Photo from Linked Stage Graph

What’s
on stage tonight?

A closer look at copyright and opera performances

Today, the works of almost no living composers are performed on global opera stages.

This is particularly surprising if you consider that the creation of new opera flourished throughout most of the 20th century, with the introduction of moderate terms of copyright protection incentivizing the creation of new, high-quality operas.

Why are we not seeing more performances of modern operas? What are the factors that have driven new works off the stage?

While previous research has focused around how copyright incentivizes composers to create new work, we’ll be taking a look at the economic role of copyright and how it affects opera houses’ decisions around staging and reusing works.

Is granting exclusive rights to new opera works actually excluding them from the stage?

Let’s find out.

Photo from Linked Stage Graph

A backstage view on opera houses

Opera is an exception within the creative economy because it relies on a large body of popular public domain works for which the copyright has expired; a unique scenario which isn’t the case for many other creative fields.

Generally speaking, professional opera companies often share performance venues with other performing art companies, including ballet or spoken theatre, and in many places rely heavily on public funding.

This means the number of performances that can be staged is limited.

Opera: An exception in the creative economy

  • Large body of public domain works
  • Many opera companies are subsidized
  • Limited number of performance slots
  • Strong competition between new and established works

On an economic level, the fixed amount of performance slots increases the competition between works of opera, especially between established works in the public domain and new operas.

Is copyright also affecting which works are staged more often today and influencing how opera houses are choosing their repertoire?

Does copyright actually encourage the creation and promotion of new opera works?

Photo by Maria Bayo on Unsplash

What we asked

Photo from Linked Stage Graph

Are works without copyright being staged more often than protected works?

To investigate, we started by building a large-scale data set of opera performances staged in more than 200 countries and programmed over six seasons (2012/13 to 2017/18).

Then, we categorized each composition produced and performed on stage as either protected by copyright and requiring the opera house to license the composer’s work or as in the public domain and not requiring licensing.

The data allowed us to look specifically at new productions. New productions are an important entry point for new works.

It showed that new productions are rarely staged, accounting for approximately 20 percent of all performances.

% of new productions* in global opera performances

Existing productions
80%
New productions
20%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
*Neither belonging to an existing repertoire nor rented from other opera houses.
The first look at the data also showed that only one composer from the 20th century – Leonard Bernstein – appears among the top 50 most performed operas worldwide, despite the fact that new opera composition flourished during the 20th century.

Top 50 most performed opera works on global stages, 2017-2018

Verdi
19th
La traviata
853
Bizet
19th
Carmen
652
Mozart
18th
Die Zauberflöte
616
Puccini
19th
La bohème
525
Puccini
19th
Tosca
514
Rossini
18th
Il barbiere di Siviglia
497
Mozart
18th
Le nozze di Figaro
411
Verdi
19th
Rigoletto
397
Mozart
18th
Don Giovanni
384
Puccini
19th
Madame Butterfly
381
Strauss
19th
Die Fledermaus
362
Humperdinck
19th
Hänsel und Gretel
351
Verdi
19th
Aida
316
Lehar
19th
Die lustige Witwe
300
Donizetti
18th
L’elisir d’amore
287
Puccini
19th
Turandot
277
Tchaikovsky
19th
Eugene Onegin
267
Mozart
18th
Cosi fan tutte
266
Leoncavallo
19th
Pagliacci
233
Verdi
19th
Nabucco
227
Donizetti
18th
Lucia di Lammermoor
222
Verdi
19th
Il trovatore
216
Verdi
19th
Un ballo in maschera
216
Wagner
19th
Der fliegende Holländer
212
Rossini
18th
La cenerentola
206
Mascagni
19th
Cavalleria rusticana
203
Offenbach
19th
Les contes d’Hoffmann
179
Kalman
19th
Die Csárdásfürstin
167
Gounod
19th
Faust
166
Donizetti
18th
Don Pasquale
164
Verdi
19th
Don Carlos
163
Bellini
19th
Norma
161
Verdi
19th
Falstaff
137
Gluck
18th
Orfeo ed Euridice
135
Verdi
19th
Otello
134
Puccini
19th
Gianni Schicchi
126
Beethoven
18th
Fidelio
125
Kalman
19th
Gräfin Mariza
125
Mozart
18th
Die Entführung aus dem Serail
120
Dvorak
19th
Rusalka
114
Weber
18th
Der Freischütz
112
Bernstein
20th
Candide
111
Mozart
18th
La clemenza di Tito
110
Tchaikovsky
19th
Pikovaya Dama
104
Strauss
19th
Salome
102
Tchaikovsky
19th
Iolanta
97
Strauss
19th
Eine Nacht in Venedig
88
Verdi
19th
Macbeth
85
Verdi
19th
Simon Boccanegra
81
Verdi
19th
La forza del destino
80

Century of birth of the composers with the top 50 most-performed operas on global stages

18th century
29%
19th century
70%
20th century
1%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%

Photo by Gabriel Santos Fotografia on Pexels

Does copyright encourage creativity in opera?

In principle, copyright grants composers with exclusive rights to capitalize on their works for the copyright term. Licensing income should allow them to recuperate their initial investment and go on to create more new work.

In the case of opera, however, this logic might not always hold up.

New, avant-garde works tend to attract smaller crowds and sell at lower ticket prices compared to the many popular works in the public domain. Opera houses have low expected revenues from these performances so the cost of licensing them from composers becomes too high.

All this can hinder the discovery of new works as they cannot grow in popularity on stages. In turn, this limits licensing income for these contemporary composers, which ultimately drives them to create fewer new works.

In the end, it’s the conundrum of the chicken or the egg.

Without copyright, innovative new operas wouldn’t be created in the first place; yet with copyright, we could end up with fewer and fewer of these new operas making it onto the stage.

So what exactly is the effect of copyright protection on staging? What can be done to help new operas find their audience?

Copyright in opera: the chicken or the egg?

  • Copyright protects a composer’s work and their ability to earn income from it
  • New works have lower expected ticket sales and higher copyright-related costs than public domain works
  • Limited sales and higher costs might hinder the discovery of new works and limit revenue for composers
  • If new works are not being promoted on stage, the financial incentive for new composers to create may decrease

Photo from Linked Stage Graph

What we found

Select a chapter or scroll down to start reading

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Photo by Manuel Nageli on Unsplash

A work is performed more often once copyright expires.

Our research shows that once the copyright in an individual work expires, there is an increase in the total number of performances.

More specifically, a composition will have on average 15 percent more stage performances when it is in the public domain.

more stage performances when a work is in the public domain

It is likely licensing costs that are causing opera companies to opt for the public domain works which are often more profitable. Moreover, opera houses may strategically choose to wait to stage a work until it’s in the public domain to avoid the licensing costs.

While moderate copyright terms may incentivize the creation of new opera when the composer is living, they also restrict opera houses from bringing new, innovative opera to their stages and reusing these works.

Photo from Linked Stage Graph

The discovery of new opera might be at stake.

When it comes to new and experimental performances of opera, budgeting tends to be particularly tight and the commercial risk is higher.

Data from opera revivals in the early 20th century show that copyright status affects the staging of new opera from early on, right after their premiere, and it restricts how popular the work can become.

So copyright may act as a barrier to entry and licensing cost hurdle for new, more avant-garde operas, particularly for new productions that are outside of an opera house’s standard production repertoire.

In order to discover new opera, it is critical that these new works are performed on stage so they can gain recognition and popularity among audiences.

Photo by Do The Lan on Pexels

Photo from Linked Stage Graph

Develop copyright frameworks that consider the full lifecycle of operatic works.

Our research highlights the access costs and barriers to entry of copyright as it applies to new works and the reuse of works throughout the entire lifecycle of a new opera.

In the case of opera, good copyright policies will not only protect the financial interest of the composer, but also safeguard creativity and artistic freedom on later opera stages to incentivize the reuse of copyrighted work.

A new copyright framework for opera is needed.

  • Copyright reduces the number of performances a work receives
  • Copyright should protect the composer´s interest while also ensuring the reuse and promotion of their work throughout its lifecycle
  • A copyright framework for opera is needed that incentivizes the promotion and reuse of new works

A simple solution could be granting rights to art directors for their stage productions. Granting multiple rights, however, can also mean increased costs of negotiation which could discourage additional staging.

What’s needed is a copyright framework and complimentary cultural policies that give enough space for new operas and find ways to incentivize the reuse of new works to establish a more level playing field with public domain opera.

Photo by Kael Bloom on Unsplash

Consider collective management in opera licensing.

In many countries, rights are negotiated between opera houses and composers on a case-by-case basis. This can make things more costly to negotiate for everyone involved.

Deals and fees could be more easily streamlined and optimized under collective management via an organization that would represent composers and their interests to opera houses.

If a collective management system were to be implemented in opera licensing, the savings would have to outweigh the costs of having such a system in place.

Photo by JJ Jordan on Pexels

Encourage new opera to be tested both on stage and on digital platforms.

If new works and new productions don’t make it onto the stage, then the incentive to create them won’t work.

So stakeholders in the opera business are beginning to rethink ways to give space for living composers and their copyright protected works.

For example, recent discussions have been focused on negotiating rights for streaming opera online and using streaming as a marketing tool for live performances, particularly for the dissemination of new opera works, as streaming and digital technologies become more prominent.

This can create more space to showcase and promote new works if licensing costs are lower than stage productions.

Furthermore, some industry stakeholders have proposed the idea of subsidizing new works from living composers by continuing to collect revenues and royalty income from popular works, even after the copyright has expired.

Photo by Michel Catalisano on Unsplash

In a nutshell

Four considerations for policymakers

  • 1
    By not considering the full lifecycle of opera, copyright laws are creating financial and legal barriers to the staging of operas, in particular new and less well-known works.
  • 2
    A copyright framework and complimentary cultural policies that give enough space for new operas and find ways to incentivize the staging of new works will help to establish a more level playing field with popular public domain opera.
  • 3
    Digital platforms can also provide opportunities for testing new operas. Recent discussions have focused on negotiating rights for streaming opera online and for using streaming as a new marketing tool for live performances.
  • 4
    In order for deals and fees to be more easily streamlined and optimized, an option could be a collective management system that would represent composers and their interests to opera houses.