Neue Kritikenmehr...
A tokenistic Turandot in Hong Kong

Veronika Dzhioeva presents a menacing Turandot in Opera Hong Kong's latest production which attempts to merge historical accuracy with the complexities of Orientalism.
Visually splendid telling of Puccini's Madama Butterfly in Hong Kong
This production brought the work into the 21st century, at least visually, with a more modernised and digitally-stylised telling than their recent attempts.
Hong Kong’s Roméo et Juliette a West Side Story wannabe
Opera Hong Kong’s Roméo et Juliette: a gigantic effort marred by confused artistic vision and irritating production choices.
Opera Hong Kong’s modernised Salome leaves questions unanswered
Director Andrejs Zagars went for a multimedia presentation of Salome modernised to the 20th century, which had its moments, but left serious questions about deviations from Strauss’ score built around Oscar Wilde’s play unanswered.
Hong Kong Opera's riveting tribute to Wagner in The Flying Dutchman
Wagner’s The Flying Dutchman is a tale not only about redemption through love, but also about the helpless plight of human beings in the face of wilful and vindictive supernatural forces. In the hands of Wagner, the mythical Dutchman, instead of being a collector of itinerant souls at sea, has become an intrepid adventurer condemned to eternal maritime wandering.
A slick and enjoyable Tales of Hoffmann by Opera Hong Kong
Jacques Offenbach’s Tales of Hoffmann is a fine example of how the ridiculous can indeed be sublime. Three E.T.A. Hoffmann stories about otherworldly love affairs with defective femmes fatales, one of whom turns out to be a mechanical doll, connected only by the author’s gullible alter-ego as protagonist, scale the heights of the phantasmagorical.
