For Immediate Release
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Press Contact: Sarah K. Ivins | 212.796.8628 | SIvins@operaamerica.org
OPERA America Awards $190,000 in Grants to Nine New York City Opera Companies
Generously supported by the Howard Gilman Foundation
OPERA America is pleased to announce grants totaling $190,000 to nine opera companies through its NYC Opera Grants: Support for Small-Budget Organizations program.
NYC Opera Grants support strategic investments in opera organizations, with budgets below $250,000, that will increase the capacity of the company. The grants fund projects in administrative areas, such as marketing, fundraising, or production; or in programming, including productions or other public-facing programs. Additionally, the program provides opportunities for the grantees to engage in peer learning groups, fostering collaboration and knowledge exchange among grantee organizations with similar objectives.
Grants were awarded to nine opera companies:
- Association for the Development of Vocal Artistry and Neighborhood Cultural Enrichment (ADVANCE) (Manhattan)
- Bronx Opera Company (Bronx)
- Caborca (Brooklyn)
- Experiments in Opera (Brooklyn)
- International Brazilian Opera Company (Manhattan)
- New Camerata Opera (Bronx)
- New Music Theatre Project (Queens)
- Opera Praktikos (Manhattan)
- The Opera Next Door (Brooklyn)
(See below for additional information about the productions.)
Grantees were selected by a panel of industry leaders consisting of Geysa Castro, director of advancement and community impact, Women of Color in the Arts; Piper Gunnarson, consultant; Marco Nisticò, opera producer, Fisher Center at Bard; and Mariel O’Connell, assistant director of opera activities, The Juilliard School.
NYC Opera Grants are made possible with the generous support of the Howard Gilman Foundation. The Howard Gilman Foundation is a private foundation that provides funding and support to New York City-based performing arts organizations that are reflective of the city’s vibrant cultural community.
More information about OPERA America’s grant programs is available at operaamerica.org/Grants.
PROJECT DESCRIPTIONS
| Association for the Development of Vocal Artistry and Neighborhood Cultural Enrichment (ADVANCE) Manhattan Project: ADVANCE-MORE Opera Strategies for Capacity Building and Artist Compensation in 2026 and 2027 |
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The Association for the Development of Vocal Artistry and Neighborhood Cultural Enrichment (ADVANCE) is dedicated to making opera and classical vocal music accessible and affordable to everyone, especially those in underserved communities in New York City. ADVANCE’s mission is to promote the understanding, appreciation, and enjoyment of opera and classical vocal music through accessible, affordable, and culturally responsive operatic performances brought directly to audiences who otherwise may not have access. ADVANCE aims to transform lives and inspire excellence by presenting high-quality concerts and educational outreach programs to students, families, and older adults (ages 60 ) in these communities. ADVANCE-MORE Opera Strategies for Capacity Building and Artist Compensation in 2026 and 2027 |
| Bronx Opera Company Bronx Project: Bronx Opera Performs and Teaches |
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The Bronx Opera (BxO) was founded in 1967 and is the only company in New York City other than the Metropolitan Opera to have produced annually since then. BxO has seen over 200 artists work at the Met in all capacities. Many BxO alums have gone on to national careers and taught at major conservatories. The company’s mission is to serve three communities: operatic artists (by giving opportunities to put their work on display); local audiences (by keeping ticket prices at $40 and under and presenting opera in English); and the Bronx (through outreach presentations and as educators). Bronx Opera Performs and Teaches |
| Caborca Brooklyn Project: Rubalee |
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Caborca is a bilingual ensemble that has been making original experimental theater, music theater, and film under Puerto Rican writer/director Javier Antonio González since 2009. Caborca works in New York and on tour at the intersection of Latine and experimental arts, where audiences are hungry for the ensemble’s politically charged and formally innovative reflections on colonial power. Caborca combines disciplinary backgrounds in music, visual arts, postmodern dance, and performance with rigorous experimentation, continually reinventing its practices. Six of the ensemble’s 13 members, including González, come from or live in Puerto Rico. The remaining members come from China, Korea, and the breadth of the continental U.S. Headquartered in Brooklyn, Caborca is integrally a part of the Puerto Rican diaspora, the broader Latine culture, and Latin America. Rubalee |
| Experiments in Opera Brooklyn Project: Reimagining the EiO Writers’ Room |
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Experiments in Opera (EiO) is a company founded by, run by, and serving artists. Its mission is to open up the boundaries of opera by supporting and guiding an inclusive group of musicians, composers, and librettists to expand their craft. The company positions new operas in a context shaped by its artist leaders and their work. EiO was founded in 2011 by three composers and is currently run by four artist leaders: Jason Cady, Shannon Sindelar, Kamala Sankaram, and Aaron Siegel. The company focuses solely on commissioning and producing new works and has commissioned 98 new works from 68 composers over the past 14 years. Each artistic season includes between three and six productions, usually a mix of fully staged premieres, curated group shows, and workshop presentations. EiO’s priority has always been to invite a demographically and stylistically diverse pool of contemporary composers into a conversation about the scale, medium, and narratives of contemporary opera. Reimagining the EiO Writers’ Room |
| International Brazilian Opera Company Manhattan Project: Opera Nova Fundraising and Development |
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The International Brazilian Opera Company (IBOC) supports the creation of a new operatic repertoire that combines ideas from Brazilian and international artists while providing an educational structure for emerging talent. IBOC’s mission is based on three pillars: creation of a new repertoire that is relevant to our time for a diverse audience; trans-cultural collaboration, supporting voices from underrepresented demographics; and professional development and education for early and mid-career artists. IBOC believes that opera is the art form of the future. It can be a transmedia event that encompasses cutting-edge technology in the service of human connection. It unites all art forms, providing an experience that has no parallel. IBOC understands opera as a community-building effort. Opera Nova NYC is IBOC’s annual platform for new operatic works in progress — an open window into how new opera is made. Opera Nova Fundraising and Development |
| New Camerata Opera Bronx Project: L’amant anonyme |
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New Camerata Opera (NCO) is a democratically led ensemble of singer-producers whose mission is to cultivate new opera fans by breaking down traditional barriers. The organization delivers bold, inclusive experiences that meet audiences on stage, on screen, and in schools, while advancing artist development and equitable access. Founded in 2016 by eight professional singers with complementary skills in producing, design, and fundraising, NCO was built to collaborate across disciplines to lower costs, expand access, and incubate innovation. From NCO’s earliest seasons, three program strands — mainstage, education, and digital — have guided growth and impact. L'amant anonyme |
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New Music Theatre Project Project: New Work Development Fund |
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New Music Theatre Project (NMTP) is where theater meets music. NMTP’s mission is to invest in developing work that explores the traditional and innovative ways in which music and theater play together. The company’s core programs include the commissioning and development of new works, including musical theater, opera/operetta, instrumental work, and plays featuring music; all developed through a three-phase model of commissioning, workshops, and public presentations. New Work Development Fund |
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Opera Praktikos Project: Building Infrastructure for OPrak to Thrive While Making Opera Accessible! |
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Opera Praktikos (OPrak) is a small-budget, disability-forward opera company dedicated to making opera accessible, thereby building community. Founded in 2020 and incorporated in 2022, OPrak integrates live opera and other musical events for a growing local and online community. By centering accessibility and interconnectivity, OPrak presents opera as a transformational and inclusive art form reaching historically marginalized audiences. The company cultivates an active on-site and digital presence that extends well beyond any traditional performance venue. Opera is the vehicle through which OPrak generates this community of artists and audiences with and without disabilities. In 2018, Co-founders Gregory Moomjy and Marianna Mott Newirth met at OPERA America’s Professional Development Symposium, where a friendship was started and the seed for an opera company was planted. Moomjy, a musicologist, opera journalist, and dramaturg, uses a wheelchair due to cerebral palsy. Newirth, a librettist and independent producer, has been involved with the creation of new opera works since 2018. Building Infrastructure for OPrak to Thrive While Making Opera Accessible! |
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The Opera Next Door Project: Organizational Capacity Building |
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Born out of the stoop concerts presented in Brooklyn during the pandemic summer of 2020, The Opera Next Door (TOND) was created to fill the void left in the arts community by the loss of live performance, particularly opera. TOND’s inaugural production of Così fan tutte in May 2021 achieved something remarkable: It brought hundreds of neighbors together on a block in Brooklyn, fostering a sense of community and renewal after such a dark and isolating time. Since then, TOND has continued to share high-quality opera in spaces both conventional and unconventional. From city blocks to Lincoln Center, TOND reconnects the art form to its humble, audience-centric roots, forming a bridge between diverse new audiences and vibrant, culturally resonant opera performances, highlighting its relevance in our modern lives. Organizational Capacity Building |
ABOUT OPERA AMERICA
OPERA America (operaamerica.org) leads and serves the entire opera community, supporting the creation, presentation, and enjoyment of opera. The organization is committed to:
- Promoting collaboration and effectiveness among opera companies, universities, and allied businesses.
- Delivering professional development to artists, administrators, and trustees.
- Increasing appreciation of opera through educational and audience development resources.
- Offering support and services that foster the creation and presentation of new works.
- Fostering equity, diversity, and inclusion across all aspects of the opera industry.
- Undertaking national research and representing the field to policymakers and the media.
- Managing the National Opera Center, a custom-built facility that provides a centralized space for collaboration, rehearsal, and performance.
Founded in 1970, OPERA America fulfills its mission through public programs, an annual conference, regional workshops, consultations, granting programs, publications, and online resources. It is the only organization serving all constituents of opera: artists, administrators, trustees, educators, and audience members. Membership includes 200 professional opera companies; 300 associate, business, and education members; and 3,000 individuals. OPERA America extends its reach to 80,000 annual visitors to its National Opera Center and over 83,000 subscribers and followers on digital and social media. Representing over 90 percent of eligible professional companies, OPERA America is empowered to lead field-wide change.
Over the past five decades, OPERA America has awarded over $24 million to opera companies and artists across North America. This strategic philanthropy, made possible through OPERA America’s Opera Fund endowment and in partnership with committed foundations, supports new work development, audience building, civic practice, co-productions, and field-wide innovation at its member opera companies. Awards to individuals advance the careers of women and people of the global majority in creative roles, highlight emerging artists, and recognize the leadership of exceptional trustees.





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