Link to the Show / Show Notes"Classical music, opera, theatre - people turn to these in times of crisis, and to some extent, times of easy prosperity are often when the arts are ignored"
Born in Oxford in 1947, David Pountney and was educated at Cambridge. It was a production of Janacek’s opera Katya Kabanova for the 1972 Wexford Festival that first brought his work as an opera director to world attention. From 1975 to 1980 he was Director of Production for Scottish Opera where, in collaboration with Welsh National Opera, his productions featured a Janacek cycle of various operas by the Czech composer.
Pountney produced the world première of David Blake's Toussaint at English National Opera and went on to become Director of Productions there in 1980, directing over twenty operas in that house. As a freelance Director from 1992 he has worked regularly in many of Europe’s leading opera houses, as well as in America and Japan. Since 2003 he has been the Artistic director of the Bregenz Festival.
In this week’s Inspired Minds David Pountney talks to Breandáin O’Shea about writing libretto for opera, the challenges of being a festival director during the financial crisis and how history has shown that the arts tend to flourish and not fade when things get tough.
Interview: Breandáin O'Shea/David Pountney