
It remains a little-known fact that despite the popular perception of Glyndebourne as representing the quintessence of Englishness, it would almost certainly never have come into existence had it not been for the involvement of refugees from Nazi Europe – most notably Artistic Directors Fritz Busch and Carl Ebert, and General Manager, Rudolph Bing, but also conductor Hans Oppenheim, singers Irene Eisinger and Ina Souez, and répétiteur Jani Strasser, among others.
In its first years of existence, the Glyndebourne Festival Opera set out to internationalize English opera culture, both by attracting international artists and leading proponents of a new concept of opera production and by giving émigrés the chance to further hone skills developed in Central Europe and beyond.
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