Midsummer Music – Saturday 12th July – St Margaret’s Church, Swinton.

Sheffield City Opera presents Midsummer Music

Sheffield City Opera are performing a fantastic concert of “Midsummer Music” at St Margaret’s Church, Swinton. Featuring music from Carmen, Cavalleria Rusticana, Dido and Aeneas, Phantom of the Opera, West Side Story, Les Miserables, Miss Saigon, Sound of Music, Oliver, Fiddler on the Roof and more.

Location: St Margaret’s Church, Swinton.
Date : Saturday 12th July – 7:30pm start

Book Online here or Telephone: 07547 230632

Click below to add tickets to your shopping basket
St Margaret’s Church, Swinton – 12th July (£8.00) [wp_cart_button name=”Midsummer Musicals, St Margaret’s Church, Swinton, 12th July” price=”8.00″]

Tickets will also available on the door

Cast and Production Team

Cast

Margerita:    Chloe Seywell
Faust:    Mark Ellse
Mephistopheles:    Nigel Rothery
Valentine:     Mike Willis
Siebel:    Debra Finch
Wagner:    Jeremy Craven
Marthe:    Mary McCready

Understudies

Margerita:    Sophia Carroll
Faust:    Gareth Lloyd
Mephistopheles:    Gavin Magenty

Production

Musical Director:    Gavin Usher
Director:    Gavin Magenty
Choreographer:    Hayley Watts
Costume:    Leigh-Anne Schofield

Stage Manager:    Paul Sparshott
Deputy Stage Manager: (DSM)    Hannah Newton
Assistant Stage Manager: (Flying)    TBC – University
Lighting Design:    Pete Brown
Set Design:    David Smith

SCO – Faust Performers
Faust Performers

About SCO's Faust

Faust burns to find the secret of eternal youth. Still the mechanism of anti-aging eludes him. Enter Mephistopheles. As he tempts and teases with voluptuous visions, Faust sizzles with renewed vigour. Women and hell-raising beckon. Soul-death seems a small price to pay.

In one tantalising vision he encounters Marguerite, a young girl who embodies all of Faust’s lost innocence. He yearns to possess her.

To this end, Faust morphs into a bizarre rakish figure from his Victorian youth. Assisted by Mephistopheles’ machinations, Faust’s seductive campaign begins with  jewels. Bathed in luciferic light, Marguerite is dazzled by them. She sings her delight in her famous aria ‘The Jewel Song’.

This is a production filled with contrasts: peasants sing happy songs of summer off-stage whilst Mephistopheles wreaks havoc on-stage; First World War soldiors display a touching camaraderie as they sing Gounod’s hearty drinking song. Meanwhile the frozen certainties of the previous century are beginning to move and crack. Wrongness is all around.

There’s a see-saw of musical contrasts too. The Devil’s choir does not have all the best tunes. The music that accompanies Marguerite’s redemption is Gounod at his most sublime.

There is much to resonate with modern audiences in this Gothic tale of good and evil, duels to the death, curses and redemption.

It’s also music to die for.