Gao Guangjian Stage Design/Director
He is a stage supervisor of NCPA and a national level-I stage designer, an outstanding expert of the Ministry of Culture. He has acted as stage designer in more than 100 stage plays and large-scale performances. He has won “Wenhua Award for Stage Art Design” conferred by the Ministry of Culture for several times. Main works: operas Turandot, La Traviata, Rigoletto, Plain, dance dramas Dream of Dunhuang, The Old Summer Palace, Marco Polo, etc.

Elisabete Matos as Turandot
Elisabete Matos was born in Braga, Portugal, where she studied singing and violin at the local conservatory. Later, she moved to Madrid, Spain, where she finished her studies at the Madrid School of Singing with a scholarship from the Gulbenkian Foundation.
She was awarded several prizes at singing competitions, including second place at the Belvedere Vienna Singing Competition.
Recently, she has had her debut at Viena as Abigaille (Nabucco) and at Los Angeles Opera as Senta, conducted by Conlon, and after her huge success as Minnie (Fanciulla del West) at Metropolitan Opera House, she has returned on November for Nabucco‘s Abigaille and will be back on December 2013 for Tosca. Next engagements also include Rienzi (Irene) at Liceu de Barcelona, Turandot at Chile, Berlin and Capitole de Toulouse and her debut as Salome at Palma de Mallorca.
Ms. Matos is also a frequent guest of various concert halls. Her concert repertory goes from Bach to contemporary music, including lieder and symphony. She was recently invited to perform Beethoven’s 9th Symphony in Cagliari (conducted by Lorin Maazel), Manuel de Falla’s El Sombrero de Tres Picos with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Daniel Baremboim.
Her recordings include von Suppé’s Requiem with the Gulbenkian Foundation Chorus and Orchestra conducted by Michel Corboz (Virgin Classics), as well as the title role in La Dolores for Decca (with Placido Domingo), for which she was awarded a Grammy in 2000. |
Sun Xiuwei as Turandot
Sun Xiuwei was born and grew up in Liao Ning, China. On leaving school, she moved to Shanghai to study at the Conservatory under her first singing teacher, Professor Gao Zhilan. She then moved to Italy to continue her training under Rita Orlandi Malaspina, probably the last great soprano of Verdi music. As well as improving her general command of Italian and its pronunciation, of key importance for voice emission, Sun Xiuwei widened her repertoire to include Bel Canto.
Sun Xiuwei entered several international vocal music contests, winning six of them: Varallo Val Sesia, Parma, Piacenza, Adria, G. Simionato, Pavia and Busseto.
In 1994, her Italian début at the G. Verdi Theatre, Trieste in the role of Norma was acclaimed by public and critics alike. She then appeared in Madama Butterfly as Cio Cio San, a role that was to bring her accolades around the world: the Arena of Verona , the Opéra de Nice, Opern des Stadt Bonn, Deutsche Opern Berlin, Bilbao, Genoa, Oslo, Aachen, Palermo, Helsinky, Rome, Santiago of Chile, Detroit, Philadelphia, Trieste, Washington, Toronto, Maiorca, Pacific Opera California, Bologna, Karlsruhe, Los Angeles, Torre del Lago, Trieste, Macao and, in 2006, Washington once more to celebrate her 170th performance.
In 2000, a rising opera star in Italy, Sun Xiuwei was invited to sing at the Paul VI Hall in the Vatican before Pope John Paul II. She has also been a regular feature of the Puccini Festival at Torre del Lago, a must for a natural Puccini soprano like herself, singing in Madama Butterfly and as Liù, a role she was to perform in many other theatres, including Washington where she would later return to sing the leading role in Turandot. While performing Butterfly around the world, Sun Xiuwei worked on extending her repertoire to include other operas like Andrea Chenier, Il Corsaro, Attila, Nozze Istriane, Il Trovatore and La Traviata, performing in Tokyo, the Arena d’Avenches and Budapest. Hong Kong saw her triumphant début in the role of Lady Macbeth in Verdi’s Macbeth. Subsequently, once more at the Arena d’Avenches, Sun Xiuwei was widely acclaimed for her Abigaille in Nabucco with Renato Bruson, Leo Nucci and Juan Pons.

Vladimir Galouzine as Calaf
Vladimir Galouzine is indisputably one of the world’s leading dramatic tenors, known for his unrivaled stentorious voice and extremely vivid characterizations of some of the most demanding roles.
He started his career as a member of the Mariinsky Theater in Saint Petersburg, Russia, performing a myriad of leading roles from both the Russian and the Italian repertoire, including, amongst others: the title roles in Verdi’s Otello and Don Carlo and Rimsky-Korsakov’s Sadko, Radames in Verdi’s Aida, Calaf in Puccini’s Turandot, Des Grieux in Puccini’s Manon Lescaut, Cavaradossi in Puccini’s Tosca, Alexey in Prokofiev’s The Gamblers, Sergey in Shostakovich’s Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk, Khovansky in Mussorgsky’s Khovanschina, Canio in Leoncavallo’s I Pagliacci; and the role of which he is widely considered the world’s most outstanding performer: Hermann in Tchaikovsky’s The Queen of Spades.
He is in much demand internationally, performing regularly during the last two decades as a guest of most of the world’s most prominent opera houses, concert halls and festivals, including: New York’s Metropolitan Opera, Chicago’s Lyric Opera, the San Francisco Opera, the Houston Grand Opera and the Los Angeles Opera in the United States; London’s Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, in the United Kingdom; Milan’s Teatro alla Scala; Venice’s La Fenice, the Teatro Verdi in Trieste, the Teatro Comunale in Bologna as well as Florenc’s Teatro Comunale; the Vienna State Opera in Austria; the Opéra National (Bastille) and Théatre de Chatelet, both in Paris, as well as Toulouse’s Théatre de Capitole and the Marseille Opera in France; Madrid’s Teatro Real and Barcelona’s Grand Teatre del Liceu in Spain; both the Mariinsky Theater in St. Petersburg and the Bolshoi Theater in Moscow, Russia; Amsterdam’s Nederlandse Opera in The Netherlands; the Deutsche Oper Berlin, the Cologne Opera and the Baden-Baden Festspielhaus in Germany; the New National Theater in Tokyo, Japan; the New Israeli Opera; and the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, Argentina. In addition, he has performed at the Salzburg, Bregenz and Edinburgh Festivals and Washington’s Kennedy Center; London’s Royal Albert Hall; the Chorégies d’Orange and the Arena di Verona.
Vladimir Galouzine has collaborated with many of the world’s most important conductors including Valery Gergiev, Carlo Rizzi, James Conlon, Dennis Russell Davies, Marcello Viotti, and stage directors such as Franco Zeffirelli, Graham Vick, August Everding, Giancarlo Del Monaco and Elijah Moshinsky.
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