Sligo Youth Opera 2025

now recruiting!

sATURDAY 18 jANUARY | co. sLIGO

Teenagers and their parents based in and around Sligo are invited to join Sligo Baroque Music Festival and Festival in a Van for an Information Session on an exciting new project, funded by the Arts Council, which will support a group of Irish teenagers in building their own opera from scratch through free monthly workshops taking place from January - September 2025.

This Information Session will take place from 4.30pm - 6pm on Saturday 18 January at Sligo Presbyterian Church Hall. Participants will meet and hear from Sligo Baroque Music Festival Artistic Director (and renowned opera singer!) Sharon Carty, as well as Opera Director Ute Engelhardt. We strongly encourage all prospective participants to attend.

Thanks to funding from the Arts Council YPCE Award, these workshops are entirely free for participants.

For more information and to register interest, please contact sligobaroquefestival@outlook.ie no later than Thursday 16 January 2025.  

Make Your Own Opera Instagram Grid

Sligo Youth Opera 2025

2025 brings the creation of a new Sligo Youth Opera, presented by Sligo Baroque Music Festival and Festival in a Van, funded by the Arts Council, which will be developed and performed by local teenagers, and premiere as part of the 30th anniversary edition of Sligo Baroque Music Festival at Hawk’s Well Theatre 26 – 28 September 2025. 

In January, a group of up to 30 teenagers (ranging from sixth-class to sixth-year) will be recruited from Sligo, Leitrim, Donegal, and Roscommon, and given the creative space and freedom to brainstorm, write, and perform their own opera, and everything that goes with it. The project will be entirely free for participants. 

The young artists taking part will be supported over the course of nine months by a dream team of award-winning artists from a diverse range of disciplines, including: Galway composer and performer Anna Mullarkey; Cork poet Molly Twomey; Kildare opera singer Sharon Carty; costume designer Claire Garvey; Sligo violinist Nicola Cleary; Opera Director Ute Engelhardt; theatre-maker and artist James Riordan. 

Meeting regularly from January to September, the young artists will fearlessly tackle storytelling, music, costume design, instrumentation, and broader artistic exploration. Merging the old with the new – traditional baroque instruments with synths, the themes of a classic artform with the themes of life as a teenager in the Irish Northwest – the Sligo Youth Opera will give participants the opportunity to confidently express themselves in a way that is joyful, fun, encouraging, and authentic.   

Whether the young artists see themselves centre stage belting into a microphone, or behind-the-scenes planning costume design or ensuring that tech goes off without a hitch, this panoramic approach to the creation of opera encourages any teenager in the area, wherever their interests lay, to get involved.  

An information session for teenagers and their parents will take place on Saturday 18 January at 4.30pm - 6pm at Sligo Presbyterian Church Hall.

Thereafter, workshops will take place monthly, with some additional workshops as the opera premiere date gets closer. Please email sligobaroquefestival@outlook.ie for a detailed workshop schedule. 

Thanks to the generous support of the Arts Council, this project is entirely free for young people to take part in; however, as the opera will be totally created by project participants, we’d ask that participants commit to attending the majority of workshops throughout the year. 

For more information and to register interest, please contact sligobaroquefestival@outlook.ie no later than Thursday 16 January 2025.  

Presented by Sligo Baroque Music Festival and Festival in a Van 

Funded by the Arts Council YPCE Project Award 

Sligo Baroque Music Festival aims to present high-quality performances of baroque music in a friendly and informal context. There is always a mix of performers, some with an international reputation, others at an early stage of their careers. A goal of the festival has always been to foster the development of young performers. Sligo Festival of Baroque Music is run by a voluntary committee with Sharon Carty as Artistic Director. 

Since 2020 Festival in a Van has democratised access to the arts by delivering high-quality, inclusive performances around Ireland. Whether audiences live rurally, can't travel due to illness/disability, struggle with cost, or are uncomfortable with walking into a new environment, the Van brings the magic of live performance directly to their door. Kitted out with lights, a set, and a tech team, the Van delivers empowering arts experiences in car parks, housing estates, and more. Our focus is on energising and bringing together communities, employing local artists, and broadening audiences. We aim to perform ‘with’ rather than ‘for’ the communities we visit, creating a range of opportunities for our audiences to see themselves and their neighbours in a new light. 

About the artists

Anna Mullarkey is an award-winning composer and performer from Galway, whose music weaves electronics with piano and voice. The Irish Times called her “phenomenal”. Her original score for the film The Passion (2021) has won awards in Ireland and Europe. Anna is currently working on scoring for theatre and film, blending electronics with classical music.

As a music educator Anna has trained in Colourstrings for voice and piano, a method that integrates play with education. She has also a degree and diploma in Psychology and leadership in mental health, important educational tools. Anna has been teaching in Scoil na BhForbacha as a music teacher for the last eight years and gives workshops in music at different festivals including Hedge School and Galway Junior Film Fleadh.

Molly Twomey grew up in Lismore, County Waterford, and graduated in 2019 with an MA in Creative Writing from University College Cork. Her first collection, Raised Among Vultures, was published in 2022 by The Gallery Press. It won the Southword Debut Collection Poetry Award and was shortlisted for the Seamus Heaney Poetry Prize for a First Collection and the Farmgate National Poetry Award. Her work has appeared in Poetry Review, Poetry Ireland Review, Banshee, The Irish Times, Mslexia, The Stinging Fly and elsewhere.

In 2021, she was chosen for Poetry Ireland’s Introductions series as well as their International Residency Scheme. An awardee of an Arts Council Literature Bursary, Molly Twomey was also the recipient of the 2023 Ireland Chair of Poetry Bursary.

Since 2001, Claire Garvey has worked as an artist and fashion designer. She has shown in New York Fashion Week, designed for Nile Rodgers and Chic for The Oscars, as well as for the X-Factor, Dancing with the Stars, and Miss Universe Ireland. She has made appearances on The Late Late Show and was mentioned in the New Yorker for her creation of Eimear Noone’s Oscars outfit. She continues to create bespoke pieces for musicians and celebrities including Mary Coughlan, Katherine Lynch, Noel Cunningham, Evanna Lynch, and many more.

With funding from a YPCE bursary 2022, Claire became Artist in Residence in Cluny, Killiney, mentoring the students there, as well as St. Joseph’s and Margaret Aylwards. Claire has also worked with the students in Colaiste Dhulaigh and Limerick College of Art. She recently acted as a judge for Junk Kouture, providing mentorship and guidance for the students who took part.

Claire has created the junior Eurovision winners’ outfits for the past few years, and recently worked on Bambi Thug’s outfits for Eurovision 2024.

James Riordan(he/him) is Artistic Director of Brú. He is a writer and theatre maker from Galway and trained at LISPA (London) and the APT (Berlin). James spent many years working in Berlin and London for companies including the ENO and Absurda Comica and was a core member of The LipSinkers (UK) for 4 years. After returning to Ireland, he set up Brú in 2018. He is an Irish Times Theatre Awards Best Actor nominee 2020 for his role in Brú’s Selvage, has recently directed a piece for the Abbey Theatre as part of Reel Mix and received the Abbey’s Michael Hogan Commemoration Bursary in 2021 to write a new piece of long form lament.

He is Digital Artist in Residence with the Centre for Creative Technologies at the University of Galway and directed the Macnas flagship parade 2023. He has been a participant on Creative Europe’s Make a Move, Theatre Forum’s MAKE, Performance Corp’s SPACE programme and Druid FUEL. He works as a freelance director and facilitator and was a Business to Arts Artist in Resident 2019/20, creating the SOAR program with mature students of NUIG’s Access program. He has been a panellist speaker with Theatre Forum, Irish Theatre Institute, Creative Ireland and NUIG.

Sue Crawford is ASM and Props Maker specialist with over 8 years’ experience across all areas of Set Design including Set Construction & Lighting. She also has extensive experience with Scenic Painting and Costume Roles, from Supervisor to Maintenance and Breakdown work. Sue works closely with Designers, Directors & Performers to understand their needs, facilitate their vision and bring it to life.

Ute M. Engelhardt has been a freelance director since 2013 and lives in Germany.

She has many years of experience as a music theatre and cultural mediator. She is particularly keen to convey her enthusiasm for music and the many possibilities of artistic expression to children and young people. She has many years of experience in that. Particularly noteworthy here is her artistic direction of several opera camps at the Salzburg Festival from 2014-2017 and the production of the youth opera "MINA" by Uwe Dierksen at the Frankfurt Opera.

She has demonstrated her skills as a teacher in the subjects of music and theatre at Emilie-Wüstenfeld-Gymnasium in Hamburg as well as teaching at the Frankfurt University of Music and Performing Arts  with students on the Bachelor's and Master's degree courses in singing.

Violinist Nicola Cleary has enjoyed a prestigious career learning from, performing as, and most recently educating as one of Ireland’s leading musicians of her generation.

This rich heritage has embodied within Nicola a devoted passion to her art, and a desire to communicate her expertise to her audiences, students and, most importantly, towards Ireland’s musical youth, the musicians of tomorrow.

On the home stage, Nicola lent her talent to the NSO and the RTE Concert Orchestra. Always having been drawn to chamber music, Nicola pursued her desire to perform with both national and international chamber groups, most notably the I.B.O, Irish Chamber Orchestra, Camerata Ireland, Deutsche Kammerakademie, London Handel Players, and Paris ensemble Orfeo55. Over the past few years in Sligo, Nicola has been instrumental in bringing musicians young, local, and professional to share their performances with enthusiastic audiences.