![]() 9 (Beethoven) with Tokyo Symphony Orchestra, Tokyo Philharmonic and Orchestre symphonique de Nancy Missa Solemnis (Beethoven) with the Tokyo City Philharmonic Mass in C Minor (Mozart) with the Tokyo Philharmonic Messiah (Handel) with l’Orchestre de Picardie and A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Elijah (Mendelssohn) both with the Orchestre National de France under the baton of Kurt Mazur. In the concert, Hiromi Omura has sung the Deutsches Requiem (Brahms) at the City of London Festival with the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Tadaaki Otaka Symphony No. This performance has been broadcasted on TV by NHK around Japan. Omura portrayed a deeply moving Cio-Cio-San in a premiere production in Tokyo conducted by Andrea Battistoni and stage directed by Amon Miyamoto. She can be seen in 2 filmed productions of Madama Butterfly the first directed by Moffatt Oxenbould and the second is a new production directed by Alex Ollé, both released by Opera Australia. Hiromi Omura has performed Cio-Cio-San, receiving great acclaim, around the world with companies such as the New National Theatre Tokyo, Deutsche Oper Berlin, Opera Israeli (Tel Aviv), Montreal Opera, Malaga, Cordoba, Santander, Metz (France), Lausanne Opera, Polish National Opera (Theatre Wielki), Savonlinna Opera Festival in Finland, Sydney Opera House, Melbourne State Theatre, Teatro Municipal Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, Latvian National Opera, Finnish National Opera, Vanemuine Theatre in Estonia, and Puccini Festival at Torre del Lago in Italy. 2022 saw her return to Tokyo for Le nozze di Figaro as Countess Almaviva at Tokyo Bunka Kaikan and Madama Butterfly as her signature role of Cio-Cio-San at New National Theatre Tokyo, both with Tokyo Nikikai Opera. Coming up in 2022/2023, Omura looks forward to joining New Orleans Opera, also for Madama Butterfly, and Manitoba Opera for a gala of operatic repertoire. Recent career highlights include her US debut as Cio-Cio-San at the Portland Opera, as well as her debut at the Puccini Festival at Torre del Lago in Italy. Japanese-French soprano Hiromi Omura has developed her international career as “ a true singing actress: each performance brings fresh nuances and feels inhabited”(Australian Book Review) with “ her singing, powerful, seamless and exquisitely beautiful” (North Shore Times). ![]()
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