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The Los Angeles Opera, originally called the Los Angeles Music Center Opera, is an American opera company in Los Angeles, California. It is the fourth-largest opera company in the United States. [1] The company's home base is the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, part of the Los Angeles Music Center.
The theater was also home to the Los Angeles production of The Phantom of the Opera which ran at the theater from 1989 to 1993. It opened with the original London and Broadway Phantom Michael Crawford as the Phantom. He was later replaced with actor Robert Guillaume, and then Davis Gaines.
The Los Angeles Civic Light Opera (LACLO) was an American theatre/opera company in Los Angeles, California.Founded under the motto "Light Opera in the Grand Opera manner" in 1938 by impresario Edwin Lester, the organization presented fifty seasons of theatre before closing due to financial reasons in 1987.
1884 – Child's Grand Opera House opens. [25] 1886 Kansas City-Los Angeles railway begins operating. City Fire Department ... History of Los Angeles;
Grand Opera House was built by Ozro W. Childs and opened on May 24, 1884, at which point it became the largest theater in Los Angeles. It was designed by Ezra F. Kysor and Octavius Morgan and had a seating capacity of 1,311. The theater was renovated by James M. Wood in 1887-1888. [1] [2]
Los Angeles Opera brought back, after 15 years, one of Conlon’s early successes from his "Recovered Voices" initiative on Saturday night, Zemlinsky’s “The Dwarf. ...
The oldest opera company in the Los Angeles area and America’s oldest purveyor of consistently progressive opera is about to embark on the most uncompromising season of any company of its size ...
Los Angeles Opera opens its fall season with a production of Puccini's "Madame Butterfly" that sets the story on a 1930s Hollywood film set.