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Media Contact:

Ginny Greenberg
University Relations
202 Hofstra Hall
Phone: (516) 463-6819
Fax: (516) 463-5146
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University Relations

Date: May 06, 2008

The Bronx Opera Company Celebrates Its 40th Anniversary with Two Performances at Hofstra University

Mozart’s The Impresario and Leoncavallo’s Immortal Pagliacci
Performed in English; John Cranford Adams Playhouse, May 16 and 17, 2008
Benjamin Spierman, Director; Michael Spierman and Elizabeth W. Scott, Conductors

Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY … In the spirit of the theatrical-masque symbols – comedy and tragedy – The Bronx Opera will celebrate its 40th season with an uproarious comedy and a truly memorable tragedy at Hofstra University’s John Cranford Adams Playhouse on May 16 and 17.

This year, 2008, also marks the 10th anniversary of Bronx Opera Company performances at Hofstra University

Performances take place at Hofstra on Friday, May 16, at 8 p.m. and Saturday, May 17, at 2 p.m. Tickets are $40, $37 for senior citizens; and $10 for children under 12. Members of the Hofstra community may purchase up to two tickets for $22 each upon presentation of a current HofstraCard. For tickets and more information call the Hofstra Box Office at (516) 463-6644, Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. Tickets are also available for purchase online at www.tickets.com.

Mozart’s comic operetta, The Impresario, is the story of a producer besieged by wild and wooly divas and other "artistic-types." Mozart wrote this as his entry in a musical competition in which his chief competitor was none other than Antonio Salieri. For this production, an impresario will be playing an Impresario: Deputy Director of the Bronx Council on the Arts Ed Friedman makes a special appearance as Max Scruples, the producer of the off-the-wall opera troupe in Mozart's comedy. He joins Long Island native Nicole Lee Aiossa who plays “Pretenzioni.” Nicole was born and raised in Glen Cove, New York. This is her second performance at Hofstra. She first performed at the John Cranford Adams Playhouse last year in Carmen.

The second entry at Hofstra is Leoncavallo’s Pagliacci. Obscure composer Ruggero Leoncavallo soared to immortality with this operatic masterpiece about a pagliacci – a clown – and his heart-breaking discovery of his wife's infidelity. One of Enrico Caruso’s recordings of the famed "Vesti la giubba" was the first record to sell one million copies; Pagliacci became the first entire opera to be recorded; and it became the first complete opera to be filmed with sound. Pagliacci features a company of powerful young artists including Percy Martinez and Roger Ohlson, who are sharing the role of Canio, the pagliacci. Also performing in Pagliacci is Hofstra graduate Leslie Swanson who is in the chorus as a policeman. Leslie, who serves on the board of The Bronx Opera Company, use to play oboe in the Hofstra orchestra and played in the orchestra pit during many Hofstra theatrical productions, yearning to be on stage. Leslie today lives in Ozone Park, and this will be her second performance with The Bronx Opera Company at Hofstra – onstage!

Conducted by Michael Spierman, The Bronx Opera Company’s founder and artistic director (along with Elizabeth W. Scott), the production also has the distinction of being directed by Benjamin Spierman –  Maestro Michael Spierman’s son –  a nationally acclaimed operatic stage director in his own right. Ben Spierman also translated both operas into English.

Both productions will be performed in English – a trademark of The Bronx Opera Company.
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