What is Silent Opera?
A new English version of Monteverdi's Italian opera L'Orfeo is set to open in London - but audience members going along should expect a very different experience.
The organisers have taken the principle of silent discos - where a large group of people listen to music individually through headphones - and applied it to this opera.
As part of the Silent Opera experience, audience members are given headphones and asked to decide how they want to listen to the production. With headphones on, they will hear the piece with its full orchestration, pre-recorded. But with headphones off, they simply hear the live singing backed by performers on just six instruments.
Producer Tim Wilson and director Daisy Evans explain why they believe that Silent Opera is breaking the boundaries of classical opera.
Video Journalist: Sophie van Brugen
Most watched/listened
-
Video of Woolwich suspect in 2007
-
Burning US railroad bridge collapses
-
Preacher refuses to 'abhor' attack
-
Second jewel theft at Cannes festival
-
Woman confronts Woolwich attacker
-
Obama heckled over Guantanamo Bay
-
Iron Man 3 is a superhero in China
-
Africa Beats: Afrikaans rapper Jaak
-
Who was Woolwich soldier Lee Rigby?
-
Obama: Civilian drone deaths 'haunt us'
-
'I regret stupid cyclist tweet'
-
US showman's unbelievable oddballs
-
Film charts China's thirst for red wine
-
Explosion fails to demolish disused building
-
US mayor to push tornado shelter law
~RS~q~RS~~RS~z~RS~33~RS~)
