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Theatre

Israeli costume designer Buki Shiff makes opera shine

Melanie Abrams meets the costume designer whose creations are on display in opera houses across the world

December 18, 2017 16:57
(C)BC20171116_SEMIRAMIDE_0363a JACQUELYN STUCKER AS AZEMA (C) ROH. PHOTO BILL COOPER
3 min read

As the Opera: Power, Passion and Politics exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum makes clear, costume is a crucial part of the spectacle that is opera. And an Israeli designer, Buki Shiff, is making waves in the world’s opera houses, most recently at the Royal Opera House’s glitzy production of Rossini’s Semiramide.

She created Queen Semiramide’s metallic embroidered robe, a shimmering gold sheath for a princess, and an Indian entourage modelled on the Maharajahs’ legendary magnificence.

Born and still based in Tel Aviv, Shiff has created costumes for some of the best loved operas including Madama Butterfly, Don Giovanni and Faust. Her extravagant, witty work has been seen on stages from La Scala Milan to the Sydney Opera House and she has won critical acclaim including the best costume designer gong at the International Opera Awards in 2013.

Working on Semiramide chimed with Shiff as “the action takes place in Babylonia, the Iraq of today, so near where I live,” she says, and also allowed her to showcase her signature mash-up of styles, periods or sources, by referencing an ancient era in a contemporary context.