Setting a President

It was a rare and risky commission in the 1980s. But now HGO’s visionary ‘Nixon in China,’ reopening 30 years later — on Inauguration Day — on the very stage on which it debuted is renowned as a game-changing masterpiece.

On October 22, 1987, the Houston Grand Opera premiered a new opera with a provocative title in the city’s then brand-new Wortham Theater Center. Alternating with performances of Aida, Nixon in China, a series of dream-like and occasionally bizarre tableaux inspired by President Richard Nixon’s history-making 1972 visit to China, was a production as musically and visually audacious as Verdi’s triumphal march. Beginning with an onstage landing of a pasteboard Air Force One, and concluding with Richard and Pat Nixon drifting to sleep in their single beds, Nixon in China both delighted and bewildered its opening-night audience. Despite receiving mixed — well, sometimes scathing — reviews, Nixon made its way to stages in Brooklyn, L.A. and across Europe, and now enjoys rare status as a standard repertory opera.

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