Although
Patrick Summers is best known as a conductor of contemporary opera, particularly American opera, his work extends across the standard operatic and symphonic repertoire. He has worked in some of the world's most prestigious opera houses and regularly conducts at the
Metropolitan Opera, San Francisco Opera, Houston Opera, and
Opera Australia. At the San Francisco Opera and Houston Grand Opera he has played a key role in the development of over a dozen world premieres.
Summers grew up in Loogootee, IN, and studied at Indiana University. After graduation he worked with San Francisco's Western Opera Theater and the Merola Opera Program. He has been principal guest conductor of the San Francisco Opera since 1989. He made his premiere with
Opera Australia in 1994.
Summers' first performance at the
Metropolitan Opera was a 1998 performance of Die Fledermaus. He became music director of Houston Grand Opera in 1998 and in 2011 was appointed to the company's newly created dual position of artistic and music director.
Summers' involvement in the creation of new operas had begun at the San Francisco Opera, where he led
André Previn's A Streetcar Named Desire and
Jake Heggie and
Terrence McNally's Dead Man Walking. In Houston he has continued to work extensively with living composers and has commissioned and premiered a number of new operas, many of which are among the most significant and popular American works of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Works that he has been instrumental in creating include
Mark Adamo's Little Women,
Rachel Portman's The Little Prince, and
Carlisle Floyd's Cold Sassy Tree.
Tod Machover, Daniel Catán,
Lee Hoiby,
Michael Daugherty, and
Christopher Theofanidis are among the composers with whom he has worked.
He has also led performances at Barcelona’s Gran Teatre del Liceu, Welsh National Opera,
Santa Fe Opera, Opéra de Bordeaux, Rome Opera, and Lisbon Opera. Orchestras that he has led include the
Boston Symphony, the
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, the
English Chamber Orchestra, the
Rotterdam Philharmonic, and the
Los Angeles Philharmonic.
In 2002 he received a Grammy Award for the album
Bel Canto, featuring soprano
Renée Fleming and the
Orchestra of St. Luke's. Other recordings include
Adamo's Little Women,
Heggie's Dead Man Walking, Catán's Florencia en el Amazonas, and
Previn's Brief Encounter, as well as DVDs of The Marriage of Figaro, La Cenerentola, I Puritani, and Madama Butterfly.