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Contemporary opera represents one of the most dynamic areas of modern art, combining diverse creative fields and collaborative practices. This study aims to explore innovations in contemporary opera through the lens of collective team decisions, with particular attention to how priorities are determined when departing from established operatic traditions. The research is grounded in empirical analysis of data from Music Theatre NOW (MT NOW), a global platform that documents and evaluates innovative works in musical theatre. To identify trends, we applied a specially developed Method for Determining Primary Contribution. This method interprets the composition of creative teams as formalized in MT NOW applications, transforming such data into indicators of which creative field – musical, theatrical, literary, choreographic, or conceptual – was prioritized in the process of innovation. Our findings demonstrate that musical art remains the dominant field of innovation in contemporary opera, accounting for over half of all primary contributions. Theatrical art and ideas also play significant roles, though with greater fluctuation across different years. Literature and choreographic art, while less frequent, nonetheless appear as meaningful contributors to innovation. The study also highlights the phenomenon of “incognito contributions”, interpreted as a form of collective authorship that resists attribution to a single creative field. The results confirm the multidimensional character of innovation in contemporary opera and emphasize the importance of recognizing team-based authorship. This research contributes to a deeper understanding of how innovations emerge, compete, and interact within collaborative creative processes, while also providing a methodological foundation for further empirical studies.