Back to overview

23 Jun 2016 - 12 Apr 2017

Dr. Miracle

Dr. Miracle's last illusion

The creators of the production drew inspiration from a literally magical genre: illusionism. We transported ourselves to the era around 1900, when life was colored by sparkling variety shows and a fascination with existence beyond the boundary of life and death. The production was a co-production with the New European Ensemble, De Dutch Don’t Dance Division, and the Koninklijke Schouwburg.

We follow the elusive illusionist Dr. Miracle. In his traveling theatre, he enchants the audience with seemingly light-hearted variety acts. He defies gravity and other laws of nature. During one of his performances, his assistant loses her life in a tragic accident. Dr. Miracle becomes utterly entranced by the beauty of her passage into the eternal light. Overcome by a powerful longing to relive that experience, he embarks on a quest, taking on ever-changing forms and venturing into a mysterious world filled with sleepwalkers, madmen, and wandering souls. Are we witnessing playful illusions—or a detailed account of a series of gruesome murders?

Dr. Miracle’s Last Illusion was both a flamboyant and melancholic performance full of suspense, where humor and horror went hand in hand. The story came to life through enchanting scenes from operas and ballets by Bellini, Offenbach, Verdi, Wagner, and Stravinsky. The production was also an ode to the magical genres of opera and dance, with their many heroines—often driven to madness. These muses—and victims—of Dr. Miracle were portrayed by the exceptional vocal talents Martina Prins, Kristina Bitenc, and Lucie Chartin, along with dancer Violet Broersma from De Dutch Don’t Dance Division. Woedy Woet, multiple Dutch magic champion, embodied the role of Dr. Miracle. The concept and direction were by Serge van Veggel, artistic director of OPERA2DAY.

About the performance

Watch videos about the performance, read the synopsis, download the program booklet, or explore the list of featured repertoire.

Video

Trailer Dr. Miracle's last illusion

Director Serge van Veggel on Dr. Miracle’s Last Illusion

The Muses of Dr. Miracle

Synopsis

In the performance, we follow the elusive illusionist Dr. Miracle. In his traveling theatre, he enchants the audience with seemingly light-hearted variety acts. He challenges gravity and other laws of nature. During one of his shows, his assistant dies in a tragic accident. Dr. Miracle becomes completely mesmerized by the beauty of her passage into the eternal light. He is overwhelmed by a powerful desire to experience this again. In his quest, he takes on new identities and becomes entangled in a mysterious world full of sleepwalkers, madmen, and wandering souls. Are we watching lighthearted illusions? Or are we witnessing a detailed account of a series of gruesome murders?

Repertoire

In the performance, among others, the following works (or excerpts thereof) are included:

Jacques Offenbach – Le Docteur Ox

Jacques Offenbach – Les Contes d’Hoffmann

Vincenzo Bellini – La Sonnambula

Isabelle Aboulker – Je t’aime

Giuseppe Verdi – Macbeth

Igor Stravinsky – L’Oiseau de feu (The Firebird)

Ambroise Thomas – Hamlet

Gian Carlo Menotti – The Medium

Ernest Chausson – La Nuit

Richard Wagner – Tristan und Isolde

Programme Book

Download the programme book for the performance.

 

Team

Cast & Crew

Artistic Team

Concept and direction Serge van Veggel
Musical direction Hernán Schvartzman
Project development Alice Gubler
Dramaturgy and text Minnekus de Groot
Composition and arrangements Daniël Hamburger
Research historical recordings Emlyn Stam, Hernán Schvartzman
Choreography Thom Stuart (De Dutch Don’t Dance Division)
Illusions Woedy Woet
Scenography Herbert Janse
Lighting Uri Rapaport
Sound design and soundscape Arne Bock
Technical production Ronald Tebra
Costumes Mirjam Pater
Hair and makeup Nienke Algra

Cast & Team

Dr. Miracle Woedy Woet
Soprano I Lucie Katrien
Soprano II Kristina Bitenc
Soprano III Martina Prins
Dance Violet Broersma (De Dutch Don’t Dance Division)
Flying effects Femke Luyckx
Voice Dr. Miracle Tom Jansen
Role double soprano III Mieke van der Ven

New European Ensemble

First violin Rada Ovcharova
Second violin Eduardo Paredes
Viola Emlyn Stam
Cello Willem Stam
Double bass Dobril Popdimitrov
Oboe Seung Eun
Flute Felicia van den End
Clarinet James Meldrum
Bassoon Renee Knigge
Trombone Konstantin Koev
Piano Daan Treur
Percussion Natalia Alvarez
Sound field with contributions from students and participants

Artistic Team Support

Assistant director Femke Luyckx
Stage manager Roland Lammers van Toorenburg
Repetiteurs Luba Podgayskaya, Anastasiia Kurilko
Direction advice Karel de Rooij

Understudies

Soprano I Vera Hiltbrunner
Soprano II Marta Loncar
Soprano III Jannelieke Schmidt
Dance Femke Luyckx

Production Team

Project management Alice Gubler
Production management Rodney Verhoeven
Stage production Rian de Bruijn, Sanne van der Velde, Jossie van Dongen
Head stagehand Ronald Tebra
Technicians Thomas van Brink, Lucas de Groen, Mike Willemsen, Leroy van der Spek, Amber van Stallenberg
Set changers Lisa Dale, Romain Touron, David Teekens
Lighting technicians Peter Peereboom, Ramuntxo Stoete
Sound technicians Arne Bock
Wardrobe mistress Karianne Hoenderkamp
Assistant wardrobe Heleen de Bruïne *, Nicole Piccinno *, Vonne van Zant *
Hair and makeup Marissa Coster
Supertitles Matthias Koneçny
Supertitles operation Wim Goris *, Kees Brinkers *
Set production De man met de hamer (Maarten Smids, Berd Visscher, Rienk Krikke, Matthijs Botke), Bossinade lightworks (Bas Bossinade), All-Illusions (Rene van Tuijl), Decoratelier Petruk (Fred Hoppener), Theatex (Astrid Wiggers), Phlippo Nederland (Jeroen van Oirschot)
Costume production Hermien Hollander, Atelier van het Nationale Toneel
Lighting equipment Peter Peereboom
Sound equipment Gijs Kater, Kater Audio Techniek

Marketing & Communication

Marketing coordination Jackie van der Vlis
Program booklet and texts Dimitri van der Werf
Translations Agnes de Wit*
Campaign photography Henk Bleeker
Stage photography Morten den Boer
Trailer and films Joris-Jan Bos
Graphic design Shilpi Ahmed-van der Pool
Introductions Philip Ruitenberg
Relations management Carla Voorendonk

Education

Education coordination Mieke van der Ven
Education internship Anja van den Bos
Workshop teachers Niels van Laar, Willem van den Andel, Marrit Bausch, Daphne van Ommen

Fundraising

B&D Funding: Brenda Dirkse, Dirk Evers, Daniek Cappetijn

Tour Planning

Senf Theaterpartners: Chris Bergwerff, Linda Terlaak, Huub van den Heuvel

The Dutch Don’t Dance Division

Artistic direction Thom Stuart, Rinus Sprong
Business management Berend Dikkers
Company manager Charlie dos Reis Borges Rodrigues
Marketing and publicity Sofie den Dulk

New European Ensemble

Artistic direction Emlyn Stam
Business management Onno Ephraim
Assistant business management Lisa van Winden
Publicity Dimitri van der Werf

Koninklijke Schouwburg

Management Simon van Driel
Head of marketing Elke Smelt
Marketing Frerick de Haan, Daphne Browne, Rio van der Oest
Head of technical department Alphons Verhallen
Programmer Marijtje Pronk
Audience guidance and catering Gonny Hogervorst

Royal Theatre Additional Programming

Concept development Serge van Veggel, Désirée Achterkamp, Alice Gubler, Michael Häfliger, Femke Luyckx
With thanks to Karel de Rooij, Krijn van Driel

Circus Tent and Foyers
Actor Zweitze Zwart
Singers Vera Hiltbrunner, Marta Loncar, Jannelieke Schmidt

Paul Steenbergen Foyer
Theremin players
Thorwald Jorgenson, Marieke van der Heyden
Magic lanterns Henk Doelman Kranenburg, Robert te Pas (Magic Lantern Museum)

Ladies’ Foyer
Dance
Michael Häfliger (choreography), Olga Markari

King Willem I Foyer
Violinist
Isobel Wamelink
Actor Lorris Eichinger

Production manager and design Désirée Achterkamp
Royal Theatre coordination Alphons Verhallen
Technical Maus Hendriks
Lighting Lex Verkade
Audience guidance and program sales Jannet Bikker*, Cristiana Kat*, Lia Laaper*, Liesbeth Mulder*, Hanne van Oorschot*, Hanna Samson*, Barbara Somers*, Rob Stinis*

Press and public

Read an overview of the review and see the audience reactions.

Video

Audience reactions to the premiere.

Review summary

In April 2017, after 30 performances, the tour of Dr. Miracle’s Last Illusion was concluded. Never before had so many performances of a production been staged by OPERA2DAY. The responses from press and audience were almost unanimously enthusiastic. “Spectacular,” wrote de Volkskrant; “a hit,” wrote the Theaterkrant. An overview.

A four-star review appeared in De Volkskrant. Reviewer Patrick van de Hanenberg highly praises the way director Serge van Veggel merges opera and illusionism into magical musical theatre. He calls it “artistic fusion at a high level” and concludes that Dr. Miracle is the “most accessible and spectacular” production OPERA2DAY has staged so far. Even audiences who might get nervous from too many operatic divas on stage, he writes, “are captivated by the combination of Woedy Woet’s impressive illusions, dreamy dance, and powerful sopranos.”

Theaterkrant also awards four stars and calls Dr. Miracle “a hit.” Reviewer Dick van Teijlingen praises Serge van Veggel as well: “He is inspired by his fascination with illusionism and the atmosphere and music of the late nineteenth century… creating a feast for the eyes and ears.” He is also impressed with the stage design: “Herbert Janse’s sets look stunning!” Moreover, he greatly appreciates the music. Following the tradition of eighteenth-century pasticcios, Dr. Miracle weaves fragments of operas and ballets by Bellini, Offenbach, Verdi, Wagner, and Stravinsky into a new whole. According to Theaterkrant, it is “an interestingly chosen selection of arias and duets.” Dick van Teijlingen is impressed by the “finely performing New European Ensemble” and the sopranos: “Lucie Chartin delivers dazzling, light-footed vocal fireworks, shining for example in both acting and singing as the singing doll Olympia from Offenbach’s The Tales of Hoffmann… Kristina Bitenc is beautifully restrained and sensitive in the lyrical, plaintive ‘Ah! Non credea mirarti’ from Bellini’s La sonnambula.” And “Violet Broersma of De Dutch Don’t Dance Division performs graceful choreography.”

Colorful and ingenious

Peter van der Lint from Trouw appreciates Dr. Miracle as a “colorful and smoothly running production.” Internationally awarded illusionist Woedy Woet was engaged to embody Dr. Miracle. According to Van der Lint, this results in “great and ingenious magic acts, beautifully performed by Woedy Woet.” The New European Ensemble and the three sopranos drew inspiration from historical 78 rpm recordings to perform with the same freedom as their colleagues around 1900. Some of those recordings can also be heard during the performance. At the end of the show, “a fragment of Lili Lehmann in Wagner’s Liebestod is beautifully extended into the live singing of Martina Prins. Well done.” Engaging musical theatre and musically excellent.

Floris Don of NRC praises Dr. Miracle as “engaging musical theatre” and has great appreciation for the music. “Three excellent sopranos are accompanied by the fiery New European Ensemble.”

Ferdi de Lange of FerdiBlog also attended the premiere of Dr. Miracle’s Last Illusion. In a four-star review, he observes: “Beautiful sets clearly show that the makers did not take the easy way out.” Because of this, the production really feels like “1900.” He, too, is impressed by the “excellent sopranos” and finds the New European Ensemble “musically very good.” Go see it!

The web magazine Place de l’Opera is enthusiastic about the three sopranos as well: “In Dr. Miracle’s Last Illusion there is much vocal enjoyment… Chartin delivered a brilliant Olympia and Bitenc a beautiful daughter in Menotti’s Medium. Martina Prins convincingly portrayed her Lady Macbeth character.” The opera scenes are given a new context in the show. Reviewer Peter Franken writes: “Dr. Miracle appears as a psychiatrist and convinces a female patient through hypnosis that she has murdered him. Brilliantly conceived is the musical accompaniment to this scene: the aria ‘Una macchia’ from Verdi’s Lady Macbeth.” Illusionist Woedy Woet’s mesmerizing acts are “very convincing and skillfully executed,” thanks in part to the stage technology: “It was very well arranged, so much so that the antics performed with the various ladies looked absolutely lifelike.” Place de l’Opera concludes: “OPERA2DAY has once again proven itself with this production as a talented newcomer in the Dutch opera landscape. Or rather, it has outgrown that status and become an established ensemble. Achieving this position in today’s times shows great enthusiasm, much talent, and enormous perseverance… go see it, go see it.”

Audience reactions

The audience expressed their enthusiasm not only through standing ovations and applause groups. Our mailbox was flooded with fan mail. Here is a small compilation: “Beautiful music, wonderfully sung, and excellently directed. Highly recommended.” – “Visually stunning.” – “Opening act very impressive.” – “A great combination of entertainment, opera, and illusionism.” – “Breathtakingly wonderful!” – “A beautiful fusion of different genres. The music was gorgeous!” – “A very original idea, beautifully executed, a spectacle to be proud of.” – “Great imagination and passionate artists, fantastic voices, and excellent performances made for a great experience.” – “Heartbreakingly beautiful.” – “The music pulled you into the performance. What an inspiring subject: Death!” – “Beautiful in many if not all respects. Singing and music, very, very beautiful. Clever technique. Beautiful story and its portrayal. Moving finale.” – “Never been to an opera before, but I really enjoyed this combination. Enjoyed the introduction, the theatre atmosphere, and of course the performance itself.” – “Very entertaining. Truly miraculous, thrilling. Beautiful singing and dancing. Breathtaking.” – “I have seen all OPERA2DAY productions and this one surpasses (once again) all expectations.” – “I loved the disappearance acts and the singers, especially Olympia, amazing.” – “Orchestra in the pit modest in size but rich in sound!” – “Impressive, captivating from the first to the last minute, very well made and performed.” – “The music was beautiful and also beautifully performed by the New European Ensemble and the singers!” – “Fantastic concept, beautiful sets, fun entrance with the little atmospheric scenes in the various salons. All perfectly suited to get into the mood. Very Dutch, very good!!”.

Image

View the production photos and the teaser.

Teaser

https://youtu.be/7_izJY2y5VE

Teaser Dr. Miracle's last illusion

Duration of the performance

90 without breaks

Jed Wentz

Jed Wentz

Coach baroque acting

Jed Wentz has worked as a flutist, conductor and teacher within the discipline of Early Music since 1986. With his ensemble Musica ad Rhenum he recorded more than 30 CDs and toured three continents. He is assistant professor at the Academy of Creative and Performing Arts at Leiden University and teaches rhetoric at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague. His current research revolves around the relationship between music and acting, 1680-1930. He has published articles in Cambridge Opera Journal, Journal of the Riemenschneider Bach Institute and European Drama and Performance Studies. He recently contributed an essay to Early Music in the 21st Century, published by Oxford University Press. He regularly performs as actor and reciter with the early music ensemble Postscript, and has created a number of scores to accompany silent film. He is also artistic advisor to the Utrecht Early Music Festival in The Netherlands.

Oscar Verhaar

Oscar Verhaar

Countertenor

Oscar Verhaar began his career as a boy soprano and earned his master’s degree in Early Music at the Royal Conservatoire in The Hague, where he studied with Michael Chance, Jill Feldman, Lenie van den Heuvel, and Peter Kooij. He also studied musicology in Utrecht and Vienna, and participated in masterclasses with teachers such as Ian Bostridge, Carlos Mena, and Kees Boeke. He was selected for the Academy of Jordi Savall’s Fundacío CIMA, was a laureate of the Fondation Royaumont, and a Young Bach Fellow of the Netherlands Bach Society.

Oscar specialises in medieval and baroque music, but he also regularly performs contemporary music, such as the world premiere of the opera Humanoid, composed by Leonard Evers. In working with early music, Oscar delves into old manuscripts and books for background and inspiration. This research opens up new avenues for unfamiliar repertoire that can also provide new insights into familiar pieces.

In 2024, Oscar and orchestra La Sfera Armoniosa recorded a CD for label Challenge Classics featuring arias about freedom by G.F. Handel. In 2025-2026, Oscar will be heard in the opera Queen Mary, based on music by Henry Purcell.

James Hall

James Hall

Countertenor

British countertenor James Hall is recognised for the combination of technical security, interpretive depth, and dramatic authority he brings to repertoire ranging from baroque to contemporary opera. He appears widely in opera, concert, and new music contexts across the UK and Europe.

James has originated roles in new works by David Bruce (Nothing, Glyndebourne), Laurence Osborn (The Mother), and Rolf Hind (Sky in a Small Cage), and created the role of Strumpet Ginger in Masque of Might, Opera North’s devised Purcell eco-opera. His operatic work has taken him to major houses and festivals including Glyndebourne, Bayerische Staatsoper, Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, Badisches Staatstheater Karlsruhe, Deutsche Oper Berlin, the Venice Biennale, and Broadway, where he appeared as Farinelli in Claire Van Kampen’s Farinelli and the King alongside Mark Rylance.

On the concert platform, Hall has collaborated with ensembles including The Monteverdi Choir, Collegium Vocale Gent, The English Concert, Concerto Copenhagen, the Dunedin Consort, Irish Baroque Orchestra, Early Opera Company, and Les Musiciens de Saint-Julien, performing at venues such as Carnegie Hall, Wigmore Hall, the Royal Festival Hall, the Concertgebouw, the Barbican, the Palace of Versailles, and the Wiener Konzerthaus.

His debut recording Elegy, made with fellow countertenor Iestyn Davies, was nominated for a Gramophone Award. He has recorded for Hyperion, Phi, and Vivat.

Operatic performances in 2025-2026 include Joachim in Handel’s Susanna for Opera North, Ivan Vane in the world premiere of Elena Langer’s To Die For: A Comedy with Nederlandse Reisopera, Hercules in Handel’s The Choice of Hercules for the London Handel Festival, and Cake and Berghahn in Jonathan Dove’s Itchalongside the Cheshire Cat in Will Todd’s Alice in Wonderland for Opera Holland Park.

Saana Tolonen

Saana Tolonen

Circusartist

Saana Tolonen is a circus artist from northern Finland, currently based in Rotterdam in the Netherlands. Working primarily with aerial hoop, she explores the edges of aerials, acrobatics, and contemporary circus, constantly seeking new physical and expressive possibilities. Her work is influenced by movement and theatre, and she finds inspiration in collaboration and interdisciplinary exchange.

She holds a bachelor’s degree from the Circus School at Turku University of Applied Sciences (2017) and is a graduate of Codarts University of the Arts (2020). Saana has worked with different directors and creators, including Daniel Gulko, Francesco Sgró, Lennie Visser, Cécile Da Costa, Lotte Mueller and Julía Campistany.

In addition to performing, Saana develops her own circus projects, such as a video-circus performance created for the OIJOIJOI! Festival in Tampere, Finland. She is also part of the Sisko collective, a collaboration between three sisters working across artistic disciplines.

Alejandro García Bustos

Alejandro García Bustos

Circus artist

Alejandro García Bustos is a circus artist born in Mexico City, Mexico, in 1999.

In 2018 he crossed the ocean to start his studies at the preparatory circus school Carampa in Madrid and later in 2020 at Codarts Circus Arts in Rotterdam. Shortly after his graduation in 2024 he joined the Belgian company Circumstances for their show Exit which he toured for two seasons.

Alejandro considers himself an all-round acrobat with a special love for teeterboard and trampoline, and he is overall just a “funny lad”.

Lilian Tong

Lilian Tong

Soprano

Lilian Tong is a soprano from Hong Kong, currently based in Rotterdam. She obtained her Master’s degree in Vocal Performance from Codarts Rotterdam Conservatory in 2018. Since completing her studies, she has established herself as an active performer across Europe, particularly in The Netherlands.

Her operatic highlights include Musetta in La Bohème at the Shaw Theatre in London, Serpina in Pergolesi’s La Serva Padrona with Hollands Diep Zomer Opera, and Despina in Così fan tutte with Codarts Opera Lab. She has also appeared in the world premiere of Seconds of Fear at the Dutch National Opera and performed at Operadagen Rotterdam.

Beyond opera, Lilian is an active and versatile concert soloist. She has appeared as soprano soloist in major works such as Messiah, Johannes-Passion, Matthäus-Passion, Weihnachtsoratorium, The Armed Man, and Rutter’s Requiem. She made her Concertgebouw debut in 2023 and was a finalist in the Corsica Lirica International Competition. In the same year she won First Prize at the Aphrodite Voice Competition.

Ruoran Ma

Ruoran Ma

Soprano

Ruoran Ma is a Chinese soprano currently pursuing her Master’s in Classical Voice at Codarts Conservatory in Rotterdam, studying with Professor Marcel Reijans. An acclaimed young artist, Ruoran has been awarded fourth prize and supraleitung method prize at the 3rd Basel International Vocal Competition. She has also been a semi-finalist at the Renata Tebaldi International Vocal Competition (2025).

Her recent engagements include solo performances in Mozart’s Requiem under Richard Egarr in Rotterdam, the role of Flaminia in Haydn’s Il mondo della luna at Codarts Conservatory, and participation in the Dutch National Opera’s Baroque Young Voice project, performing in Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas. She was selected for the Young Artist Project of the Openfest Prague and will perform in July 2026.

Ruoran has performed at notable venues such as the Beijing Concert Hall, Tokyo Opera City, and the China National Centre for the Performing Arts, and continues to build an international career in both concert and operatic repertoire.

Femke Luyckx

Femke Luyckx

Artistic Research

Belgian Femke Luyckx works as a dancer, aerial acrobat, choreographer, stunt coach, and assistant director. She has her own dance company, Compagnie KAIROS.

As a stunt coach, Femke has worked on projects including Stranger Things, Eurovision, 14, and Jesus Christ Superstar. She has collaborated with directors such as David Alden, Pierre Audi, Lotte de Beer, Simon McBurney, Robert Carsen, Romeo Castellucci, and Ivo van Hove, and choreographers such as Amir Hosseinpour, Jonathan Lunn, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, and Philip Giraudeaux. She has assisted at Dutch National Opera & Ballet, Opera Ballet Flanders, and the Netherlands Chamber Choir, among others.

Femke studied Classical Ballet at the Royal Ballet School of Antwerp and Contemporary Dance at Fontys School of Fine and Performing Arts in Tilburg and obtained her master’s degree in Choreography at Codarts and Fontys in 2023.

Femke has been working on OPERA2DAY productions since 2015, including La Révolution de Carmen, J.S. Bach – The Apocalypse, Song of the Dark Forest and Don Quichot.

Aedín Walsh

Aedín Walsh

Director

Aedín is a director, acrobat, musician, dancer and actor. Born in 1982 in Ireland, she has lived in a diverse range of countries and continents, becoming polyglot by accident in an effort to understand and hear the voices of others. Aedín is a staunch believer in the necessity of art and artists as catharsis and reflection of the world. Whether working for Clowns Without Borders in war-torn locations, or with large circus/dance companies, Aedín does not believe in the irrelevance or frivolity of creation, and she embraces the deliverance present in diverse forms of humour and absurdity.

Performing throughout childhood in musicals and ballets in her then local city of Harare, Zimbabwe, she returned to Ireland at the age of 10.

Between 2000-2015 her studies comprised Architecture (ECA, Edinburgh), Contemporary Dance Performance (The Space, SSCD, Scotland), Dance Theatre (Trinity-Laban) culminating in an MA in New Performative Practices specialising in Circus (SKH Sweden). From 2005 her professional life as a performer began, and from 2007 she worked as a choreographer.

Based in France with her young family since 2022, her professional work becomes more and more an interweaving and reimagining of the world, as a Mother, rendering the invisible visible, necessary, inspiring, and returning to the poetry writing of her youth.

Integral to her work onstage and off is the inclusion of consent-based practices and communication.

Mira Leonard

Mira Leonard

Circusartist

Mira Leonard graduated from Stockholm University of the Arts in 2014 and has since then worked for different circus companies, big and small, in theatres, circus tents, street corners, living rooms and parks in America, China and across Europe.

Mira was part of the Nordic artist collective ENT making various site-specific performances intertwining circus and folk music in forests and trees. Before that she was in a duo for 20 years with Esmeralda Nikolajeff focusing on the disciplines of duotrapeze and icarian games.

Lately Mira has been enjoying high heights in harnesses, practicing hair suspension and walking on crushed glass. This is the first time Mira has worked with opera.

Luise Hoffmann

Luise Hoffmann

Circusartist

Luise Hoffmann is a multiskilled circus artist from Germany. She graduated from Codarts University of the Arts in Rotterdam, where she collaborated with various directors and developed her own artistic voice. Through contemporary circus, her work explores expectations, perception and personal boundaries.

Since graduating, Luise has focused on both solo creations and group acrobatics. Her solo piece, WHAT I THINK, THEY THINK, has been performed internationally and was nominated for the BNG Circus Prize. Alongside her solo work, Luise has collaborated with institutions and collectives such as Scapino Ballet Rotterdam, Klaus! Kollektiv (Berlin) and INO Kollektiv.

Jean Charles Gaume

Jean Charles Gaume

Circusartist

Jean-Charles Gaume is a tight-wire dancer, hand to hand base, circus author, and circus co-director of his own company, INHERENCE. He graduated from ENACR and CNAC in France in 2008. His artistic approach is multidisciplinary and multiskilled, and he has consistently blended circus, dance, and theatre throughout his career.

Jean-Charles has created a wide range of circus works, including Le Parcours du Combattant (2010), J’aurais Voulu with Sandrine Juglair (2014), Here & Now (2017), and Radius et Cubitus, les Amants de Pompéi (2021, Beaumarchais Laureate). In 2026, he will premiere a new solo piece entitled FRAME, I’m Gonna Live Forever.

His multidisciplinary approach has led him to collaborate with numerous theatre directors, circus directors, and choreographers as both a performer and an author. He performed in La disparition du slow with the Yvan Mosjoukine Collective, Diktat by Sandrine Juglair, Le Corps au-delà des Frontières by Salia Sanou, L’Oublié(e) by Raphaëlle Boitel, VerSant by Underclouds, and projects of le Théâtre du Mouvement (Mime). In 2024, he directed In Sity, Partir, rester un peu for Compagnie CirkVOST in collaboration with Karine Noël.

Jean-Charles has also collaborated across other artistic fields, including cinema (The Sound of Time by Wim Wenders and Chocolat by Roschdy Zem), jazz music (videoclip Today of Anne Pacéo), contemporary music (Françoise Toullec), and comedy (Virginie Hocq).

In 2013, Jean-Charles graduated in Biodynamic Craniosacral Therapy from the KARUNA Institute in the UK.

Joe Baker

Joe Baker

Circusartist

Joe Baker is a talented circus artist with a passion for pushing the boundaries of performance. After studying at Codarts, he honed his skills in aerials and acrobatics.

Joe’s experience includes performing with renowned dance company Scapino Ballet where he explored the fusion of acrobatics and choreography in live performances. With a flair for captivating audiences, Joe brings creativity, and precision to every performance, constantly seeking new ways to challenge himself and elevate the circus field. Music plays a vital role in his performances, where rhythm and sound are as important as movement. Joe composes his own music for his personal works, creating an all-encompassing and unique experience.

Maud Bessard Morandas

Maud Bessard Morandas

Soprano

French coloratura soprano Maud Bessard-Morandas, initially trained as a dancer and actress, performs a wide-ranging repertoire, spanning Renaissance music to contemporary creation, including opera, operetta, oratorio, and art song. She is a prizewinner at numerous international competitions (Gordes, L. Bellan, Arles, G. Enesco, Lugano, Cesti, Froville, Clermont) as well as the Royaumont, Leenaards, and Sigg Foundations. She appears regularly as a soloist at major European festivals (Saint-Denis, Royaumont, Ambronay, Saintes, and La Côte-Saint-André) and opera houses (Wrocław in Poland, Brașov in Romania, Geneva, Versailles, Dijon, and Clermont-Ferrand).

Maud frequently collaborates with leading early music ensembles such as Cappella Mediterranea, Amarillis, Pulcinella, Procris, O Tempora, and Les Argonautes.

In the 2025–2026 season, she will premiere a production for young audiences at the Grand Théâtre de Genève, perform Acis and Galatea at the Ambronay Festival, tour the Netherlands in The Opera Circus with OPERA2DAY and the Netherlands Bach Society, and record a solo album with Ensemble O Tempora.

Maud holds three Master’s degrees from the CNSMD de Lyon and the Haute École de Musique de Genève(voice, pedagogy, and conducting), as well as a Bachelor’s degree in musicology.

James Hall

James Hall

Countertenor

British countertenor James Hall is recognised for the combination of technical security, interpretive depth, and dramatic authority he brings to repertoire ranging from baroque to contemporary opera. He appears widely in opera, concert, and new music contexts across the UK and Europe.

James has originated roles in new works by David Bruce (Nothing, Glyndebourne), Laurence Osborn (The Mother), and Rolf Hind (Sky in a Small Cage), and created the role of Strumpet Ginger in Masque of Might, Opera North’s devised Purcell eco-opera. His operatic work has taken him to major houses and festivals including Glyndebourne, Bayerische Staatsoper, Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, Badisches Staatstheater Karlsruhe, Deutsche Oper Berlin, the Venice Biennale, and Broadway, where he appeared as Farinelli in Claire Van Kampen’s Farinelli and the King alongside Mark Rylance.

On the concert platform, Hall has collaborated with ensembles including The Monteverdi Choir, Collegium Vocale Gent, The English Concert, Concerto Copenhagen, the Dunedin Consort, Irish Baroque Orchestra, Early Opera Company, and Les Musiciens de Saint-Julien, performing at venues such as Carnegie Hall, Wigmore Hall, the Royal Festival Hall, the Concertgebouw, the Barbican, the Palace of Versailles, and the Wiener Konzerthaus.

His debut recording Elegy, made with fellow countertenor Iestyn Davies, was nominated for a Gramophone Award. He has recorded for Hyperion, Phi, and Vivat.

Operatic performances in 2025-2026 include Joachim in Handel’s Susanna for Opera North, Ivan Vane in the world premiere of Elena Langer’s To Die For: A Comedy with Nederlandse Reisopera, Hercules in Handel’s The Choice of Hercules for the London Handel Festival, and Cake and Berghahn in Jonathan Dove’s Itchalongside the Cheshire Cat in Will Todd’s Alice in Wonderland for Opera Holland Park.

Maria Schellenberg

Maria Schellenberg

Soprano

Maria Schellenberg is a Russian mezzo-soprano celebrated for her dark vocal colour, dramatic authority, and psychologically intense performances. She has appeared at the Royal Opera House, Opera de Tenerife, Dorset Opera Festival and the Linbury Theatre, and with orchestras including the Danish National Orchestra, Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra and London Philharmonic Orchestra.

Noted for her exceptional reliability under pressure, she received critical acclaim for a last-minute appearance as Megacle in Vivaldi’s L’Olimpiade at the Royal Opera House’s Linbury Theatre in 2024. Her repertoire includes Dalila, Ulrica, Maddalena, Zia Principessa, Margared (Le Rois d’Ys) and Isabella (L’italiana in Algeri).

Maria studied piano and harpsichord in addition to vocal performance. She is a graduate from the Royal College of Music and an alumna of the Samling Academy and Opera Tenerife Young Artists Programme.

Ken Gould

Ken Gould

International Partnerships

Nienke Algra

Nienke Algra

Hai & Make-up design

Hair and Make-up Designer Nienke Algra completed her training in TV, film, and theater make-up in London in 1986. She began her career at Atelier Didden and was associated for fifteen years with the Paardenkathedraal, working on productions with Dirk Tanghe, as well as freelancing for theater companies including Orkater and Jakop Ahlbom.

For OPERA2DAY, she has previously been responsible for hair and make-up on Mariken in de Tuin der Lusten, Dr. Miracle’s Last Illusion, Hamlet, Opera Melancholica, Vivaldi – Dangerous Liaisons, and Don Quichot.

Mirjam Pater

Mirjam Pater

Costume design

Costume Designer Mirjam Pater is fascinated by clothing. She studied at the Amsterdam Fashion Academy, founded her own costume studio, and has worked as an independent designer since 1990. From 1992 to 2008, she was the resident designer for Dirk Tanghe. She has also created designs for many leading theater companies, including Het Nationale Toneel, Het Internationaal Danstheater, and Orkater.

For Stage Entertainment, she designed costumes for Cabaret, a large-scale musical at Carré. Her opera designs include Orfeo for Holland Opera, Lucia di Lammermoor and Don Pasquale for De Nederlandse Reisopera, Norma at the Grote Markt in Groningen, Rheingold on a Rhine barge, and Ipermestra, an anniversary production for Festival Oude Muziek. Since its founding, she has designed almost all productions for OPERA2DAY.

Arne Bock

Arne Bock

Sound design

Sound Engineer Arne Bock is a renowned audio professional specializing in live sound, recording, mixing, and mastering. With a strong foundation in jazz as well as classical and contemporary music, Arne has become one of the most sought-after audio engineers. His expertise spans a wide range of formats and genres, from orchestral and opera productions to immersive audio installations and large-scale tours.

Arne’s impressive career includes close collaborations with acclaimed composers, conductors, ensembles, and artist management, such as Steve Reich, Joe Hisaishi (Studio Ghibli), CAMI Music, and Columbia Artists Management. His recording and production work has been released on prestigious labels including BIS Records, SteepleChase, and Sony Music, earning awards such as the Swedish Grammis and the French Diapason d’Or. As a sound designer and technical director, Arne has brought his expertise to performances in major concert halls and stadiums worldwide.

He frequently contributes his experience to opera productions. Recent projects include work for OPERA2DAY and the highly praised sound design for Monteverdi’s Maria Vespers, performed by the Pygmalion Ensemble under Raphael Pichon and directed by Pierre Audi in the iconic Gasholders in Amsterdam. He was also the lead sound engineer for the groundbreaking production Aus Licht in Amsterdam (2019), mixing monumental works by Karlheinz Stockhausen.

As an educator, Arne has taught and led masterclasses at institutions such as the Royal Conservatory in The Hague and the University of Lethbridge. He regularly mentors interns and young professionals through various technical training programs. He holds a bachelor’s degree in jazz trumpet and both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in sound engineering, all from the Royal Conservatory in The Hague.

Uri Rapaport

Uri Rapaport

Lighting design

Lighting Designer Uri Rapaport has been professionally active in theater since 1977. He has created numerous designs both in the Netherlands and abroad for a wide variety of companies, producers, and museums, including Het Nationale Toneel, Toneelgroep Maastricht, De Nederlandse Reisopera, Opera Zuid, De Nationale Opera, Opera Genève, Opera Budapest, Ruhrtriennale, Wiener Festwochen, De Doelen, Gergiev Festival, Holland Festival, and Festival Oude Muziek Utrecht, as well as for Joop van den Ende, De Parade, Oerol, and Het Nut.

Between 1996 and 2008, he was a member of the artistic team at the Paardenkathedraal and designed all productions for Dirk Tanghe. Recent theater designs include Pauperparadijs, Trojan Wars, Willem II, Erik of het klein insektenboek, De Verleiders, and several major musicals such as Nummer 14, Dagboek van een Herdershond, Zondag in het zuiden, and Het geluk van Limburg. He also performed in his own production, LICHT. Since 2012, he has been responsible for the lighting design of a wide range of OPERA2DAY productions.

Herbert Janse

Herbert Janse

Scenography

Set Designer Herbert Janse studied scenography at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam and the Jan van Eyck Academy in Maastricht.

Since 1985, Herbert Janse has designed sets for productions including De Avonden (Het Vervolg), Houdini (Orkater), De methode Ribadier (Het Nationale Toneel), Cloaca (Het Toneel Speelt), Rigoletto (Hong Kong Opera Company), Hamlet, Hedda Gabler (De Theatercompagnie), Il barbiere di Siviglia, Le nozze di Figaro, La fille du régiment (Opera Zuid), Ex, Carnage (Suburbia), Schrijf me in het zand, Hamlet (Studio Antigone), and Song of the Dark Forest (a co-production by OPERA2DAY and Scapino Rotterdam).

Since 2006, he has also been teaching at the Amsterdam Theatre School and served as curator for the Dutch entries at the Prague Quadrennial in 2007 and 2011. Since 2012, he has been responsible for the scenography of most OPERA2DAY productions.

Tiara Kobald

Tiara Kobald

Dramaturgy

Dramaturg Tiara Kobald was originally trained as a violinist at the Fontys Conservatory in Tilburg. She studied violin with Chris Duindam, baroque violin with Franc Polman, and orchestral conducting with Arjan Tien and Etienne Siebens. She works as a freelance violinist with various orchestras and ensembles, including the Ars Musica Orchestra.

After completing her musical training, she studied English and Theatre, Film and Literary Studies at the University of Antwerp. She completed two directing internships at the Dutch National Opera in Amsterdam and an internship in dramaturgy at Opera Vlaanderen in Antwerp.

For the past year, Tiara Kobald has been a resident dramaturg with OPERA2DAY

Flora den Bieman

Flora den Bieman

Communication & Content Officer

Henry Vorselman

Henry Vorselman

Chef de Bureau

Evelien Storm

Evelien Storm

Coordination Participation & Education

Doldie Noorduijn

Doldie Noorduijn

Project management & Casting

Wim van de Laak

Wim van de Laak

Head of Marketing

Harm Witteveen

Harm Witteveen

Business director

Hernán Schvartzman

Hernán Schvartzman

Musical director

Argentinean-Dutch conductor Hernán Schvartzman is an award-winning and versatile artist who feels as equally at home conducting top historically informed ensembles, cutting edge contemporary music groups as well as leading international big scale opera productions and symphonic concerts.

He has conducted ensembles such as the Netherlands Chamber Orchestra, Vox Luminis, Asko|Schönberg, Netherlands Bach Society, Het Gelders Orkest, Orquesta del Teatro Argentino de La Plata, Orchestra of the Early Music department of the Royal Conservatoire, New European Ensemble, Netherlands Chamber Choir, Dutch Radio Choir, Cappella Amsterdam, and B’Rock Orchestra.

Hernán is the musical leader of Netherlands-based opera company OPERA2DAY and works as guest conductor for other companies such as Juventus Lyrica, Muziektheater Transparant, Nederlandse Reisopera, Operadagen Rotterdam, Teatro Argentino de La Plata, Dutch National Opera Studio and the Monteverdi Festival de Cremona. A selection of his operatic repertoire includes: Mozart-Da Ponte trilogy, Die Zauberflöte(Argentinean Opera of the Year 2013), Cherubini’s Médee, Charpentier’s La Troupe d’Orphée (Dutch Opera of the Year 2014), the world premiere of Calliope Tsoupaki ’s Mariken in the garden of delights, J.S. Bach – The Apocalypse (Bach-Iliopoulos) (2024), Don Quichot (Vanni Moretto, 2023), Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice, Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo, Rossini’s Le Comte Ory and Ambroise Thomas’ Hamlet (nominated for the VSCD ovation price 2018).

He graduated Cum Laude from the Masters in Orchestral Conducting and Early Music opera conducting at the Royal Conservatoire of The Hague. His teachers were Jac van Steen, Kenneth Montgomery, Jos van Veldhoven, Ton Koopman and Reinbert de Leeuw. Hernán was part of the selection committee for the “Composers Showcase” organised by the BBC National Orchestra of Wales (BBC NOW) where he recorded the award-winning chamber music pieces with the wind soloists of the BBC NOW. Hernán teaches Ensemble Leading at the Royal Conservatoire of The Hague and held the position of main classical music advisor of the Argentinean Ministry of Culture for the opening of the Centro Cultural Kirchner, where he also gave masterclasses to Argentinean conductors, along with the Argentinean National Youth Orchestra.

Hernán Schvartzman was recipient of the prestigious Huygens Scholarship, awarded by the Dutch Government, and has also been selected as a “Musical Top Talent”, “Creative Top Talent” and “Cultural Ambassador of the City” by the municipality of The Hague.

He was nominated as Best Argentinean Conductor of the Year 2014 by the Argentinean Association of Musical Reviewers.

Serge van Veggel

Serge van Veggel

General Director / Artistic Director

Serge van Veggel is one of the founders of OPERA2DAY. Over the years, he has developed a highly diverse range of productions there as artistic director, writer, and director. Often, he opts for a conceptual approach, creating new works from existing repertoire. This was the case, for example, with La troupe d’Orphée, featuring Charpentier’s repertoire, Dolhuys Kermis with baroque lamenti, Dr. Miracle’s last illusion with romantic repertoire, and the ‘new baroque opera’ Vivaldi – Dangerous Liaisons. Additionally, he directed productions from the repertoire such as The Fairy Queen (Purcell), La Giuditta (Alessandro Scarlatti), Médée (Cherubini), Hamlet (Thomas), Carmina Burana (Orff), and The Fall of the House of Usher by Philip Glass (as part of the Opera Melancholica production). He crafted the libretto and directed the new opera Mariken in de tuin der lusten, with music by Calliope Tsoupaki. Filmmaker Sonia Herman Dolz documented the creative process in the film Mariken, visioen van een opera. Furthermore, he has created music-theatre productions and staged recitals both within and outside OPERA2DAY. In 2023, he collaborated with three choreographers to develop Song of the Dark Forest for Scapino Ballet Rotterdam.

Supervisory Board

Supervisory Board

Anne Marie Stordiau (chair)

Anne Marie Stordiau has a background spanning government, diplomacy and the cultural sector. She served as Director of Communications and spokesperson to the Minister of Justice and Security, after which she worked as a diplomat at the Dutch Embassy in London. She initially studied viola at the Royal Conservatoire in The Hague, followed by studies in Law and Public Administration at the Rijksuniversiteit Leiden. She has extensive experience in governance, including roles with orchestras, theatre companies, museums and the Fund for Cultural Participation. With a strategic background and a broad network, she is committed to fostering strong connections between culture and society. Anne Marie has a particular interest in opera as an art form that uniquely brings together music, theatre, visual arts and contemporary social and political themes.

Fatma Kaya

Fatma Kaya (1969) is a connector pur sang and socially involved to the bone. She works as a relationship manager for the JOGG foundation, which stands for healthy youth and a healthy future, and works with municipalities throughout the Netherlands to achieve this. Fatma has always worked in the non-profit sector for trade unions, governments and educational institutions, among others. She was a member of the Supervisory Board of the Koninklijke Schouwburg for six years, was chairman of the Women at Work Foundation in The Hague and is a member of Rotary Club ‘s Gravenhage Kijkduin.

Guus Mostart

Guus Mostart initially studied medicine. With a scholarship from the then Ministry of C.R.M., he took a stage management course at the London Opera Centre after which he joined the Netherlands Opera Foundation under Hans de Roo. In 1977, he left for the Glyndebourne Festival where he rose from Staff Producer to Associate Director and Director of Production for the Glyndebourne Touring Opera. In the more than 40 years Guus has worked in the opera world, he has held various positions including Director of Artistic Affairs Dutch Opera, Artistic Director Vancouver Opera, Director of Artistic Administration & Dramaturgy English National Opera and Intendant of the National Touring Opera.

Michaël Nieuwenhuizen

Michaël Nieuwenhuizen has over 40 years of experience in positions as director, advisor, policy officer, programme manager, lobbyist and supervisor. He is known in the arts and culture sector as an optimistic stayer who, in combination with a large network, has a broad agenda. Michaël combines substantive knowledge of music, visual arts, heritage and media with business and managerial experience. As a creative and strategic thinker, he is strong in setting out and profiling a new course and creating support.

George Oostrom

George Oostrom is a former CEO of a multinational claims management company. He has worked in several countries and was responsible for the business activities in the Benelux and France. He is a member of NIVRE – the Dutch Institute of Registered Experts, of which he has been (vice) chairman for several years. As a board member, he is still associated with the foundation Calamities and Projects, a foundation affiliated with NIVRE.
In addition, George is a member of various boards related to the insurance sector, such as the Institute of Financial Crime, and he is active as an editorial board member of the Salvage Foundation of the combined fire insurers. George Oostrom has a great passion for opera and classical music.