WORLD PREMIERE of “Daniel”, an oratorio by Dan Montez in Westchester

taconicoperalogodanielan oratorio by Dan Montez In English

WORLD PREMIERE!

On the heels of last year’s premiere, Jonah, based on the famous prophet of whale fame, Taconic Opera presents another world premiere, Daniel, based on the prophet sent to the den of lions. The work is being promoted by Arts Westchester as part of this year’s ARTSEE campaign to promote new works to the public.

“The story isn’t just about a lions’ den; the book of Daniel includes some of the most exciting narrative in canon,” says Dan Montez, the composer, orchestrator, and conductor of the work. The story covers the lives of four kings, including the famous Nebuchadnezzar. “For those who love Verdi’s opera, Nabucco, this oratorio tells the rest of the story,” claims Montez.

The narrative includes the famous “writing on the wall,” the madness of Nebuchadnezzar, the bizarre dreams, the three burning young men, and, of course, Daniel’s survival of the lions’ den.

Much like Jonah, Daniel is a revered prophet in Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. Within Christianity, Catholicism’s version of the Bible (based on the Septuagint) has two additional chapters not found in the King James version. “These two additional chapters contain the words and prayers of the three men cast into the fiery furnace and are some of the most beautiful prose in scripture…it was calling me to write music for it,” says Montez.

Montez describes his composing style as “somewhat impressionistic.” It is similar to Ravel, Poulenc, Debussy, Fauré, and yet seems to have harmonic elements of Puccini, and stylistic elements of Copland and Ralph Vaughan Williams. “Truth be told, as much as I love impressionism, it is hard to get the opera out of me. I like drama, and I love the powerful way opera singers can tell a story. I believe it is time to tell these Biblical stories in the language of the people, in this case English, and not only foreign languages like Latin. They also need to be told to a modern audience in a beautiful way. Too many liturgical oratorios are either only available in early music or in ultra-modern forms. I’m not sure people are being moved by the stories this way…so I don’t apologize for not composing with any sort of atonality. I want to reach people with the narrative.”

The work is about an hour and fifteen minutes in length and features the soloists, opera chorus, and full orchestra of the Taconic Opera.

The company will be presenting the oratorio in two locations:

UNITED METHODIST CHURCH OF OSSINING
One Emwilton (corner of Emwilton and Route 9 next to the high school)
Saturday, May 30, 2015, at 7:30 pm

and

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF WHITE PLAINS
39 North Broadway, White Plains, New York (Route 6 exit on Highway 287)
Sunday, May 31, 2015, at 3:00 pm.

Tickets are $27 for adults, $20 for seniors, and $15 for students
Tickets can be purchased safely ONLINE here or by calling toll-free
1-(855) 88-OPERA (67372) or at the door.

 CAST

DAN MONTEZ Composer

DAN MONTEZ
Composer

ADRIENNE PATINO Soprano

ADRIENNE PATINO
Soprano

CHRISTINA CARR Mezzosoprano

CHRISTINA CARR
Mezzosoprano

GENNARD LOMBARDOZZI Tenor DANIEL

GENNARD LOMBARDOZZI
Tenor
DANIEL

STEVEN FREDERICKS Bass

STEVEN FREDERICKS
Bass

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Fidelio at the Operhaus in Zurich

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Fidelio

Opera in two actsfidelio2

Disguised as a man and under the name of Fidelio (the faithful one), Leonore has herself employed as the gaoler’s assistant in a state prison. The governor of the prison is keeping her husband, his most dangerous opponent, hidden there and intends to let him slowly starve to death. When the minister comes to inspect the prison, the governor decides that he must die immediately. Leonore has to dig her own husband’s grave. At the moment of the gravest danger, a trumpet signal announces the arrival of the minister.

fidelio3Beethoven contemplated writing an opera all his life, but only the story of the woman who risks her life to rescue her beloved husband from prison reflected his vision of an opera as he felt it should be. However, the work was arduous and dogged by discouraging failures and setbacks. After the unsuccessful première in 18O5, the composer revised the work thoroughly on two occasions, until it embarked on its triumphal progress across the stages of the world. The composer’s difficulties in writing the piece have left their mark: Fidelio is not a self-contained, classically rounded work. It is a contradictory, brittle and angular conglomerate of singspiel, grand opera and oratorio. Yet Beethoven’s music succeeds in uniting the disparate elements and, from a seemingly trivial libretto, creating a work with clearly delineated figures and moving situations. The opera is both a paean to conjugal love and an ardent hymn to freedom. Above all, however, it is an opera about the invincible strength of hope and the world-changing power of utopian ideals.

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Fidelio is Andreas Homoki and Fabio Luisi’s first joint opera production in Zurich. The much-lauded American tenor Brandon Jovanovich will be giving his role début as Florestan.

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Cherubini’s Medea in Geneva

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Tragedia in 3 acts by Luigi Cherubini
Libretto by François-Benoît Hoffmann, based on Euripides’ tragedy and Pierre Corneille’s play.
Italian translation by Carlo Zangarini.
First performed on 13 March 1797 at the Théâtre Feydeau, Paris and on 30 December 1909 at the Teatro alla Scala, Milan.

New production
At the Grand Théâtre de Genève

Sung in Italian with English and French surtitles

Due to reasons of ill health, Jennifer Larmore will not be singing Medea. The soprano Alexandra Deshorties will stand in for her part.

medea3 medea4 medea5Since its beginnings, opera has been characterized by its fascination for extreme personalities. No surprise then that many opera composers should have chosen as their subject one of the most fiery, passionate and violent figures of Ancient Greek legend: the vengeful sorceress Medea, daughter of the King of Colchis, who did not hesitate to murder her children and burn the temple of Juno to the ground on finding out the adulterous affair of her husband Jason. Among them, Luigi Cherubini’s Médée (1796) stands as a ground-breaking work in the history of French musical theatre. Making good use of the innovations introduced by Gluck, the Italian composer so admired by Beethoven imagined a musical tragedy containing the full measure of passionate fury and bloodthirstiness found in the ancient myth. Inspired by the tragedies of Euripides, Seneca and Corneille, Cherubini’s Médée was soon adapted in an Italian version, which became popular thanks to Maria Callas’ performances of the title role in the 1950s. Medea promises musical moments of dramatic intensity that will not be easily forgotten.

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Musical Director Marko Letonja
Stage Director Christof Loy
Set and Costume Designer Herbert Murauer
Lighting Designer Reinhard Traub
Body Expression Thomas Wilhelm
Dramaturgy Yvonne Gebauer
Creonte Daniel Okulitch
Glauce Grazia Doronzio
Giasone Andrea Carè
Neris Sara Mingardo
Medea Alexandra Deshorties
Captain of the Guard Alexander Milev
Fashion Designer Johanna Rudström
Her assistant Magdalena Risberg
Medea Jennifer Larmore

Grand Théâtre Opera Chorus
Director Alan Woodbridge
Orchestre de la Suisse Romande

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I Due Foscari at the Gran Teatre de Liceu in Barcelona with Placido Domingo

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Verdi was just starting to be Verdi when I due Foscari was first performed. But this was also his period of intensive work, which he dubbed “his galley-slave years”. This sixth opera was his most dramatic to date. Contemporary critics noted that the characters all had their own idiom and voiced their own passions. The tale, taken from Lord Byron’s play of the same title, relates how the dying Doge of Venice is faced with the choice between his political duties and his love for his son, who is accused of murder. Reasons of State versus fatherly love. Verdi wrote the work for La Fenice in Venice but the theatre management, under pressure from the censors, considered it unsuitable because it uncovered political intrigues in the city’s own political underbelly and some of the leading figures, such as the Foscari family itself, still wielded influence there. So the premiere was transferred to Rome.


Opera in three acts. Libretto by Francesco Maria Piave based on Lord Byron’s novel The Two Foscari. Music by Giuseppe Verdi. Premiered on 3 November 1844 at the Teatro Argentina in Rome. First performed at the Gran Teatre del Liceu on 12 July 1847. Last staged at the Liceu on 13 November 1977.

Conductor
Massimo Zanetti

Symphony Orchestra and Chorus of the Gran Teatre del Liceu

CAST
Francesco Foscari Plácido Domingo
Jacopo Foscari Ramón Vargas
Lucrezia Contarini Liudmyla Monastyrska
Jacopo Loredano Raymond Aceto
Barbarigo Josep Fadó
Pisana Maria Miró
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The Czech National Opera presents “Don Giovanni”

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dongiovanni

dongiovannidateLibretto: Lorenzo da Ponte
Musical preparation: Tomáš Netopil
Conductor: David Švec
Stage director: SKUTR (Martin Kukučka a Lukáš Trpišovský)
Sets: Jakub Kopecký
Costumes: Linda Boráros
Chorus master: Pavel Vaněk
Choreography: Jana Burkiewiczová
Dramaturgy: Beno Blachut

National Theatre Orchestra

National Theatre Chorus

Ballet of the National Theatre Opera

Premiere: June 9 and 10, 2012

 

 

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The opera Don Giovanni, the Estates Theatre and the long-standing Mozart tradition are among the greatest glories of Prague’s cultural history. The Estates Theatre is globally unique in that it is the one and only preserved and still functional venue where a world premiere of a Mozart opera took place with the composer himself conducting. This premiere was – as is generally known – of the very “Opera of Operas”, Don Giovanni. And the Estates Theatre is all the more unique owing to the fact that this opera has been performed there for centuries. The world premiere of Don Giovanni on 29 October 1787 was a tremendous success and from Prague the new opera set out on its journey to global acclaim and admiration. Mozart’s “Prague” opera is one of the most frequently performed titles at the National Theatre. Mozart and Da Ponte’s opera is a work of Shakespearean multivalence, blending comedy and tragedy, “high” and “low”, giving rise to philosophical contemplations while at the same time affording entertainment replete with excitement and humour.

Orchestra and Chorus of the National Theatre

The opera is staged in Italian original version and Czech and English surtitles are used in the performance.

Photo: Hana Smejkalová

Duration of the performance: 3 hours and 10 minutes, 1 intermission

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CAST
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“La Traviata” at La Fenice Theater in Venice

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Synopsis

ACT ONE

In the Salon in the house of Violetta Valéry, a fascinating and much-wooed courtesan in fashionable Parisian society, a sumptuous reception is in progress. Among the last guests to arrive, after gambling at cards in the house of Flora Bervoix, Viscount Gaston de Letorières introduces Violetta to Alfredo Germont, who is a fervent admirer of hers: so deeply in love, confides Gaston, that when she was recently ill he came each day to enquire secretly after her health. Violetta, touched by this unusual devotion, amiably dispels the young man’s shyness. Encouraged by his friends, Alfredo improvises a toast to beauty and to the joy of life. After supper, as the guests move off towards the ballroom, Violetta has a sudden fit of coughing. Alfredo, who is alone with her, begs her fondly to take more care of her health, assuring her that he would know how to look after her jealously. And tenderly he declares his love to her. Violetta is surprised and feigns indifference, replying that he will receive only friendship from her. Inwardly, however, she is perturbed by this confession. Plucking a flower from her bosom, she offers it to Alfredo for him to bring back when it has withered. Exultantly he takes it to mean an invitation to return the following day. Dawn has risen and the guests take their leave after the dancing. In solitude, Violetta ponders over Alfredo’s words of love. For the first time, someone has expressed a sincere affection for her. Accustomed to spend her life among fleeting joys and worldly pleasures, should she take him seriously, and change her way of life? No, she resolves not to pursue this foolish illusion. Though deep in her heart she feels that their love must be true.

Caramba (Luigi Sapelli, 1865-1936), figurini (Violetta, Alfredo) per la ripresa scaligera del 1906, la prima in costumi moderni. Cantavano Rosina Storchio (Violetta; 1876-1945; la prima Mimì e Zazà per Leoncavallo, e la prima Butterfly), Leonida Sobinov (Alfredo; 1872-1934), Riccardo Stracciari (Germont; 1875-1955).

Caramba (Luigi Sapelli, 1865-1936), costumes (Violetta, Alfredo) for the Verona premiere of 1906, the first one with modern costumes. The performers were Leonida Sobinov (Alfredo; 1872-1934), Riccardo Stracciari (Germont; 1875-1955), and Rosina Storchio (Violetta; 1876-1945), who was the first Mimì, but also the first Zazà for Leoncavallo, and the first Butterfly.

ACT TWO

Scene one

In a country house near Paris Violetta and Alfredo are spending an idyllic life together, far from the social whirl of the capital. Alfredo expresses the fullness of his joy at this delightful situation, which has lasted now for three months. But the spell is unexpectedly broken by Annina, the maid, who tells him she has been to Paris upon Violetta’s orders, to sell jewels, horses and property to pay for the expenses of their stay in the country. Alfredo’s pride is hurted and he decides to leave at once in order to settle these affairs personally. Violetta enters. She is reading a letter from Flora, who has discovered the lovers’ retreat and invites her friend to a reception that same evening. Let her wait in vain, smiles Violetta. In the meantime a visit is announced. Giorgio Germont, Alfredo’s father, introduces himself to Violetta with a contemptuous air, convinced that the woman is being kept by his son. Proudly Violetta shows Germont the deed of sale of her estate. Germont is favourably impressed by this gesture. However he asks her on the strength of her affection, to renounce Alfredo in order not to ruin the happiness of another member of his family, his daughter, whose marriage with a young man «of good family» is liable to fall through unless her brother’s scandalous liaison is broken off. Violetta claims the rights of her love, telling Germont of her serious state of health, and desperately resists his pressing requests. But in the end she yields. In resignation she agrees to sacrifice her own happiness for the sake of Alfredo and his loved ones. She promises Germont, who is deeply moved, to face her immense sorrow alone and never to reveal to Alfredo why she has deserted him so precipitately. She is on the point of writing him a farewell letter when Alfredo himself appears and asks the reason for her strange uneasiness. Violetta answers with a heartrending cry of love, before hastening away. Later she sends him a note saying that she has decided to return to her former society life and old friends. Alfredo is deeply shaken. Germont arrives, but his fond words of consolation are of no avail, even though he reminds his son of the peaceful times spent in their native Provence, where he invites him to savour once again the warmth of family affection.

Scene two

In a hall in the house of Flora Bervoix. A masked ball is in full swing. Violetta is in attendanceon the arm of Baron Douphol, her former protector. Not expecting to find Alfredo there,she is upset on seeing him, but he pretends to take no notice. He makes for the card tables, wherehe wins with shameless luck, while provoking Douphol’s resentment with vague allusions. The announcementof dinner prevents a quarrel, and the guests move into the dining room. Alfredo re-entersimmediately, having received an invitation from Violetta to talk with her. She implores him to leave and not to incur the baron’s wrath. Also, she confesses, if he would but realize, she fears most of all for his own life. But Alfredo replies that he will leave only if she will follow him. Violetta is compelled to reveal that she has sworn never to see him again. But since Alfredo insists on knowing who has had the right to impose this oath upon her, she allows him to understand that it was the Baron. Beside himself with jealousy and despair, Alfredo summons the guests. Confessing his shame at having allowed a woman to squander her fortune for him, he flings at Violetta’s feet a purse full of money, proclaiming that he has thus repaid her. Violetta faints, while Alfredo’s gesture is received with general indignation. Germont, who is arrived in the meantime, reproaches his already humiliated and repentant son, and drags him away, followed by Douphol who demands satisfaction for the insult to his partner.

ACT THREE

Violetta, whose illness is by now beyond hope, is being looked after by the faithful Annina. It is a grey winter’s morning. Doctor Grenvil arrives and tries so instil hope and courage into his patient, but confesses to Annina that the end is near. Violetta once again re-reads the affectionate letter received from Germont, in which he thanks her for having kept her promise. He also informs her that the Baron was wounded in the duel and that he has at last revealed the truth to Alfredo, who is now on his way to visit her to beg forgiveness. A echo of carnival music and revelry rise from the street, Violetta gazes mournfully her pale image in the looking-glass and her heart breaks when she remembers the happy months spent with her lover. But now Annina enters to prepare her for a great emotion, followed at once by Alfredo, who throws himself into Violetta’s arms. Together they dream once again of a radiant future. Blissfully happy, Violetta would like to get dressed and go out into the festive city. But her strength fails her and she realizes she has not much longer to live. As Germont, who has joined his son, now clasps her to his heart like a daughter, she gives Alfredo a portrait of their happy years, begging him to keep it in memory of her who has loved him so deeply, and to offer it one day to the young woman who will be his future wife: on the stage Annina and Doctor Grenvil too. Suddenly she feels lifted by a mysterious force. Rising in one last longing for life, she falls back dead in Alfredo’s arms.

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“Il trovatore” in Prague

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trovatoredateLibretto: Salvatore Cammarano
Musical preparation: Jan Latham-Koenig
Conductor: Jiří Štrunc
Stage director: Lubor Cukr
Sets: Josef Jelínek
Costumes: Josef Jelínek
Chorus master: Adolf Melichar
Dramaturgy: Jitka Slavíková

State Opera Orchestra

State Opera Chorus

Premiere: May 26, 2011

The romantic story set in 15th-century Spain about the troubadour Manrico and the Gypsy Azucena, replete with heroism, machinations, love, hatred and revenge, is rather intricate and its plot improbable to say the least. The celebrated tenor Leo Slezak, a favourite guest of the New German Theatre (today’s State Opera) and a superlative performer of Manrico, remarked: “I have sung the Troubadour at least a hundred times, and I still haven’t the slightest inkling as to what this opera is actually about!” Nevertheless, Giuseppe Verdi superbly negotiated all the unlikely plot twists and duly created one of his most forcible works. The melodies in Il trovatore are lavishly expressive and the celebrated Anvil Chorus “Vedi le fosche notturne” from Act 2 has experienced numerous paraphrases, including Glen Miller’s jazz arrangement. The premiere on 19 January 1853 at the Teatro Apollo in Rome was a triumph and opera stages were soon scrambling to stage the work. Alongside La traviata and Rigoletto, Il trovatore is the apex of Verdi’s creation, and the three operas are still record-breakers when it comes to the number of performances and visitors at opera houses around the world.

The opera is staged in Italian original version and Czech and English surtitles are used in the performance.

Duration of the performance: 2 hours and 35 minutes, 1 intermission

Photo: Martin Divíšek

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Aida in the Czech Republic

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aidadateLibretto: Antonio Ghislanzoni
Conductor: Martin Leginus
Stage director: Petar Selem
Sets: Hafiz Abdel Farghali
Costumes: Josef Jelínek
Chorus master: Adolf Melichar
Choreography: Otto Šanda

State Opera Orchestra
State Opera Chorus
Czech National Opera Ballet

Premiere: June 2, 1994

To inaugurate the Suez Canal, Ismail Pasha, Viceroy of Egypt, commissioned an opera from the composer whose Rigoletto opened the Khedivial Opera House in Cairo in 1869. Giuseppe Verdi dedicated great care to preparing the new work and even visited Egypt so as to have his own idea of the country. (He even had Old Egypt “Aida trumpets” made in Milan.) Yet he only completed the opera after the Suez Canal was opened (17 November 1869) and the premiere took place on 24 December 1871 at the Teatro del’Opera in Cairo.

aida-1 aida-2 aida-5The dramatic charge of the story of the Egyptian Princess Aida and the warrior Radames grows out of the inner torment of a woman who has to decide between being loyal to her country or dedicating herself to a man who is one of the oppressors of her nation. The dilemma of choosing between love and duty is also faced by Radames, who ultimately betrays his homeland because of Aida. The current State Opera production was premiered in 1994. The renowned Egyptian painter Hafíz Abdel Farghali gave a genuine Egyptian colour to the sets which, together with Josef Jelínek’s exquisite costumes, contributed to the great success of the performances. The production also met with a tremendous response during the State Opera Prague’s two tours of Japan – in 2001, the role of Radames was portrayed by the world-famous artist José Cura, and in 2005 the celebrated singer Maria Guleghina performed with our company.

The opera is staged in Italian original version and Czech and English surtitles are used in the performance.

Photo: Oldřich Pernica and Dan Jäger

Duration of the performance: 2 hours and 45 minutes, 1 intermission

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Cast

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Dvořák’s The Jacobin performed by the Czech State Opera

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jacobindateLibretto: Marie Červinková-Riegrová
Musical preparation: Tomáš Netopil
Conductor: David Švec, Jan Chalupecký
Stage director: Jiří Heřman
Sets: Pavel Svoboda
Costumes: Alexandra Grusková
Choreography: Lucie Holánková
Chorus master: Pavel Vaněk
Dramaturgy: Beno Blachut
Light-design: Daniel Tesař
Chorus master of the Kühn’s Children’s Choir: Jiří Chvála

National Theatre Orchestra

National Theatre Chorus

Ballet of the National Theatre Opera

Kühn Children’s Choir

Premiere: October 8 and 9, 2011

 

jakobin-1 jakobin-3 jakobin-4Dvořák’s The Jacobin is one of the most popular and most frequently performed Czech operas. To date, the National Theatre has staged twelve productions, most recently in 1993. The story, depicting life in a small Czech town on the one hand and the return of a “suspicious” émigré to his homeland on the other, is often understood in a somewhat simplistic, hyperbolic manner. Yet it is rather borne – primarily owing to Dvořák’s musical genius – in an ambiguous atmosphere of melancholy, sentiment, humorous bird’s-eye view and self-irony. As in many other similarly tuned Czech dramatic works, here too all the accumulated and pointed conflicts end up in humble, conciliatory and amicable lesson-learning.jakobin-5

At the end of the 18th century, Bohuš, a count’s son, who at one time was hounded out by his father owing to his liberalism returns to an idealised Czech town. Yet before he is allowed to reconcile with his father, he and his wife have to experience a slew of provincial intrigues which the locals direct both at themselves and – because of his being suspected of “Jacobinism” – against Bohuš and his wife. We encounter a number of stock and popular dramatic types – the happily amorous Jiří and Terinka, between whom the big-headed burgrave Filip wants to drive a wedge, the count’s power-hungry nephew Adolf, as well as the good-natured teacher Benda. A crucial role in the story is played by the traditionally lauded Czech musicality; the Czechs’ affectionate relationship to music, whose ardency and tenderness is able to soften even the most hardened of hearts. The scene at the school during which the teacher Benda is preparing with the children a festive cantata in honour of the new master is one of the most remarkable in Czech opera.

Orchestra of the National Theatre, Chorus of the National Theatre Opera and Kühn Childern´s Choir, Ballet of the National Theatre Opera

The opera is staged in Czech original version and Czech and English surtitles are used in the performance.

Duration of the performance: 3 hours, 2 intermissionsjakobin-6 jakobin-7 jakobin-8

CAST

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Rigoletto performed by the Prague State Opera

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Libretto: Francesco Maria Piave
Conductor: Richard Hein
Stage director: Karel Jernek
Sets: Zbyněk Kolář
Costumes: Olga Filipi
Chorus master: Adolf Melichar
Choreography: Daniel Wiesner

State Opera Orchestra

State Opera Chorus

Premiere: January 14, 1988

 

rigoletto-3 rigoletto-4 rigoletto-7 rigoletto-10Together with La traviata and Il trovatore, Rigoletto (1851) is an opera that made Verdi famous worldwide. Its theme, taken over from Victor Hugo’s drama Le roi s’amuse, is the tragic story of the court jester Rigoletto and his beautiful daughter Gilda, who falls victim to her father’s promiscuous master, the Duke of Mantua. The genesis of the work, written for the Teatro La Fenice, was quite dramatic in itself. The Venice police intervened and subjected the original version to censorship, claiming that the theme was “tastelessly immoral” and “offensive to His Royal Majesty”.

The librettist Francesco Maria Piave carried out acceptable revisions, replaced the character of the King with the Duke, omitted the hunchback personage and the motif of curse, and changed the working title La maledizione to Il duco di Vendôme. Yet Verdi insisted that the main story line be preserved and that Triboletto (as the hunchback was originally called) remain an outcast living on the edge of society. Ultimately, a compromise was reached and the opera was given a new title, the one we know it by today – Rigoletto. The world premiere on 11 March 1851 in Venice was a triumph and the Duke’s cynical song “La donna e mobile” (The woman is fickle) was sung by people in the streets the very next day. Verdi’s splendid melodies and the masterful depiction of the lead characters still enchant opera-lovers around the world.

The opera is staged in Italian original version and Czech and English surtitles are used in the performance.

Duration of the performance: 2 hours and 30 minutes, 2 intermissions

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