Opera in Bloom Brings Three Operas to Inspiration Point
The lights dim over Inspiration Point, and for a few hours you forget you’re sitting on a hillside outside Eureka Springs. Opera in the Ozarks opened its Opera in Bloom season June 26 and keeps the outdoor stage filled with satire, comedy, and heartbreak in equal measure through July 24. Bring a light jacket for the evening air.

THE DEETS
📅 Running through Friday, July 24, 2026
🕢 Curtain at 7:30 PM, Sunday matinees at 3:00 PM | Opera Talk at 6:45 PM (1:30 PM before matinees)
📍 Inspiration Point, Eureka Springs
🔗 More info | Tickets and full schedule

Three Operas, Three Very Different Nights
Your first stop can be Bernstein’s “Candide,” a satirical take on Voltaire’s novella that follows its naive title character through war, shipwreck, and a string of disasters while his tutor keeps insisting this is the best of all possible worlds. You’ll get 2 hours and 38 minutes of it, and it has been playing regularly through the season since it opened June 30.

If you want the lighter side of the lineup, Mozart’s “The Marriage of Figaro” is your pick. Figaro and Susanna spend their wedding day dodging a Count who wants Susanna for himself, and you watch the plot untangle through mistaken identities and disguises before landing on forgiveness. At 3 hours and 35 minutes with two intermissions, it’s the longest night of the three, and it has been running since June 26.

If you want something split down the middle, catch “Suor Angelica & Gianni Schicchi,” two Puccini one-acts under one ticket. You’ll watch Suor Angelica, a grief-stricken drama about a noblewoman sent to a convent after having a child out of wedlock, then Gianni Schicchi flips the tone entirely with a comedy about a dead man’s greedy relatives hiring a con artist to rewrite his will in their favor. Together the two run 2 hours and 14 minutes and have been on stage since June 27.

What to Expect Once You’re in Your Seat
The Opera Talk is your preview of the night ahead, with General Director Nancy Preis and a handful of singers walking you through what to listen and watch for before the curtain goes up. Even if the opera is sung in its original French, German, or Italian, English supertitles run above the stage so you can follow along without missing a beat.

There’s no dress code, and given the summer heat, dressing cool and comfortable is your best bet. Once you’re seated, hold off on the phone, the side conversations, and any urge to hum along, since latecomers may have to wait for a break to be seated.

Make a Night of It in Eureka Springs
A concession stand on site sells water, soft drinks, beer, wine, and snacks if you just want to grab something between the Opera Talk and curtain. For a full meal, Eureka Springs sits about six miles east of the theater and has plenty of restaurants worth building your evening around before or after the show.

Opera in Bloom runs through July 24, and there’s still time to catch a night at Inspiration Point before the season wraps. Grab your tickets at opera.org and see which of the three productions calls to you.





