian opera
company, associated to the Ministry of
Culture, was only established after the
1952 Revolution, when the Cairo
Conservatoire produced enough Egyptian
operatic talents.
In the early sixties, Ratiba El-Hefny
sang the main role in the operetta The
Merry Widow and both Amira Kamel and
Violette Makkar achieved great success
with their performance of Aida in
Belgrade.
When the Cairo Opera Company officially
started its performances in 1964, La
Traviata (translated into Arabic by
Ibrahim Refaat) was on the programme,
and new stars such as Manar Abou Heif,
Nabila Erian, Hassan Kamy, Youssef
Sabbagh, Regina Youssef, Gaber
El-Beltagui and Youssef Ezzat made their
debut.
Gradually, the Cairo Opera Company
attained success with productions such
as Madame Butterfly, The Dancing Years,
La Bohème, and Beethoven’s 9th Symphony
until tragically, the old Opera House
was destroyed by a fire in 1971.
The Opera Company continued its activity
performing at the Gomhouria Theatre,
Ewart Memorial Hall and Sayed Darwish
Theatre instead, until the new Opera
House was inaugurated. New stars such as
Sobhi Bidair, Reda El-Wakil, Iman
Moustafa, Neveen Allouba and Hanan
El-Guindy, Mona Rafla, and Tahia Shams
el Din pursued their path of success.
Today, the Cairo Opera Company’s
repertoire includes 32 opera productions
with a permanent ensemble of 32 artists
whose refined skills cover opera works
from Baroque to Verismo. Some of these
artists have performed on the most
renowned opera stages of the world and
they paved the way for future stars like
Amira Selim, Dalia Farouk, Tamer Tawfik,
Gala El-Hadidi and others who devote
effort and passion to contribute to the
Cairo Opera’s excellent reputation.
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