Richard David Gockley was born in Philadelphia and grew up in Wayne, Pennsylvania.[4] He holds a bachelor's degree from Brown University, where he sang with the Jabberwocks, and a master's degree from Columbia University.[5] According to San Francisco Opera's website,[2] his father was an athletic coach and inspired his early love for sports, and he inherited a passion for music from his mother. He is the father of three children: Meredith, Lauren, and Adam.[6]
He has served as president of OPERA America and is currently a board member.[7]
Houston Grand Opera
In 1970, Gockley joined Houston Grand Opera as business manager and was appointed general director in 1972. Under his tenure, Houston Grand Opera presented 35 world premieres and six American premieres. Gockley oversaw the founding of the Houston Grand Opera Studio in 1977, the company's young artist development program, and the opening of the Wortham Theater Center in 1987. He introduced “plazacasts”, free broadcasts of mainstage opera productions to outdoor audiences; created OperaVision, a series of screens located throughout the Wortham Center that projected close-up shots of the action on stage; and began annual radio broadcasts of Houston Grand Opera performances in the U.S. and abroad.
After a 33-year tenure as general director, Gockley resigned from Houston Grand Opera in 2005 to assume the post of general director for San Francisco Opera.[8]
Gockley oversaw the creation of San Francisco Opera's Koret-Taube Media Suite, the first permanent high-definition broadcast-standard video production facility installed in any American opera house according to the company's website.[13] Through the Koret-Taube Media Suite, he expanded on the plazacasts he pioneered at Houston Grand Opera with a series of “simulcasts”, live broadcasts of San Francisco Opera mainstage performances to remote locations. The company has presented eight simulcasts throughout San Francisco and the Bay Area, specifically to San Francisco's Civic Center Plaza, Stanford University's Frost Amphitheater, and seven simulcasts presented on the scoreboard at San Francisco's AT&T Park, home of the San Francisco Giants. All simulcasts have been presented free to the public, drawing as many as 200,000 people collectively.[12] San Francisco Opera also broadcast a live performance of Don Giovanni to four theaters across Northern California in June 2007.[14]
Gockley continued his OperaVision program[15] at San Francisco Opera and supervised the presentation of four San Francisco Opera productions in movie theaters across the United States. Unlike the Metropolitan Opera, which began live broadcasts of performances to theaters in 2006 using projection systems used for advertising,[16] The opera partnered with The Bigger Picture to present four operas in a feature–film quality digital cinema format in 2008.[17]
In 2007, the opera returned to national and international radio after 25 years under Gockley's leadership.[18] Earlier in 2007, Gockley announced the appointment of Italian conductor Nicola Luisotti as the company's new music director, effective September 2009.[19] Luisotti is the company's third music director following Sir John Pritchard and Donald Runnicles. In January 2009, Gockley announced the reappointment of Patrick Summers as principal guest conductor and named Giuseppe Finzi as the company's new assistant music director.[20] In May 2011, it was announced that Gockley's contract was to be extended through SFO's 2015–16 season.[21]
Gockley announced his retirement in 2014[22] and transferred leadership to Matthew Shilvock in August 2016.[3]
Awards and honors
Dean's Award for “Distinguished Professional Achievement”, Columbia University Business School
Honorary Doctorate in Humane Letters, University of Houston, 1992
Honorary Doctorate in Fine Arts, Brown University, 1993
Cummings, David, International Who's Who in Music and Musicians' Directory, Cambridge, England: Routledge; 17 edition June 13, 2000; ISBN978-0-948875-53-3