“My main job is to bring people together and convince them that the selection of productions is exactly the right one,” Veronka Köver tells me. She is project manager of the ARTE Opera Season and responsible for Europe’s largest digital opera house.
Together with 23 partner opera houses and festivals from 14 countries, ARTE’s aim since 2018 has been “to offer freely accessible streams throughout Europe. Thanks to a European Commission funding programme, the streams can be subtitled in six different languages, enabling us to reach 70% of Europeans in their mother tongue.”
Köver is sent into a rapture when I ask her about the process of selecting the productions that are to be streamed as part of the ARTE Opera Season: “You feel like a child in a sweet shop!” Unlike other streaming platforms, the aim is not just to select the best productions, but to “put them into a dialogue with one another.”
“We don’t want to just be an aggregate,” Köver says, “it’s a properly curated season. We want to create an arc and tell a story. We do that by creating a bouquet from a range of productions, from new discoveries to repertoire bonbons. But we also deliberately choose special focuses. This season, for instance, we have the French soprano Julie Fuchs, the director Dmitri Tcherniakov and several operas based on Shakespeare.”
At the time of our conversation, preparations are in full swing for the next stream: Prokofiev’s War and Peace in a production by Dmitri Tcherniakov, conducted by Vladimir Jurowski at the Bayerische Staatsoper. Showing this production against the backdrop of the global political situation is “a challenge, but also an opportunity. The interview shown during the interval illustrates how Tcherniakov and Jurowski wrestled with the idea of staging this opera in 2023 and what motivated them to do so. I think this is also a mandate from ARTE to show an opera like this across Europe today.”
On the anniversary of the beginning of the war, ARTE broadcast a production of Ukrainian composer Alexander Rodin’s opera Kateryna, which premiered at Odessa Opera in September 2022: “It was the very first time ever, in what is now our fifth season, that we presented a production by a house that is not a permanent partner of the season. But it also shows the solidarity of the sector and the strong bond between the opera houses, because all partners were convinced that it was the right thing to do.”
Flexibility was important in this instance. The realisation of individual streams is always “a big planning, coordination and production job, involving dozens of people. It’s an incredibly exciting task and sometimes you don't know until moments beforehand how all the small details – minimal to viewers, but of great importance to us – will ultimately be implemented.” In the end, however, the audience should not notice this huge amount of work in the background. “The magic and enchantment of opera should remain unspoilt.”
To make this enchantment easily accessible, ARTE adopts different approaches. There are “live streams that are broadcast simultaneously on TV, web-only live streams and videos on demand,” Köver explains. She elaborates on how the decision is made as to whether a performance will be shown live or on demand. “Later in the season, for example, we have a very exciting and daring project from La Monnaie / De Munt in Brussels, in which Donizetti’s four Elizabethan operas are woven together over two evenings under the name Bastarda!. As this is a re-arrangement of these operas, it makes sense to show this project as a video on demand, so that the inherent dramaturgy of this production can be appreciated to the fullest.”
In other cases, however, a live stream is the best choice – there is “obviously a certain magic to the live experience which you can also experience as an online viewer.” The lockdowns of 2020–21 certainly played into ARTE Opera’s hands. “The partner houses got their own streaming activities going as a result of the pandemic. It was a way to stay connected to the audience despite closed doors.”