Opera singer Joshua Hopkins: Remembering my sister in song
We speak to Joshua Hopkins, the Canadian baritone who is using his voice to call out violence against women, after the loss of his sister in 2015
Joshua Hopkins is an award-winning Canadian baritone who is using his voice to call out violence against women, after the loss of his sister in 2015. Joshua tells Sophia Smith Galer how collaborating with Booker Prize winning author Margaret Atwood on Songs for Murdered Sisters offers consolation, while opening up conversation about gender-based violence across the world.
Sun and Sea is a Lithuanian production that takes its international audiences on a playful trip to the beach. For The Cultural Frontline, the director Rugil臈 Barzd啪iukait臈 and writer Vaiva Grainyt臈 share how they use humour to highlight the climate crisis.
Opera is an enduring, evolving art form, but is everyone invited? Rising stars J鈥橬ai Bridges from the US, Ang茅lica Negr贸n from Puerto Rico and Adrian Angelico from Norway tell Sophia how they鈥檙e opening up the genre to make it more inclusive, on and off stage.
Plus, has a song, a poem or a book ever changed the course of your life? South African soprano Vuvu Mpofu shares the work that set her on a different path.
Presenter: Sophia Smith Galer
(Photo: Joshua Hopkins. Credit: Songs for Murdered Sisters, directed by James Niebuhr)
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- Sat 8 May 2021 16:06GMT大象传媒 World Service News Internet
- Sat 8 May 2021 22:32GMT大象传媒 World Service except Americas and the Caribbean
- Sun 9 May 2021 03:32GMT大象传媒 World Service
- Sun 9 May 2021 18:32GMT大象传媒 World Service South Asia, East Asia & Americas and the Caribbean only
- Mon 10 May 2021 09:06GMT大象传媒 World Service
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The Cultural Frontline
The Cultural Frontline: where arts and news collide.