New Zealand's first professional opera performance

29 September 1862

Marie Carandini
Marie Carandini (Wikimedia Commons)

The first professional opera performance in New Zealand was put on by members of the English Opera Troupe and the Royal Princess Theatre Company.

The troupe, described by Adrienne Simpson, author of Opera’s farthest frontier: a history of opera in New Zealand, as ‘a small concert party’, arrived in Dunedin on 18 September 1862. They had been hired by brothers Tom and Sanford Fawcett to boost their existing company at the Royal Princess Theatre.

On 29 September members of the troupe and company came together in a performance of The daughter of the regiment, a ‘shortened English production’ of Gaetano Donizetti’s French comic opera, La fille du régiment. The opera tells the love story of Marie, an orphan raised by a French army regiment, and Tonio, a peasant who had once saved her life. In its original form it is known for the aria sung by Tonio, ‘Ah! mes amis, quel jour de fête!, which has been described as the ‘Mt Everest for tenors’. The celebrated Italian tenor, Luciano Pavarotti, was dubbed the ‘King of the High Cs’ for his performances of this aria.

In the Dunedin production the role of Tonio was played by tenor Walter Sherwin, a member of the English Opera Troupe. Sherwin seems to have been no Pavarotti, reviewers noting that he had sung ‘satisfactorily’. The role of Marie was played by another member of the troupe, the ‘popular and capable soprano’ Marie Carandini. The role of Sergeant Sulpice, Marie’s guardian and head of the regiment, was played by Charles Young, ‘one of the Royal Princess’s favourite actors’.

The troupe performed at the Royal Princess Theatre for several months. They left Dunedin after their final performance on 4 December and later mounted opera performances elsewhere in the colony by ‘joining forces with other itinerant artists encountered en route’.

The face of New Zealand opera continued to be dominated by visiting companies and principals from overseas well into the 20th century. New Zealand’s first professional opera company, the New Zealand Opera Group, was not founded until 1954.