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The Magic Flute at Crested Butte Music Festival, Colorado

The Magic Flute

is an opera by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, first performed in 1791. Blending fairy tale, allegory, and Enlightenment ideals, it follows Prince Tamino and the bird-catcher Papageno on a quest to rescue Princess Pamina. Guided by mystical forces, they face trials of wisdom, courage, and love, encountering magical creatures, the Queen of the Night’s dazzling vengeance, and the noble Sarastro’s temple of truth. Filled with symbolic imagery, humor, and some of opera’s most famous arias, it’s both a fantastical adventure and a celebration of enlightenment and harmony.

Vitek Kruta, a founder of Gateway Artisan Studios, served as set designer for the Crested Butte Music Festival production of Mozart’s The Magic Flute. His involvement with the festival (he’s credited as the set designer for the festival’s Magic Flute and earlier productions such as Carmen) is noted in the Crested Butte Arts listings. 

 

The creative team and collaborators
Sarah Meyers (also published as Sarah Ina Meyers), a stage director who has been on the directing staff of the Metropolitan Opera, worked on the production in a directorial/collaborative capacity, bringing Metropolitan Opera-level staging experience and dramaturgical discipline to the festival production.

Keith Miller  sang in the company

(he has performed the role of Sarastro in The Magic Flute in other companies), anchoring the production’s vocal and stage collaborations. 

Kruta’s approach to the sets
Kruta is an artist-restorer and muralist trained in Old-World decorative techniques; his background in fine and decorative arts and in mural/paint restoration informs scenic work that often blends painted surfaces, textured finishes, and large-format imagery rather than purely scenic machinery. That artistic profile is part of his public biography and helps explain the visual character he tends to bring to opera sets. (rmichelson.com)

Practical production notes (how the collaboration worked)

  • Early phase: Started with concept meetings between Kruta and the director (Meyers) to align on tone, period vs. fantasy aesthetics, and how the principal roles (e.g., Sarastro) move within the space. (This is standard practice for director/designer collaborations.)

  • Kruta produced sketches and a scale model or renderings for approval; those drawings guide scenic carpentry, painted drops, and any specialty finishes. (Again, standard scenic workflow.)

  • Fabrication and finishes: given Kruta’s decorative background, painted backdrops, hand-painted flats, and layered surface treatments (glazes, faux finishes, large murals) are likely elements rather than completely modular, factory-built scenic units. This approach suits festival contexts where strong visual impact from simplified, painterly elements is desirable. 

  • Crested Butte productions frequently use close, ephemeral venues (the festival has at times used a Spiegeltent / Mirror Palace and other intimate stages), so sets must be transportable, adaptable to tight stage footprints, and quick to strike. Lighting and projection are commonly integrated to extend painted surfaces and create magical effects appropriate to The Magic Flute. Center for the Arts Crested Butte

Collaboration with performers and Met staff
Meyers’ Met experience shaped blocking, pacing, and the relationship between singers and scenic elements; Kruta’s designs were adjusted during tech rehearsals to ensure sightlines, safe movement for principals and chorus, and acoustic considerations. Singers like Keith Miller (festival cast) provided practical feedback during staging rehearsals — particularly for large, ceremonial scenes (priests, rituals, trials) where choreography, chorus placement, and set sightlines must all sync.

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