Laurent Pelly's expression of Berlioz's adaptation of Much Ado about Nothing as an opera comique becomes ''an elegant treatise on love and music".
Beatrice and Benedict
Opera

Set against the dual backdrops of the First World War and the devastating 1918 flu epidemic, this brilliant masterpiece by Alice Childress delivers a searing, emotional portrait of interracial love in Charleston, South Carolina. The story centers on the deep devotion between Julia, a Black seamstress, and Herman, a white baker, whose decade-long commitment must navigate the cruel, institutional racism of the Deep South. As they fight for a life together, the couple faces a web of oppressive laws, hostile social customs, and heartbreaking judgment from both of their families. Rather than shying away from these harsh realities, Childress uses sharp precision and powerful storytelling to expose the profound personal cost of systemic prejudice. Though written during the height of the Civil Rights era, this prophetic play carries an extraordinary contemporary resonance. By exploring how an old pandemic and deep-seated racial divides upend ordinary lives, the production acts as a powerful mirror to modern social movements, making it an essential, timeless piece of theatrical storytelling.