2024 96-Hour Opera Project
Competition
JUNE 14-17, 2024
RAY CHARLES PERFORMING ARTS CENTER @ MOREHOUSE COLLEGE
• World Premieres
• Competition & Showcase
• $10,000 Prize & $25,000 Commission
Now in its third season, the 96-Hour Opera Festival celebrates the artistry of emerging creative talents and offers a path into the art of opera. Launched as the 96-Hour Opera Project, the Festival expanded from the original composition competition to include developmental workshops and incubator performances of works by past competition winners. The competition remains the heart of the Festival and pairs composers and librettists to write ten-minute operas. Bringing their completed works to Atlanta, the creative teams are allowed 96 hours to rehearse and develop their productions with guidance from specialists in the field from June 14 through 17, 2024.
On Monday, June 17, 2024, a public showcase will present the ten-minute operas at the Ray Charles Performing Arts Center at Morehouse College, and a winning team is selected by a distinguished group of judges. All selected participants will receive a $1000 honorarium. The Atlanta Opera presents the Antinori Grand Prize to the winning team — a $10,000 award and an Atlanta Opera commission for a new work to be produced and performed in an upcoming season.
The 96-Hour Festival also features presentations of the works in development by previous competition winners. Tickets and a full schedule of public opportunities to view these world premieres will be released in March 2024.
Designed specifically for composers and librettists from historically underrecognized communities, the 96-Hour Opera Competition is open to those who self-identify as part of a demographic that has been under-presented in the creative pantheon of opera.
The Atlanta Opera provides singing talent, and a pianist as collaborators to bring the new works to life. Story partners based in Atlanta will assist The Atlanta Opera in providing a compelling story theme(s) to be presented to the selected teams. The story prompts form the basis of the plot lines of the submitted works.
DATES & DEADLINES
Mon, Dec 4, 2023
Applications open
Mon, Feb 12, 2024
Application deadline
Mar 2024
Announcement of selected participants
Fri, Jun 14, 2024
96-Hour Festival begins
Sat, Jun 15, 2024
World Premiere:
Forsyth County is Flooding
Mon, Jun 17, 2024
Competition Public Showcase
Finalists & Teams
2024 Competition
Judges’ Choice Winner: Kitty Brazelton | Vaibu Mohan with Jala-Smriti–Water Memory
Judges’ Choice Runner Up / Audience Favorite: Timothy Amukele | Jarrod Lee with What is Love? An AI Story

Dr. Timothy
Amukele
Dr. Timothy Amukele is a Jack of two trades: a working physician, and a composer and arranger of vocal music. Most recently he served as the Minister of Music at the historic St. James Episcopal church in Baltimore Maryland while on faculty at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.

Jarrod
Lee
Jarrod Lee, librettist, hails from Sylacauga, Alabama and presently resides in Baltimore, Maryland. Jarrod’s collaborations include Oshun and Two Corners with composer B.E. Boykin, Voices of Zion and the art song See your Equal, which placed third in the composition category …

George
Tsz-Kwan Lam
Hong Kong-born composer George Tsz-Kwan Lam (b. 1981) grew up in Hong Kong and Massachusetts. Lam’s recent works focus on connecting audiences with stories from their local communities through contemporary music.
Such projects include …

David
Davila
David Davila is a multi-hyphenate theatre maker from the border of South Texas; where the wall has stood since George W’s administration. Winner of the 2022 Smith Prize for Political Theatre and the 2021 New American Voices Playwriting Award his work stands at the intersection of …

Evan
Williams
Dr. Timothy Amukele is a Jack of two trades: a working physician, and a composer and arranger of vocal music. Most recently he served as the Minister of Music at the historic St. James Episcopal church in Baltimore Maryland while on faculty at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
He has worked closely …

Ashlee
Haze
Kiera “Ashlee Haze” Nelson is a poet and spoken word artist from Atlanta by way of Chicago. She is the winner of a 2023 Silver Telly Award for original copywriting and voiceover. She has been a part of the Atlanta Poetry circuit for over a decade and has been writing for over 15 years. Ashlee Haze has brought …

Kitty
Brazelton
For pioneering NYC composer, bandleader, and multi-instrumentalist Kitty Brazelton, music is personal, and the personal is universal. Winner of two Opera America awards, Aaron Copland Fund for Music and an NPR-broadcast choral commission with Garrison Keillor, the irrepressible Brazelton has always championed music’s power to unite— …

Vaibu
Mohan
Vaibu Mohan is a writer, musician, dancer, director, and producer specializing in bringing South Asian forms of storytelling and theater making into the Western sphere. She founded the series Work In Progress at 54 Below which gives early career writers a place to present their work. New York City premieres include: Life of A Lemon (NYU/AOP Opera Labs), …

Lauren
McCall
Lauren McCall is a composer and music educator from Atlanta, Georgia. She studied for her master’s degree in music composition at the Vermont College of Fine Arts, and she is a Ph.D. student studying music technology at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Lauren has had compositions performed around North America and Europe.

Mo
Holmes
Mo Holmes is a black queer Southern playwright and dramaturg, born in San Antonio and raised on the long stretch from Texas to Alabama. Her works include: We so Short (honors: 2022 O’Neill National Playwrights Conference semi-finalist; development: 2019-2020 Playwrights’ Center Many Voices Mentorship), …
Judges

Paul Cremo
Paul Cremo has overseen projects developed through the Met / Lincoln Center Theater New Works Program, as well as full commissions for the Met stage, including Grounded by Jeanine Tesori and George Brant; The Hours by Kevin Puts and Greg Pierce; Eurydice by Matthew Aucoin and Sarah Ruhl, Intimate Apparel by Ricky Ian Gordon and Lynn Nottage at Lincoln Center Theater, Nico Muhly and Nicholas Wright’s Marnie, Nico Muhly and Craig Lucas’s Two Boys, revised versions of Fire Shut Up in My Bones Fire Shut Up in My Bones by Terence Blanchard and Kasi Lemons …

Doug Hooker
Doug Hooker is CEO of the Connector Foundation, an initiative to build a public park over a portion of the connector highway in Atlanta. Throughout his career, Doug Hooker has worked for public sector and private sector organizations. He “retired” in March 2022, having led the Atlanta Regional Commission for many years. Currently, he serves as the board chairman of the Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta. He also serves on the boards of the Atlanta Housing Authority, the Latin American Association, the Fox Theatre, the Clayton State University Foundation, and St. Vincent de Paul.

Andrea Davis Pinkney
Andrea Davis Pinkney is the acclaimed librettist for the Houston Grand Opera’s The Snowy Day, with composer Joel Thompson, a work based on the beloved classic by Ezra Jack Keats. The Snowy Day opera was hailed by the New York Times for its ability to “change perceptions about Black identity and attract new audiences to opera.” As the New York Times bestselling and award-winning author of numerous books, Ms. Pinkney’s work has garnered multiple Coretta Scott King Book Awards, the Boston Globe/Horn Book Honor, and the Parenting Publications gold medal.

Carlos Simon
“My dad, he always gets on me. He wants me to be a preacher, but I always tell him, ‘Music is my pulpit. That’s where I preach,’” Carlos Simon reflected for The Washington Post’s ‘Composers and Performers to Watch in 2022’ list.
Having grown up in Atlanta, with a long lineage of preachers and connections to gospel music to inspire him, GRAMMY-nominated Simon proves that a well-composed song can indeed be a sermon. His music ranges from concert music for large and small ensembles to film scores with influences of jazz, gospel, and neo-romanticism.

Tazewell Thompson
Tazewell Thompson is an internationally acclaimed award-winning director of opera and theatre and is also a playwright, librettist, lecturer, teacher, and actor. The opera, Blue, which Thompson created with composer Jeanine Tesori, won the Music Critics Association of North America Award for Best New Opera in 2020. The New York Times and Washington Post listed Blue as Best in Classical Music for 2019. Commissioned and produced by Glimmerglass in 2019, Blue has had subsequent productions at Washington National Opera, Dutch National Opera, English National Opera, in Seattle, Pittsburgh, Michigan, Toledo, New Orleans and upcoming at Chicago Lyric in November 2024. His new opera, Jubilee, about The Fisk Jubilee Singers, will have its world premiere October 2024 at Seattle Opera.
Past Finalists
2023 Competition
Judges’ Choice Winner: Dave Ragland | Selda Sahin with Steele Roots
Judges’ Choice Runner Up / Audience Favorite: Nathan Felix | Anita Gonzalez with Faces In The Flames

Edward
Shilts
composer

Laura
Barati
librettist

Omar
Najmi
composer

Catherine
Yu
librettist

Nathan
Felix
composer

Anita
Gonzalez
librettist

Dave
Ragland
composer

Selda
Sahin
librettist

Jorge
Sosa
composer

Alejandra
Martinez
librettist
2022 Competition
Winner: Marcus Norris | Adamma Ebo with Go On With That Wind

Jorge
Sosa
composer

Alejandra
Martinez
librettist

Johanny
Navarro
composer

Deborah
D.E.E.P Mouton
librettist

Marcus
Norris
composer

Adamma
Ebo
librettist

Roydon
Tse
composer

Marcus
Yi
librettist

Samah
Shahi
composer

Isabella
Dawis
librettist

Carlos
Castro
composer

Diana
Solomon-Glover
librettist