With New Initiative, Dallas Opera Can Keep On Trucking

Thanks to a wheely, wheely good donation, the Dallas Opera can now take it’s show on the road.

The Dallas Opera announced Monday its newest initiative, designed to bring productions of family fare to Greater Dallas communities with OperaTruck, an 18-wheel flatbed “big rig” that has been customized as an outdoor mobile stage, which can accommodate musicians and singers with appropriate distancing in “pop-up” performances.

OperaTruck was retro-fitted and donated by Quincy Roberts—a TDO trustee, TDO chorus member, and one of D Magazine’s “Top 500 Most Influential Leaders”—who is also is a trained opera singer, and CEO of Roberts Trucking, the largest African American-owned construction hauler in Dallas.

“We are so very grateful to Quincy Roberts for his generosity of time and effort to provide TDO with the OperaTruck, which is helping us create inroads with new local partners, such as local churches and social service organizations,” said Ian Derrer, The Dallas Opera’s Kern Wildenthal General Director and CEO. “These collaborations will bring live classical music in an unexpected way (on a truck!) to engage new audiences and families with the stories we tell through music.”

OperaTruck makes its debut with three new community partners: First United Methodist Church of Heath on Saturday, May 8 at 2 p.m., Trinity Basin Preparatory School on May 15 at 2 p.m., St. Matthew’s Cathedral on May 23 at 3 p.m. OperaTruck performances feature TDO singers in family-friendly one-act operas: Jack and the Beanstalk and Doctor Miracle. All OperaTruck performances take place outdoors; audiences should bring their own seating.

“It’s a privilege to both support The Dallas Opera and participate with them in performance,” said Roberts, “which is why providing them with a creative way to expand their community engagement efforts made so much sense. After a year without live performances, I can’t wait to see the OperaTruck in action in our communities.” 

The OperaTruck will also bring performers for private events at the North Texas Food Bank in Plano and Family Gateway in downtown Dallas.

OperaTruck is the brainchild of Kristian Roberts, TDO’s Director of Education.

“The pandemic has been challenging for arts organizations as a whole, but it has also given The Dallas Opera opportunities to become even more bold and creative in our approach to our mission,” she said. “We have seized this moment to better serve the community while upholding our commitment to a talented generation of Texas-based singer/actors now developing their craft. I’m extremely proud of the work my team has done, and I am excited to see it help change stereotypes, expectations—and lives.”

She continued, “I cannot thank Quincy enough for his generosity. OperaTruck allows us to present free family-friendly content in a big, big way. And that’s about as Texan as it gets!”

Additional free outdoor performances of Jack and the Beanstalk will take place (without the truck) at the Dallas Arboretum on April 24 at 11 a.m. and 12 p.m. in the Rory Meyers Children’s Adventure Garden and at Klyde Warren Park on May 1 at 1 p.m.


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