The Town Hall presents the New York premiere of the Kaminsky/Reed chamber opera "Hometown to the World," about the impact of the largest workplace ICE raid in US history that took place in Postville, IA in 2008. This searing work is conducted by Tania León, directed by Kristine McIntyre and presented in association with Santa Fe Opera, as one of its Opera For All Voices commissions. Performers include Cecilia Duarte, Blythe Gaissert, and Michael Kelly, the ensemble Sybarite5, and a chorus comprised of 100+ public high school students from Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts and Repertory Company High School for Theatre Arts.

In 2008 the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) raided the nation’s largest kosher meatpacking plant based there, decimating the town. During its renaissance, Postville evolved into a model of multiculturalism, summarized perhaps most accurately by the sign on the edge of town, which reads: “Hometown to the World” but, following the raid, families were destroyed, the meatpacking plant was forced to close and Postville’s ability to function was decimated.

The opera brings together three characters from the different communities affected by the raid—Linda Morales, a Guatemalan woman whose undocumented husband and son were deported but who remained to care for her U.S.-born baby; Abraham Fleischman, a gay Hasidic Jew, who, banished from his family, seeks refuge in Morales’ home; and Country Commissioner Larsen, an American of Scandinavian descent, who despairs at the town’s downfall and who has come to question everything.

Terrance McKnight shares his commitment to humanity and music by “bringing everyone’s culture to the table.” He is the weekday evening host for radio station WQXR in New York. When not on air, his endeavors include Langston & Beethoven: Black & Proud, a program he created and brings to the Sidewalk Studio at Lincoln Center in early 2023, hosting evenings of diverse music across the US, such as concerts in the centennial celebration of New York’s Town Hall during the 2022-23 season, and producing documentaries on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Hazel Scott, Florence Price, Harry Belafonte and others. In 2019, McKnight curated a series of concerts and audio tours for the Charles White: A Retrospective exhibition at MOMA. An artistic advisor for the Harlem Chamber Players and member of the Artistic Committee of The Hermitage Artist Retreat, he serves on the board of directors of MacDowell, and is the voice of recent media campaigns for Carnegie Hall and the Studio Museum in Harlem. He gave the keynote address for the diversity track of the spring 2022 Music Teachers National Association. McKnight is the author of the book Concert Black, anticipating a 2023 release by Abrams Books.

Sung in English, Spanish, Yiddish and Hebrew.


Health & safety: As of July 1, The Town Hall is mask friendly. Masks are encouraged but not required, unless otherwise noted.

Tickets start at $52

Presented by:
The Town Hall Presents in association with Santa Fe Opera