Die Zauberflöte, Royal Academy of Music review - first-rate youth makes for a moving experience

★★★★ DIE ZAUBERFLOTE, RAM First-rate youth makes for a moving experience

The production takes time to match Mozart's depths, but gets there halfway through

Tamino in the operating theatre hallucinating serpents? Sarastro’s acolytes wheeling lit-up plasma packs? From the central part of the Overture onwards – just when we thought we'd escape directorial intervention in Olivia Clarke’s racy conducting - Jamie Manton’s production of Mozart's adult fairy-tale looks distinctly unpromising. But by Act Two, it becomes one of the most moving Magic Flutes I’ve ever seen. Glorious singing and youthful energy help to make it so.

Mansfield Park, Guildhall School review - fun when frothy, chugging in romantic entanglements

★★★ MANSFIELD PARK, GSMD Fun when frothy, chugging in romantic entanglements

Jonathan Dove’s strip-cartoon Jane Austen works well as a showcase for students

Let’s call it Jane Austen fit for the West End, but with opera singers. The fact that it also serves as a fun ensemble piece for students is also very much in favour of Jonathan Dove’s Mansfield Park, with a neatly telescoped and often witty libretto by Alasdair Middleton. Like his latest work, Uprising, a community opera for Glyndebourne staged at the weekend, it presses all the right buttons for the young, while staying within safe and mostly derivative boundaries.

Uprising, Glyndebourne review - didactic community opera superbly performed

★★★★ UPRISING, GLYNDEBOURNE Didactic community opera superbly performed

Jonathan Dove and April De Angelis go for the obvious, but this is still a rewarding project

The score is effective, and rewarding to perform, but derivative. The libretto uses every cliché, or truism, about save-the-planet youth activism in the book; it’s didactic, not dramatic. Direction, design and lighting sometimes feel unfinished. Yet as a youth/community opera, Glyndebourne’s latest educational project hits the mark; the commitment of singers and players young and old, professional and amateur, makes the ends justify the means.

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It all started on 09/09/09. That memorable date, September 9 2009, marked the debut of theartsdesk.com.

It followed some hectic and intensive months when a disparate and eclectic team of arts and culture writers went ahead with an ambitious plan – to launch a dedicated internet site devoted to coverage of the UK arts scene.

Many of our readers today may have forgotten the arts journalism atmosphere of the first decade of the new century – especially the decimation of traditional broadsheet arts coverage that followed the financial crisis of 2008.

Fledermaus, Irish National Opera review - sex, please, we're Viennese/American/Russian/Irish

★★★★ FLEDERMAUS, IRISH NATIONAL OPERA Vivacious company makes the party buzz

Vivacious company makes the party buzz, does what it can around it

Let’s finally face the elephant in the room: the most popular Viennese operetta, packed with hit numbers, no longer works on the stage as a whole. The central party, yes, never more high-energy delight than here, with a cast of 13 and 10 instrumentalists on stage. As for the rest, not even the likes of Richard Jones, Harry Kupfer and Christopher Alden have won a total victory. Davey Kelleher comes closer, but the high jinks can still be wearing in the outer acts.

Mary, Queen of Scots, English National Opera review - heroic effort for an overcooked history lesson

★★★ MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS, ENO A heroic effort for an overcooked history lesson

Heidi Stober delivers as beleaguered regent, but Thea Musgrave's opera is limiting

Genius doesn't always tally with equal opportunities, to paraphrase Doris Lessing. Opera houses have a duty to put on new works by women composers; sometimes an instant classic emerges. But to revive a music drama that hardly made waves back in 1977? Thea Musgrave’s Mary, Queen of Scots has some strong invention, and whizzes you through historical bullet points so quickly that there’s no chance to get bored. But does it deserve a company giving it their all?

Festen, Royal Opera review - firing on every front

★★★★★ FESTEN, ROYAL OPERA No slack in Mark-Anthony Turnage's operatic treatment of the visceral first Dogme film 

No slack in Mark-Anthony Turnage's operatic treatment of the visceral first Dogme film

So the Royal Opera had assembled a dream cast, conductor (Edward Gardner) and director (Richard Jones). The only question until last night was whether composer Mark-Anthony Turnage would be at his remarkable best. His operatic journey has been uneven, but one thing is now certain: adapting the first Dogme 95 movie, Festen by Thomas Vinterberg, so shocking at a time (1998) when the issue of child abuse rarely surfaced in drama, has yielded music theatre of flawless pace and range.

Phaedra + Minotaur, Royal Ballet and Opera, Linbury Theatre review - a double dose of Greek myth

★★★★ PHAEDRA + MINOTAUR, LINBURY THEATRE A double dose of Greek myth

Opera and dance companies share a theme in this terse but affecting double bill

Greek myths are all over theatre stages at the moment, their fierce, vengeful stories offering unnerving parallels with events in our modern world. The latest such project is a pithy double bill of opera and dance, both halves (though the first lasts only 20 minutes) featuring the half-man, half-bull Minotaur, and the havoc he wreaks, even in death.

The Marriage of Figaro, Welsh National Opera review - no concessions and no holds barred

★★★★★ THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO, WNO No concessions and no holds barred

Compelling revival, punches, placards and all

Drained as they are at present of crucial funds, WNO are managing to put on only two operas this spring, and spaced out to the point where it could hardly be called a season. For their new Peter Grimes we must wait till April. Meanwhile we can relish Tobias Richter’s sparkling nine-year-old Figaro, skilfully revived, with a few tweaks, by Max Hoehn.