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Teatro alla Scala Milan is Italy's most famous opera house. Photo: Ronan
O'Connell
Teatro alla Scala Milan is Italy's most famous opera house. Photo: Ronan
O'Connell

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Weekend


UNESCO SITES AND SOUNDS: FIVE OPERA HOUSES TO VISIT ON YOUR NEXT TRIP TO ITALY


THE COUNTRY'S OPERA SINGING WAS ADDED TO THE LIST OF INTANGIBLE CULTURAL
HERITAGE IN DECEMBER

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Ronan O'Connell

January 26, 2024

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A night at the Italian opera is a bucket-list experience for many tourists and
Unesco recently safeguarded the ancient art form, including Italian opera
singing on its list of Intangible Cultural Heritage last month.



Dating back to the late 1500s, Italian opera singing is practised or taught by
more than 30,000 people in Italy.

Each day, a new generation of students receive tutelage from operatic maestros.
They learn not just exquisite control of vocal pitch, but also powerful
projection that allows them to maximise the acoustics of venues such as
churches, arenas, amphitheatres and, of course, those stunning, famous opera
houses.



Here are five of the finest venues where you can enjoy this form of singing in
Italy.


TEATRO ALLA SCALA, MILAN

Teatro alla Scala Milan has one of the world's most photogenic interiors. Photo:
Ronan O'Connell


When first I visited Italy’s most famous opera house, I feared my camera was
going to overheat. Such was the intense labour it went through in snapping my
wife from every conceivable vantage point in what is one of the most photogenic
interior spaces I’ve yet seen.

The blend of blood-red furnishings and gilded accents inside Milan’s
18th-century opera house is wonderfully ostentatious. Tourists all around us
were taking just as many photos during one of the five daily English-language
guided tours of the facility.

For $33 per person, we were led past its sublime foyer, royal box, orchestral
pit, backstage area and museum, which is laden with artworks, images and
artefacts. It explains how the Teatro alla Scala once all but disappeared. In
1943 it was badly damaged by Second World War bombing, but was rebuilt
immediately after the war and continues to regularly present concerts, operas
and stage shows.


VERONA ARENA, VERONA

The 2,000-year-old Verona Arena resembles Rome's Colosseum. Photo: Ronan
O'Connell

If Paris is the city of love, Verona is the city of romantic tragedy. This
charming city in north-east Italy has become intertwined with Romeo & Juliet, a
Shakespearian tale of love found and lost set in the timeworn streets that
surround perhaps the country's most unique opera venue.

Whereas the other Italian opera houses I visited were meticulously maintained,
Verona Arena is a crumbling, open-air amphitheatre that once was periodically
splattered with blood. After it was built, almost 2,000 years ago, it regularly
hosted violent gladiator battles. In recent centuries it has been a key venue
for concerts, stage plays and operas.

All of which are even more dramatic set against the backdrop of this
Unesco-listed structure, which is similar in appearance to the Colosseum in
Rome. Built to accommodate up to 30,000 spectators, the arena is the main venue
of the annual Verona Opera Festival, which runs from June to September this
year. At other times, tourists can enter and wander the amphitheatre each day
between 9am and 7pm.


PAVAROTTI-FRENI THEATRE, MODENA

A statue of Pavarotti outside Modena's opera house. Photo: Ronan O'Connell

Like Verona, the small northern city of Modena has a unique identity, in its
case due to being the birthplace of the luxury sports car brand, Ferrari. A
short walk south of the impressive Enzo Ferrari museum is a magnificent venue
named after another of this city’s greatest creations, opera legend Luciano
Pavarotti.

Born in Modena in 1935, Pavarotti died in 2007 as perhaps the most famous singer
in Italian history. Even now, his music lives on in his hometown, where tribute
concerts are held for him each year. I was able to watch him in full vocal flow,
albeit suspended in motion, by visiting his statue outside the Pavarotti-Freni
Theatre.

This stately building was Modena’s opera headquarters since the 1830s and was
known as the Teatro Comunale di Modena until being renamed in recent years.

Guided tours can be booked online, as well as tickets to its shows, which span
opera, dance and classical music concerts.


TEATRO COMMUNALE DI BOLOGNA, BOLOGNA

The Teatro Communale di Bologna reflects the city’s most famous architectural
achievement. Photo: Ronan O'Connell

Bologna is one of Europe’s most overlooked cities, the result of being located
in between tourist magnets Venice, Milan and Florence. Those tourists who do
pause to delve into Bologna are rewarded by a picturesque historic centre,
decorated by pretty churches, art galleries, shady parks and a splendid opera
house.

Built in 1763, the attractive facade of Teatro Communale di Bologna is
embellished by rows of arches and columns. This reflects Bologna’s most famous
architectural achievement – its 62-kilometre network of ornate, covered walkways
that are now a Unesco World Heritage Site.

The city’s oldest theatre is tremendously busy. More than 100 events, including
about 80 operas, are held each year in its luxurious main hall, which is draped
in vibrant murals and covered with velvet furnishings.


TEATRO ARGENTINA, ROME

Teatro Argentina, centre, stands out in the neighbourhood. Photo: Ronan
O'Connell

Rome is so dense with historic sites that it’s easy for even the most remarkable
buildings to fade into the background. That was what happened when I headed to
the Italian capital’s revered opera venue, Teatro Argentina.

As I approached this cream-coloured, 18th-century masterpiece, I encountered a
unique site opposite it – the ruins of 2,000-year-old Pompey Theatre, where
Roman leader Julius Caesar was assassinated.

One of the oldest performance venues in Rome, Teatro Argentina doesn’t offer
regular tours. But tourists can still see its lavish interior by booking online
tickets to one of its many shows, which in 2024 range from ballets to opera,
stage plays and orchestral concerts.

Updated: January 26, 2024, 7:02 PM
OperaItalyDestinationsHolidays

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