La Bohème on New Year’s Eve in Sidney

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31 December 2015

Venue: Joan Sutherland Theatre
Presented by: Opera Australia

Gale Edwards’ glittering production provides a perfect setting for New Year’s Eve: in the bohemian streets of 1930s Berlin, in the color and chaos of street fairs and burlesque bars, fairy lights and fishnet stockings.

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Description

A painter, a musician, a philosopher and a poet are having a night on the town. Café Momus is too pricey for them — they’ve nothing to weigh down those moth-eaten pockets. But why worry? The landlord is sorted, the bar tab can wait. They’re young and their lofty ideals will keep body and soul together.

And then there’s love. Ah, love. That tingle of electricity as two hands meet. The fire in the eyes of the girl you want so badly. Love will keep us warm, won’t it?

Nearly 120 years after Puccini wrote his smash-hit La bohème, this story of first love still tops the list of most performed operas around the world.

Perhaps the tale of four friends living for their art reminds us of a person we weren’t brave enough to become. Perhaps Puccini’s talent for capturing emotion in music takes us back to the first time we felt love stir in our hearts.

Perhaps it’s just that La bohème is a story we understand. It’s about friendship and falling in love.
It’s about sacrifice and never giving up, even if it means parting with your lover — or your favorite coat.

Gale Edwards’ glittering production provides a perfect setting for these utterly human emotions: in the bohemian streets of 1930s Berlin, in the color and chaos of street fairs and burlesque bars, fairy lights and fishnet stockings.

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NEW YEAR’S EVE AT SYDNEY OPERA HOUSE

A painter, a musician, a philosopher and a poet are having a night on the town. Café Momus is too pricey for them — they’ve nothing to weigh down those moth-eaten pockets. But why worry? The landlord is sorted, the bar tab can wait. They’re young and their lofty ideals will keep body and soul together.

And then there’s love. Ah, love. That tingle of electricity as two hands meet. The fire in the eyes of the girl you want so badly. Love will keep us warm, won’t it?

Nearly 120 years after Puccini wrote his smash-hit La bohème, this story of first love still tops the list of most performed operas around the world.

Perhaps the tale of four friends living for their art reminds us of a person we weren’t brave enough to become. Perhaps Puccini’s talent for capturing emotion in music takes us back to the first time we felt love stir in our hearts.

Perhaps it’s just that La bohème is a story we understand. It’s about friendship and falling in love.
It’s about sacrifice and never giving up, even if it means parting with your lover — or your favorite coat.
Gale Edwards’ glittering production provides a perfect setting for these utterly human emotions: in the bohemian streets of 1930s Berlin, in the color and chaos of street fairs and burlesque bars, fairy lights and fishnet stockings.

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NEW YEAR’S EVE AT SYDNEY OPERA HOUSE
New Year’s Eve is the night when Sydney puts on the bling, kicks up its heels and shows the world what a gorgeous thing it is, as a festival of fire explodes across the midnight sky.

Ringside seats to the greatest show on earth are hard to come by, but we’ve saved some great ones, and you’re invited.

Leave the crowds behind as you enter the Sydney Opera House.

Choose to settle back for an evening with Rodolfo, Mimi, Marcello and Musetta in Puccini’s La bohème.
Then, with a heart full of song, watch the fireworks the whole world watches. Interval is timed for the 9pm fireworks and the Sydney Opera House stays open well past the midnight fireworks.

There’s nowhere in the world like Sydney on New Year’s Eve and there’s nowhere closer to the action than Sydney Opera House. Make this your most glamorous and memorable New Year ever.

It’s guaranteed to end with a bang!

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La bohème at the Estonian National opera

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La bohème

Opera by Giacomo Puccini in four acts

Libretto by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa based on Henri Murger’s novel Scènes de la vie de bohème
World premiere February 1, 1896 Teatro Regio (Turin)
Premiere at the Estonian National Opera on October 29, 2010

S, January 9, 2016 / 19:00
F, January 15, 2016 / 19:00
W, February 17, 2016 / 19:00
F, March 4, 2016 / 19:00

  • Sung in Italian with subtitles in Estonian and English
  • Approx. running time 2 h 30 min, one intermission
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Young, cheerful, careless and passionate bohemians enjoy life and its intricate turns sparkled with love, hope, despair and wild Parisian life-rhythm to the fullest. Stage Director Ran Arthur Braun: “Bohemians are presented on stage with humour and tear as they exist together. There is no reason to ignore youth and its vivid charm as if we already knew how it is going to end!”

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As one of the greatest 20th century melody masters, Puccini has created colourful and enticing musical portraits for his characters and has depicted a beautiful and romantic image of Paris, employing memorable melodies and bold orchestral colours. Claude Debussy has said: “No one has described the Paris of these days as aptly as Puccini in his La bohème.”

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Rodolfo, the poet, and Marcello, the painter, are trying to work in their cold Latin Quarter garret. They are without money to relieve their hunger, without fuel for heating their flat and without money to pay their rent. Colline, the philosopher has tried and failed to pawn some books. The musician Schaunard has been more fortunate – he arrives with food, money firewood and cigarettes. Rodolfo wants to work and his friends depart for Café Momus to celebrate their good fortune. Rodolfo’s work is interrupted by a beautiful young woman living next door, who is searching for a means to light her candle. On her way to her room she realises that she has dropped her key in Rodolfo’s room. She returns but her candle is extinguished in the draft. Rodolfo falls in love with Mimi who is hopelessly ill but two months later he deserts her, unable to look helplessly on while Mimi’s illness worsens in his poor, cold hovel. Six months later Mimi is brought back to the poet’s lodgings, as it is her dying wish to be with her friends again…

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Staging team

  • Music Director and Conductor: Arvo Volmer
  • Conductors: Risto Joost
  • Stage Director: Ran Arthur Braun (Israel)
  • Set Designers: Ran Arthur Braun and Riccardo Gallino (Italy)
  • Costumes Designer: Elo Soode
  • Lighting Designer: Neeme Jõe

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Elizabeth Blancke-Biggs a perfect Elektra in Bologna

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logobolognaDuring the week of November 15-22 2015, the opera ELEKTRA by Richard Strauss was performed in Bologna, Italy. The opera was a great success, in particular because of the great performance by the soprano Elizabeth Blancke-Biggs, who has appeared previously on our magazine. We insert some of the raving critical comments on her performance…

WATCH A VIDEO OF ELEKTRA WITH ELIZABETH BLANCKE-BIGGS

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Elizabeth Blancke-Biggs

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“Elektra could be defined as a “one woman show”, and Elizabeth Blancke-Biggs truly succeeds in drawing the spectator to her with a charisma that makes one want her monologues and scenes to never end. Her interpretation is breath-takingly fascinating, based on a declamation and use of text that would make a Shakespearian actor jealous. Her lirico-spinto voice, warm and convincing, fits the role perfectly, and the great professional knows how to keep her sound bright and smooth in the center of her voice, and in the beautiful high register, and then to obtain the maximum dramatic effect to darken the low, and medium low parts without taking away the musicality in this difficult role rich in quasi spoken, whispered, and loud passages, heading almost to screams.”

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WWW.TEATRO.IT:  “Elizabeth Blanke-Biggs is an Elektra who is well suited in every way to take on the difficulties of the part: the voice has the proper volume, the color shows a beautiful old style darkness appropriate for the role, the high notes are solid and brilliant, and the character is vividly and intricately drawn in its lucid madness cloaked by a fury that is more interior than exterior.”

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…an optimal cast made this show great, not only vocally, but theatrically. Elizabeth Blancke-Biggs was superb in the title role. Her Elektra was expressively strong, thanks also to her voice which leaned toward the dark, but was well projected; her performance was sublime, perfectly illustrating the character, knowing how to show her tragic and mad side, and also her passionate and romantic one.”

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Follows the cast for the performances:

Elektra

Elena Nebera (15,18,21)
Elizabeth Blancke-Biggs

Klytämnestra

Natascha Petrinsky

Chrysothemis

Anna Gabler (15,18,21)
Sabina von Walther

Aegisth

Jan Vacik

Orest

Thomas Hall

Pfleger des Orest (Precettore di Oreste) / Ein alter Diener

Luca Gallo

Die Vertraute (La confidente) / Zweite Magd

Alena Sautier

Die Schleppträgerin (Ancella dello strascico) / Vierte Magd

Eleonora Contucci

Ein junger Diener (Giovane servo)

Carlo Putelli

Die Aufseherin (La sorvegliante)

Paola Francesca Natale

Erste Magd

Constance Heller

Dritte Magd

Daniela Denschlag

Fünfte Magd

Eva Oltiványi

Conductor

Lothar Zagrosek

Director

Guy Joosten

Scenography and choreography

Patrick Kinmonth

Lights

Manfred Voss

Assistant to the director

Wolfgang Gruber

Chorus Master

Andrea Faidutti

Set up by Teatro Comunale di Bologna
from Théâtre de La Monnaie / De Munt Bruxelles
and Gran Teatro de Liceu Barcelona

Orchestra, Chorus e Technicians from Teatro Comunale di Bologna

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Opera Australia presents THE MAGIC FLUTE

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30 December 2015– 16 January 2016

Venue: Joan Sutherland Theatre, Sidney
Presented by: Opera Australia

Princes and magic and bears, oh my!

Description

If you go down to the woods today, you might find a pure-hearted prince and his feathered sidekick en route to rescue a damsel in distress, a queen atop her starry throne; mysterious temples, dancing bears and a levitating picnic. If in danger, just follow the sound of the flute.

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In today’s technology-soaked world, it’s rare that anything off-screen entrances a child for more than a few minutes. But look around at a performance of Julie Taymor’s production of  The Magic Flute, and you’ll see children captivated. Utterly still, utterly silent (this is, when they’re not chortling with laughter or gasping with surprise).  That’s because The Magic Flute is like nothing they’ve ever seen before. The stage is alive with colour and movement, the music is enchanting, the movement is magical.

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From Monostatos’ grotesque nose to the Queen of the Night’s shimmering wings, everyone and everything that appears on stage is larger than life.

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As in a Pixar film, this production brilliantly balances visual stimulation with amusing dialogue in a charming English translation. The result is a pantomime of brilliant color, set to Mozart’s timeless music.

Perhaps all you need to fire a child’s imagination is a little old-fashioned theatrical magic.

Artist Information

Conductor Rory Macdonald (until 12 Jan)
Tahu Matheson
Director Matthew Barclay
Original direction by Julie Taymor
Set designer George Tsypin
Costume designer Julie Taymor
Puppetry designers Julie Taymor
& Michael Curry
Lighting designer Gary Marder
Original lighting design Donald Holder
Choreographer Matthew Barclay
Original choreography Mark Dendy
Translation by JD McClatchy
Pamina Taryn Fiebig
Tamino John Longmuir
Papageno Samuel Dundas
Queen of the night Hannah Dahlenburg
Sarastro Daniel Sumegi
1st lady Jane Ede
2nd lady Sian Pendry
3rd lady Anna Yun
Papagena Katherine Wiles
Monostatos Kanen Breen (until 7 January)
Benjamin Rasheed
Speaker Adrian Tamburini
1st priest Malcolm Ede
2nd priest Jonathan McCauley
1st armoured man Dean Bassett
2nd armoured man Clifford Plumpton

Performance Dates

Performed in English with surtitles.

Running Time: Approximately 2 hours including one 20 minute interval

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SCHEDULE

December
Wed 30 Dec 15 7:30pm

January
Sat 02 Jan 16 1:00pm
Thu 07 Jan 16 11:00am
Thu 07 Jan 16 7:30pm
Sat 09 Jan 16 1:00pm
Sat 09 Jan 16 7:30pm
Tue 12 Jan 16 7:30pm
Thu 14 Jan 16 7:30pm
Sat 16 Jan 16 1:00pm

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NYC OPERA returns with the original 1900 Tosca’s costumes and sets and Lev Pugliese as Stage Director

Posted by Francesco FornarelliNYCOperaTOSCA NYCO 2016To honor the legacy of the New York City Opera, NYCO Renaissance presents the opera that launched City Opera’s 1944 inaugural season, Giacomo Puccini’s TOSCA. NYCO Renaissance has obtained from Archivio Storico Ricordi the exclusive North American rights to re-create and present Adolf Hohenstein’s original sets and costumes from Tosca’s premiere in 1900. For the first time in America, this masterpiece of Belle Époque design will be reunited with the timeless opera that inspired it.

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TOSCA will be performed at the ROSE Theater at Lincoln Center.

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Rose Theater

Lev Pugliese

Lev Pugliese

CONGRATULATIONS TO LEV PUGLIESE WHO IS MAKING HIS AMERICAN DEBUT WITH TOSCA!

 

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L’elisir d’amore in Berlin

 

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L’elisir d’amore

[The Elixir of Love]

Gaetano Donizetti (1797 – 1848)

Melodramma giocoso in two acts
Libretto by Felice Romani, based on Eugène Scribes „Le Philtre“
First performance on 12. May, 1832 at the Teatro della Cannobiana in Milan
Premiered at the Deutsche Oper Berlin on 25 April, 2014

In Italian with German and English surtitles

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Cast

Conductor Nicholas Carter
Director Irina Brook
Set Design Noëlle Ginefri
Costume Design Sylvie Martin-Hyszka
Light Design Arnaud Jung
Chorus Master Thomas Richter
Choreographer Martin Buczkó
Dulcamara Seth Carico
Noel Bouley (04.03.2016 | 06.03.2016)
Belcore Thomas Lehman
Simon Pauly (20.05.2016 | 27.05.2016)
Nemorino Paolo Fanale
Alessandro Scotto di Luzio (04.03.2016 | 06.03.2016)
N. N. (20.05.2016 | 27.05.2016)
Adina Ailyn Pérez
Elena Tsallagova (04.03.2016 | 06.03.2016)
Heidi Stober (20.05.2016 | 27.05.2016)
Giannetta Alexandra Hutton
Elbenita Kajtazi (20.05.2016 | 27.05.2016)
Ricky Björn Struck
Chorus Chor der Deutschen Oper Berlin
Orchestra Orchester der Deutschen Oper Berlin

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elixir2 Information

Gaetano Donizetti himself described his ELIXIR OF LOVE, which premiered in 1832, as an “opera buffa”, yet there is little to laugh about in this supposedly comic opera. No different from his DON PASQUALE, composed a decade later, ELIXIR OF LOVE is a work whose mirth is rooted in gentle melancholy. Despite the happy end, the chance that things might have taken a turn for the worse is ever-present, as is the threat that the misunderstandings and coincidences that pepper the narrative of ELIXIR OF LOVE do not always turn out all right in real life.

elixir6 The story recounted by Donizetti and his librettist Felice Romani is a simple one: Adina and Nemorino are in love, yet neither can pluck up the courage to confess their love for the other person. Not until he recalls a single tear in Adina’s eye, the famous “furtiva lagrima”, does Nemorino realise that his love is requited, triggering one of the most famous tenor arias in the history of opera.

elixir7This production of ELIXIR OF LOVE at the Deutsche Oper Berlin is in the capable hands of a director who has repeatedly served notice of her proficiency in mounting operatic and theatrical works based on more lightweight material. Irina Brook has staged works such as Rossini’s LA CENERENTOLA and Händel’s GIULIO CESARE for the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées in Paris and was recently contracted for the Salzburg Festival with a new production of Ibsen’s “Peer Gynt” and Shakespeare’s “The Tempest”.

 

 

 

 

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The Marriage of Figaro at the Seattle Opera

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By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

WATCH THE TRAILER!!

KINETIC COMEDY WITH HEARTFELT HUMANITY. Charming, lighthearted, and endlessly enjoyable, Mozart’s most popular opera sparkles with genius. There’s never a dull moment for a lascivious Count and his entourage as they navigate the ups and downs of “the crazy day” preparing a wedding – or two! General Director Aidan Lang brings an “engrossing, astute, and unmissable” (The New Zealand Herald) production to McCaw Hall for his Seattle Opera directorial debut. Genuinely touching, often hilarious, ever sublime, Mozart’s miraculous marriage of music to comedy delights like no other.

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In Italian with English subtitles | at McCaw Hall
Approximate Running Time: 3 hours, 20 minutes with 1 intermission

marriagenonpiuLISTEN TO: MARRIAGE OF FIGARO: “Non più andrai”

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MarriageletterseattleLISTEN TO: MARRIAGE OF FIGARO: Letter Duet

Synopsis

A castle–the home of the Count and Countess Almaviva–near Seville, in the late 1700s

Act 1

Figaro and Susanna, the valet and maid of Count and Countess Almaviva, are to marry today. Susanna tells Figaro that the Count has been trying to seduce her, and Figaro vows to teach the Count a lesson. Meanwhile, Dr. Bartolo, still seeking vengeance on Figaro for the events of The Barber of Seville, consults with his former servant, Marcellina. She is determined to collect on an old loan made to Figaro. According to the terms, Figaro must either pay her back or marry her. Marcellina fights with her younger rival, Susanna. The teenage page Cherubino wants Susanna to plead on his behalf with the Countess to reinstate him in the Count’s good graces—the Count has banished Cherubino from the castle after finding him with the gardener Antonio’s daughter, Barbarina. They hear the Count approaching, and Cherubino hides. The Count attempts to arrange an assignation with Susanna, and he, too, hides when Don Basilio, the music teacher, arrives. When Basilio gossips about Cherubino’s crush on the Countess, the jealous Count steps forward. He is telling the story of how he found Cherubino with Barbarina when he discovers Cherubino in yet another compromising situation. Figaro enters and tries to force the Count to marry him to Susanna on the spot. But the Count delays the wedding and orders Cherubino to enlist in his personal regiment in the army.

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MARRIAGE OF FIGARO_Quartet of DeceitLISTEN TO: MARRIAGE OF FIGARO: Quartet of Deceit

Act 2

The Countess is heartbroken by her husband’s philandering. Susanna sympathizes with her. Figaro enters and divulges his schemes. He has sent the Count an anonymous note telling him that the Countess is expecting a lover while the Count is out hunting. Figaro hopes to keep the Count embroiled in this ruse to deflect his attention from Marcellina’s troublesome claim. Figaro also asks Susanna to arrange a rendezvous with the Count later on that evening in the garden; Cherubino, dressed as a girl, will go in Susanna’s place. The Count will be caught in the act and forced to mend his ways. The Countess and Susanna begin to disguise Cherubino. Susanna steps out for a moment. The Count arrives in a jealous fury, having read the anonymous note. He knocks on the bedroom door and finds it locked. The Countess, terrified, hides Cherubino in the closet and then lets the Count in. Susanna re-enters, unnoticed. The Countess refuses to unlock the closet, so the Count leaves, taking the Countess with him, in search of tools to break the lock. Susanna helps the boy escape through the window, and then she hides in the closet, surprising both the Count and Countess when they find her there. Figaro arrives and tries to get everyone to come to the wedding festivities. When the gardener enters and claims someone has jumped out of the window, Figaro takes the blame. Marcellina bursts in with Bartolo and Basilio and demands her case against Figaro be heard.

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Act 3

The Countess alters Figaro’s plan: Susanna will ask the Count to meet her in the garden that evening, but instead of Cherubino the Countess will go in her place. The Count eagerly agrees to meet Susanna, but he hears her tell Figaro that they have already “won the case” and he is once again filled with suspicion. Don Curzio, chosen by the Count to hear Marcellina’s case, judges that Figaro must either pay off the debt or marry Marcellina. Figaro claims that, as the son of an aristocrat, he cannot marry without the consent of his parents, and since he was a foundling, he doesn’t expect to be able to find them. Hearing the story of his childhood abduction, Marcellina realizes that she is Figaro’s mother and that his father is Dr. Bartolo. Susanna re-enters with money the Countess has given her to pay off Figaro’s debt. Enraged at first at seeing Figaro embrace Marcellina, she calms down when she understands the true situation. The Countess remembers her love for the Count when they first met, and still cares enough to brave danger to win him back. She dictates a note for Susanna to give to the Count, specifying the location of their supposed rendezvous later that evening in the garden. During the double wedding (of Figaro to Susanna and Bartolo to Marcellina), Susanna slips this note to the Count. The Count is to return a pin used to seal the note as an acknowledgment that he will meet her. He gives the pin to Barbarina to give to Susanna.

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Act 4

Barbarina is looking both for Cherubino and for the pin the Count gave her. She tells Figaro about Susanna’s pin, and he jumps to the conclusion that Susanna really is planning to betray him. Crushed, he hides in the garden and plans his revenge. Susanna and the Countess arrive and switch cloaks to disguise themselves as each other. Their scheme to fool the Count is disrupted by the inopportune arrival of Cherubino. Figaro eventually realizes what is going on and gets even with Susanna by wooing her in her Countess disguise. Mistaking Susanna for his wife, the Count attempts to “expose” her, but when the real Countess appears, the Count is the one who must ask for forgiveness.

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La Boheme in Novosibirsk

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SYNOPSIS

Scene 1. The Garret

Cold. Utmost poverty. It’s especially oppressive on Christmas Eve. Rodolfo and Marcello are working. At least, they are trying to work, hoping to get warm. In order to make fire, Marcello is ready to burn his painting The Red Sea. But Rodolfo sacrifices his manuscript. Let his play turn into ashes.

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Collin joins them, trying to get warm by their fire, too. Collin is a philosopher, an intellectual, he always has a book in one pocket and no money in the other. Schaunard arrives and brings wine, cigarettes, firewood and even some money: musician Schaunard is the luckiest one of the all today. But luck doesn’t hold long: the landlord Benoît comes wishing to collect the overdue rent. The friends make him drunk, accuse him of marital infidelity and manage to see him off.

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At last the careless Bohemians can celebrate Christmas. They decide to go to Café Momus in the Latin Quarter. Rodolfo tells them that he will join them in a while, after he finishes an article he is writing for the newspaper. But something more important happens. Somebody is knocking on the door. An unknown girl is standing on the threshold. This is his neighbor Mimì, a young seamstress. Her candle has blown out. She faints, exhausted by walking six floors upstairs, and looses the key to her room. Rodolfo is enchanted by the girl. He is trying to find an excuse to keep her longer in the garret. He hides the key he has found and starts a conversation. The poet and the girl tell each other about themselves.
Schaunard’s, Collin’s and Marcello’s voices are heard. The friends hasten their friend. Mimì with naivety, so characteristic of her, offers to join Rodolfo and go to Momus.

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Scene 2. Christmas Eve in the Latin Quarter

Crowded streets. Children. Salespeople. Despite the bitter cold, friends celebrate Christmas in the Latin Quarter. On the terrace of Momus, Rodolfo introduces Mimì to his friends. They sit down to table. It’s going to be fun. Suddenly the extravagant Musetta, Marcello’s former sweetheart, arrives. Now she is kept by the old bourgeois Alcindoro.
Marcello tries to seem indifferent, but in vain. Musetta is going to get her painter back.

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She dances a slow and provoking waltz. It annoys both Alcindoro and Marcello. But the latter can’t resist any more. In order to join the friends, Musetta simulates sudden pain in her foot — just to send the rich old man to the shoemaker. Alcindoro has to obey.
The couple reunites and Musetta bids farewell to her rich man in a very special way: Alcindoro will have to pay for the friends’ dinner. Meanwhile, the six friends disappear in the crowd…

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Scene 3. By the outpost

Early morning. It’s cold and gloomy. By the entrance to Paris there is a crowd of street cleaners, milkmaids, and peasants, who will pay the charge and go to Paris. From the nearby inn Musetta’s voice is heard: she’s singing her favorite waltz. She lives here together with Marcello, who is painting the façade. Suddenly Mimì appears. She wants to talk to Marcello: Rodolfo is terribly jealous, life with him is unbearable… Soon Rodolfo arrives. Mimì has to hide. In his turn, Rodolfo confides in Marcello: Mimì is definitely a sad flirt, but there is another problem: she is dying of consumption and she will never get well, if she keeps living with him in the cold and damp garret. The poor life will kill her. Rodolfo cannot bear to Mimì dying and decides to leave her…

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The fit of coughing is heard: Mimì has heard everything. Rodolfo is trying to comfort her. But both of them understand that they will inevitably part. There is a hope left: Rodolfo offers to postpone parting till spring. But for now they will stay together…
Meanwhile, Musetta and Marcello are having a row. It seems, they will part, too.

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Scene 4. The Garret

The same garret in Paris. Rodolfo and Marcello are trying to work. They feel nostalgic. Rodolfo is thinking of Mimì, Marcello is thinking of Musetta. Everybody is absorbed in his recollections.

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The arrival of Schaunard and Collin bring them back to reality. There are no credits or money left. Utmost poverty. In order to get distracted from the gloomy reality, the friends play childish games. Poverty, as always, is compensated by vivid imagination.
In the pitch of merriment, the disturbed Musetta arrives. Mimì is here, she has fainted on the threshold. The friends are doting on her: she needs a doctor. Musetta takes Marcello aside. She will sell her earrings to buy medicine and a warm muff and to call a doctor. Collin is ready to sell his old coat. Schaunard leaves Mimì and Rodolfo alone. They need to tell each other so much. Mimì is dying in the garret dear to her, surrounded by those, who shared Bohemian life with her.

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Don Giovanni at the VolksOper Wien in Vienna

volksoperlogoPresents:

Don Giovanni

Volksoper Wien

Tuesday 01 December 2015 at 7 PM
Thursday 03 December 2015 at 7 PM
Wednesday 09 December 2015 at 7 PM
Saturday 12 December 2015 at 7 PM
Tuesday 15 December at 7PM

Duration: 3 Hours 15 Minutes, Intermissions: 1

Mozart’s masterpiece “Don Giovanni” is surely one of the richest works within the operatic repertoire: both comic and tragic, ranging from ballads to cloaks-and-daggers, a moral portrait of its time and yet simultaneously a timeless piece of world theatre … The stage director Achim Freyer sees Don Giovanni
as an archetype: „the great driving force, strong and inescapable,“ bringing movement and light into our lives.

In German language with German surtitles

(c) barbara pálffy / volksoper

(c) barbara pálffy / volksoper

Cast

(c) barbara pálffy / volksoper

(c) barbara pálffy / volksoper

“Freyer’s Bewildering “Don Giovanni” Pulls Together Brilliantly in Vienna […] Jac van Steen led a beautiful, noble, wise performance of the score. Even where tempi did not tally with my inclination, I was won over by his generous musicianship. There was no ideological point-scoring here, but a clearly profound knowledge of the score, communicated with the ease – the apparent lack of any communicative act – that only the finest of Mozartians can command. His partners in crime, the Volksoper Orchestra, played beautifully throughout. […] The cast threw themselves into Freyer’s concept with enthusiasm, their clowning convincing throughout. At the centre, in the title role, stood an undeniably seductive performance by Josef Wagner, his gliding across stage at one with his silkiness of vocal delivery. I should very much like to see and hear more from him. Jörg Schneider’s beauty of tone almost made me forget my qualms about the inclusion of both of Ottavio’s arias. Kristiane Kaiser occasionally had trouble with Anna’s coloratura, but for the most part performed more than creditably; much the same might be said, albeit with greater stage ‘attitude’, for Esther Lee’s Elvira. (I should certainly never have guessed that the latter was a late stand-in for an indisposed Caroline Melzer.) Mischa Schelomianski seemed very much in his element with Leporello: a figure of fun in the best sense, perhaps a figure ‘for’ fun? Ben Connor and Anita Götz ably delineated the more plebeian roles of Zerlina and Masetto; they stand, quite rightly, as the heirs to Viennese popular theatre, whilst, perhaps ironically, attaining a dramatic seriousness of their own. Andreas Mitschke proved a suitably imposing Commendatore. More than usual, though, the claim of a company performance won out. It had to – and how!”

(Seen and heard international, Walter Berry)

(c) barbara pálffy / volksoper

(c) barbara pálffy / volksoper

 

Volksoper Wien

Währinger Straße 78
A-1090 Vienna
Info: +43/1/514 44-3670
tickets@volksoper.at
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Handel’s Alcina a great success at the Teatro Real of Madrid…

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logoteatrorealHändel’s musical genius and the fantastical story from Orlando furioso, the epic poem by Ludovico Ariosto that inspired the opera, made Alcina one of the most popular operas by the Saxon composer (alongside Ariodante and Orlando, which were also inspired by the same great literary work) performed in Covent Garden in 1735. The story, which has echoes of Homer, features the sorceress Alcina, who draws the protagonists to her island to seduce them and turn them into part of the landscape; it shows Ruggiero and Bradamante’s struggle to get rid of the evil witch, and continues to captivate audiences today with subtle metaphors on the illusions created by love and passion. In this adaptation by David Alden, who is making his début at the Royal Theatre, Alcina’s magical kingdom is the theatre itself, constructed with references to Hollywood, magazines and musical comedy. The seemingly happy ending when Ruggiero gets married to Bradamante in an entirely conventional way in a suburbs manages to inspire nostalgia for the theatrical world where the sorceress reigned.

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Program

“Alcina”

Opera seria in three acts

Anonymous libretto based on L’isola di Alcina (1728) by Riccardo Broschi, with cantos VI and VII from the epic poem Orlando Furioso (1516) by Ludovico Ariosto

First performed in the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden in London, on 16 April 1735
First performance in Madrid

A new production by the Royal Theatre, co-produced with the Opéra National de Bordeaux

Teatro Real Orchestra
(Orquesta Sinfónica de Madrid)

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Synopsis

Prologue

The background of the opera comes from the poem Orlando Furioso. The heroic knight Ruggiero is destined to a short but glorious life, and a benevolent magician is always whisking him away from the arms of his fiancée, Bradamante. Bradamante is not the type to put up with the constant disappearance of her lover, and she spends vast portions of the poem in full armor chasing after him. Just before the opera begins she has rescued him from an enchanted castle, only to have her flying horse (a hippogriff) take a fancy to Ruggiero and fly off with him. Ruggiero and the hippogriff land on an island in the middle of the ocean. As the hippogriff begins to eat the leaves of a myrtle bush, Ruggiero is startled to hear the bush begin to speak. The bush reveals that it was once a living soul named Sir Astolfo, and the island belongs to the sister sorceresses Alcina and Morgana. The beautiful Alcina seduces every knight that lands on her isle, but soon tires of her lovers and changes them into stones, animals, plants, or anything that strikes her fancy. Despite Astolfo’s warning, Ruggiero strides off to meet this sorceress – and falls under her spell.

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Act 1

Bradamante, again searching for her lover, arrives on Alcina’s island with Ruggiero’s former tutor, Melisso. Dressed in armor, Bradamante looks like a young man and goes by the name of her own brother, Ricciardo. She and Melisso possess a magic ring which enables the wearer to see through illusion, which they plan to use to break Alcina’s spells and release her captives.

The first person they meet is the sorceress Morgana. Barely human and with no understanding of true love, she immediately abandons her own lover Oronte for the handsome ‘Ricciardo.’ Morgana conveys the visitors to Alcina’s court, where Bradamante is dismayed to discover that Ruggiero is besotted with Alcina and in a state of complete amnesia about his previous life. Also at Alcina’s court is a boy, Oberto, who is looking for his father, Astolfo, who was last seen heading toward this island. Bradamante guesses that Astolfo is now transformed into something, but she holds her peace and concerns herself with Ruggiero. Bradamante and Melisso rebuke Ruggiero for his desertion, but he can’t think of anything except Alcina.

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Meanwhile, Oronte discovers that Morgana has fallen in love with ‘Ricciardo,’ and challenges ‘him’ to a duel. Morgana stops the fight, but Oronte is in a foul mood and takes it out on Ruggiero. He tells the young man exactly how Alcina treats her former lovers and adds that, as far as he can tell, Alcina has fallen in love with the newcomer, Ricciardo. Ruggiero is horrified and overwhelms Alcina with his jealous fury. Things get even worse when ‘Ricciardo’ enters and pretends to admire Alcina. Alcina calms Ruggiero, but Bradamante is so upset at seeing her fiancé wooed before her very eyes that she reveals her true identity to Ruggiero. Melisso hastily contradicts her and Ruggiero becomes very confused.

Alcina tells Morgana that she plans to turn Ricciardo into an animal, just to show Ruggiero how much she really loves him. Morgana begs Ricciardo to escape the island and Alcina’s clutches, but ‘he’ says he’d rather stay, as he loves another. Morgana believes that this other person is herself, and the act ends with Alcina’s aria “Tornami a vagheggiar“. (In some productions. this aria is sung by Morgana.)

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Act 2

Melisso recalls Ruggiero to reason and duty by letting him wear the magic ring: under its influence, Ruggiero sees the island as it really is—a desert, peopled with monsters. Appalled, he realizes he must leave, and sings the famous aria “Verdi prati” (“Green meadows”) where he admits that even though he knows the island and Alcina are mere illusion, their beauty will haunt him for the rest of his life.

Melisso warns Ruggiero that he cannot just leave; Alcina still wields immense power, and he should cover his escape by telling her that he wishes to go hunting. Ruggiero agrees, but, thoroughly bewildered by the magic and illusion surrounding him, he refuses to believe his eyes when he at last sees Bradamante as herself, believing that she may be another of Alcina’s illusions. Bradamante is in despair, as is Alcina. Convinced of Ruggiero’s indifference, she enters to turn Ricciardo into an animal, and Ruggiero has to pull himself together quickly and convince the sorceress that he does not need any proof of her love. It is at this point that the audience realises that Alcina genuinely loves Ruggiero; from now until the end of the opera, she is depicted sympathetically.

Oronte realizes that Ricciardo, Melisso and Ruggiero are in some sort of alliance, and Morgana and Alcina realise they are being deceived. But it is too late: Alcina’s powers depend on illusion and, as true love enters her life, her magic powers slip away. As the act ends, Alcina tries to call up evil spirits to stop Ruggiero from leaving her, but her magic fails her.

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Act 3

After this the opera finishes swiftly. Morgana and Oronte try to rebuild their relationship; she returns to him and he rebuffs her but (once she is offstage) admits he loves her still. Ruggiero returns to his proper heroic status and sings an aria accompanied by high horns; Oberto is introduced to a lion, to whom he feels strangely attached, and Alcina sings a desolate aria in which she longs for oblivion.

Bradamante and Ruggiero decide that they need to destroy the source of Alcina’s magic, usually represented as an urn. Alcina pleads with them, but Ruggiero is deaf to her appeals and smashes the urn. As he does so, everything is both ruined and restored. Alcina’s magic palace crumbles to dust and she and Morgana sink into the ground, but Alcina’s lovers are returned to their proper selves. The lion turns into Oberto’s father, Astolfo, and other people stumble on, “I was a rock,” says one, “I a tree” says another, and “I a wave in the ocean…” All the humans sing of their relief and joy, and Alcina is forgotten.

 

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