“I owe this to my upbringing”: Constantine Costi at the helm of La Traviata on Sydney Harbour

·

Opera Australia has confirmed its outdoor event, Handa Opera on Sydney Harbour, will return as of March 26 with Verdi’s popular La Traviata, after being shut-down earlier this year due to COVID-19.

Greek Australian Director of ‘La Traviata,’ Constantine Costi, spoke to The Greek Herald about his background and his excitement for being at the helm at Opera Australia for the first time.

“This is by far the biggest thing I have ever directed. I’ve got 20 dancers, 10 actors, a chorus of 40 and about 15 principles. In terms of the spectacle, it’s super exciting,” said Constantine Costi and went on to talk about his Greek Cypriot background.

Greek Australian Director of ‘La Traviata,’ Constantine Costi.

“I am Greek Cypriot from my dad’s side. My pappou came here in the late 1940s. He started a little fish shop in Lakemba and then he, my dad, his brother and his siblings all went off to start different versions of De Costi Seafoods.

“I grew up at the fileting bench next to my dad and what this taught me and I can apply in my job at the moment, are all these basic skills. About keeping your composure, about working hard. I can owe all that to my upbringing,” said the young director.

Costi also revealed that although very successful in what he does, he “didn’t grow up in the Opera.”

“I came in quite late. I always had this association that opera was something hard to understand or that it was overwhelming but what I discovered and what I love about it is that on a fundamental level it’s quite simple. It’s an incredibly beautiful, heart breaking, exhilarating story told through the medium of song and music.

Constantine Costi. Photo: Janie Barrett, The Sydney Morning Herald.

“Sometimes the spoken word is not enough to encapsulate the passion of the human experience and I think this is something the Opera does so well,” he said.

Asked what his emotions are when he watches a performance he has directed, Constantine said he’s excited but anxious.

“I always clench on my program but this is because I am aware of the immense amount of work that goes into the creation of the performance. From the lead soprano to the assistant technician, the amount of commitment, passion and the hours it takes to make this happen is amazing.

“I also love when I feel that a perfectly sculptured dramatic moment ripples through the audience and I know that everybody in this audience of hundreds of people is experiencing the same thing at the same time.

“This is some kind of magic that you can’t get elsewhere.”

Handa Opera on Sydney Harbour attracts thousands of visitors to Sydney since it began in 2012 and is supported by the NSW Government and the International Foundation for Arts and Culture.

Performance Details: 26 March – 25 April 2021 (Excluding Mondays and Good Friday on 2 April), Performed in Italian with English and Simplified Chinese subtitles. Runtime: 2 hours 35 minutes including one interval.

READ MORE: Constantine Costi on his passion for opera and seafood.

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Zoe Petropoulos welcomes breakthrough in quest for neurofibromatosis treatment

Years of fundraising by Zoe Petropoulos and her family have helped support research behind a promising breakthrough.

Cassandra Kalpaxis: The hidden reality of domestic violence in Australian workplaces

She is educated. Capable. Often high-achieving. She sits across the boardroom table, meets her deadlines, mentors junior staff.

Pan Korinthian Association of Melbourne hosts community trivia night

More than 50 people gathered on Friday, May 15 for the Pan Korinthian Association of Melbourne and Victoria’s (PKA) trivia night.

Fruit and deli owner Steven Nicolaou calls trust tax changes a ‘kick in the guts’

Steven Nicolaou says new federal budget measures targeting trust structures will leave small businesses “working for nothing."

Greek Ambassador visits Diocese of Brisbane during official Queensland visit

The Ambassador of Greece to Australia, Stavros Venizelos, has been received at the offices of the Greek Orthodox Diocese of Brisbane.

You May Also Like

Three monuments in Greece to be protected as part of new EU project

Three ancient monuments in Greece will be preserved as part of the new collaboration between the European and Greek-led Triquetra project.

Australia’s Ambassador to the US, Arthur Sinodinos, has praised Biden’s stance on China

The Australian government has welcomed the Biden administration’s initial stance on China, with US Ambassador Arthur Sinodinos saying it was on track to be...

Sifis Tsourdalakis: Music rooted in Cretan tradition

Born in Melbourne, Victoria in 1975, Sifis Tsourdalakis was raised in a household steeped in the melodies and rhythms of Crete.