Looking for a place to host your next meeting, cocktail party, holiday event, or wedding reception? Lyric Opera of Kansas City offers rental of our 4500-square foot rehearsal space as well as a meeting space, up to 60 guests, in the Michael and Ginger Frost Production Arts Building, 712 E. 18th Street, Kansas City, MO. The facility is located in the Crossroads Arts District in downtown Kansas City, MO and has free parking available.
PACKAGE OPTIONS
All packages include cleaning, eight hours of a House Manager and waiver for security. House Manager time over eight hours will be billed at a rate of $25 per hour. Security is available to be added to any event for a rate of $35 per hour, with a four hour minimum.
FACILITY RENTAL PRICING
Rehearsal Space
Pricing starts at $1,844. Final rental pricing is determined upon client needs.
STANDARD
Monday – Thursday
$1555
Friday & Sunday
$1805
Saturday
$2055
NON-PROFIT
Monday – Thursday
$1055
Friday & Sunday
$1180
Saturday
$1305
HOLIDAY
Monday – Thursday
$2530
Friday & Sunday
$2905
Saturday
$3280
Meeting Space
Pricing starts at $969. Final rental pricing is determined upon client needs.
STANDARD
Monday – Thursday
$780
Friday & Sunday
$805
Saturday
$855
NON-PROFIT
Monday – Thursday
$670
Friday & Sunday
$680
Saturday
$705
HOLIDAY
Monday – Thursday
$1370
Friday & Sunday
$1405
Saturday
$1480
Contact Sarah Zsohar at (816) 802-6066 for more information and availability.
Production Rentals
A number of productions are available to rent from the Lyric Opera of Kansas City. Below is a listing of the available productions. Click the production title for information. Contact Tracy Davis-Singh, Director of Production, at (816) 471-4933 or tdavis-singh@kcopera.org for inquiries about rental availability.
View ProductionsCreated through a co-production with Opera Philadelphia, Palm Beach Opera, and San Diego Opera, this is a new, traditional production of Le Nozze di Figaro.
” Leslie Travers’ scenic and costume designs lend a nod to 18th-century appearances, with expensive-looking chandeliers and richly embroidered gowns in bold hues: Even the servants’ livery is fantastically detailed. The set consists of two large wall segments that are placed at varying angles to create exteriors, interiors or (with the addition of some leafy tree-pieces) the Act IV garden. The “outer” wall is adorned with a bas relief of a tree studded with cameo-style portraits, presumably of members of the Almaviva lineage. When these oval-shaped portraits open to become windows (in which the nobles appear to summon their servants), we realize they are not to be taken literally. The result is a sort of dream-like representation of grand palace life on a smallish scale.” The Independent