AIDA at the Metropolitan Opera in NYC

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AidaAida

Metropolitan Opera, NYC

Wednesday, November 19, 2014   7:30 pm

Approximate running time 3 hrs. 40 min.

Grand opera at its grandest: the splendors of ancient Egypt return to the stage of the Met. Verdi’s mythic love triangle features Liudmyla Monastyrska, Tamara Wilson, and Oksana Dyka sharing the title role, with Olga Borodina and Violeta Urmana as Amneris and Marcello Giordani and Marco Berti singing Radamès. Marco Armiliato and Plácido Domingo share conducting duties.

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SYNOPSIS

Act I
Egypt, during the reign of the pharaohs. At the royal palace in Memphis, the high priest Ramfis tells the warrior Radamès that Ethiopia is preparing another attack against Egypt. Radamès hopes to command his army. He is in love with Aida, the Ethiopian slave of Princess Amneris, the king’s daughter, and he believes that victory in the war would enable him to free her and marry her. But Amneris loves Radamès, and when the three meet, she jealously senses his feelings for Aida. A messenger tells the king of Egypt and the assembled priests and soldiers that the Ethiopians are advancing. The king names Radamès to lead the army, and all join in a patriotic anthem. Left alone, Aida is torn between her love for Radamès and loyalty to her native country, where her father, Amonasro, is king. She prays to the gods for mercy.

In the temple of Vulcan, the priests consecrate Radamès to the service of the god. Ramfis orders him to protect the homeland.

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Act II
Ethiopia has been defeated, and Amneris waits for the triumphant return of Radamès. When Aida approaches, the princess sends away her other attendants so that she can learn her slave’s private feelings. She first pretends that Radamès has fallen in battle, then says he is still alive. Aida’s reactions leave no doubt that she loves Radamès. Amneris, certain she will be victorious over her rival, leaves for the triumphal procession.

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At the city gates the king and Amneris observe the celebrations and crown Radamès with a victor’s wreath. Captured Ethiopians are led in. Among them is Amonasro, Aida’s father, who signals his daughter not to reveal his identity as king. Radamès is impressed by Amonasro’s eloquent plea for mercy and asks for the death sentence on the prisoners to be overruled and for them to be freed. The king grants his request but keeps Amonasro in custody. The king declares that as a victor’s reward, Radamès will have Amneris’s hand in marriage.

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Act III
On the eve of Amneris’s wedding, Ramfis and Amneris enter a temple on the banks of the Nile to pray. Aida, who is waiting for Radamès, is lost in thoughts of her homeland. Amonasro suddenly appears. Invoking Aida’s sense of duty, he makes her agree to find out from Radamès which route the Egyptian army will take to invade Ethiopia. Amonasro hides as Radamès arrives and assures Aida of his love. They dream about their future life together, and Radamès agrees to run away with her. Aida asks him about his army’s route, and just as he reveals the secret, Amonasro emerges from his hiding place. When he realizes that Amonasro is the Ethiopian king, Radamès is horrified by what he has done. While Aida and Amonasro try to calm him, Ramfis and Amneris step out of the temple. Father and daughter are able to escape, but Radamès surrenders to the priests.

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Act IV
Radamès awaits trial as a traitor, believing Aida to be dead. Even after he learns that she has survived, he rejects an offer by Amneris to save him if he renounces Aida. When he is brought before the priests, he refuses to answer their accusations and is condemned to be buried alive. Amneris begs for mercy, but the judges will not change their verdict. She curses the priests.
Aida has hidden in the vault to share Radamès’s fate. They express their love for the last time while Amneris, in the temple above, prays for Radamès’s soul.

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CAST:

armiliatomarcoMarco Armiliato

CONDUCTOR (Genoa, Italy)
COMPANY DEBUT Il Trovatore, 1998
HOUSE DEBUT La Bohème, 1998
REPERTORY Aida, La Traviata

monastyrskaliudmylaLiudmyla Monastyrska (Aida)

SOPRANO (Kiev, Ukraine)
DEBUT Aida, Aida, 2012
REPERTORY Aida, Aida

borodinaolgaOlga Borodina (Amneris)

MEZZO-SOPRANO (St. Petersburg, Russia)
COMPANY DEBUT Concert, 1997
HOUSE DEBUT Marina, Boris Godunov, 1997
REPERTORY Amneris, Aida

marcellogiordani_artistpageMarcello Giordani (Radamès)

Hometown Augusta, Italy
Company debut Nemorino in L’Elisir d’Amore (1993)
House debut Rodolfo in La Bohème (1995)
Performance history More than 200 appearances in 26 roles, including Paolo in Francesca da Rimini, Dick Johnson in La Fanciulla del West, Pinkerton in Madama Butterfly, Faust in La Damnation de Faust, Edgardo in Lucia di Lammermoor, des Grieux in Manon and Manon Lescaut, Calàf in Turandot, Don José in Carmen, Cavaradossi in Tosca, Adorno in Simon Boccanegra, Alfredo in La Traviata, and the title roles of Benvenuto Cellini and Ernani

marcello_Giordani in Macbeth

Marcello Giordani in Macbeth

zeljkolucic_artistpageŽeljko Lučić (Amonasro)

Hometown Zrenjanin, Serbia
Met debut Barnaba in La Gioconda (2006)
Performance history Title roles of Rigoletto, Macbeth, and Nabucco, Germont in La Traviata, Count di Luna in Il Trovatore, and Enrico in Lucia di Lammermoor

belosselskiydmitryDmitry Belosselskiy (Ramfis)

BASS (Pavlograd, Ukraine)
DEBUT Zaccaria, Nabucco, 2011
REPERTORY Ramfis, Aida; Old Convict, Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk; de Silva, Ernani

howardsolomanSoloman Howard (The King)

BASS (Washington, D.C.)
DEBUT SEASON
REPERTORY The King, Aida

Production Team

Production: Sonja Frisell
Set Designer: Gianni Quaranta
Costume Designer: Dada Saligeri
Lighting Designer: Gil Wechsler
Choreographer: Alexei Ratmansky

Giuseppe Verdi
Aida
Libretto by Antonio Ghislanzoni

Premiere: Cairo Opera House, 1871
This grandest of grand operas features an epic backdrop for what is in essence an intimate love story. Set in ancient Egypt and packed with magnificent choruses, complex ensembles, and elaborate ballets, Aida never loses sight of its three protagonists: Amneris, the proud daughter of the pharaoh; her slave, Aida, who is the princess of the rival kingdom of Ethiopia; and Radamès, the Egyptian warrior they both love. Few operas have matched Aida in its exploration of the conflict of private emotion and public duty, and perhaps no other has remained to the present day so unanimously appreciated by audiences and critics alike.

The Creators
Giuseppe Verdi (1813–1901) is the composer of 28 operas that premiered over a period of 54 years. His works continue to form the core of the international opera repertory, cherished equally for their unforgettable music and their humanity. The story of Aida was the creation of Auguste Mariette (1821–1881), an extraordinary French archaeologist who was the founder of the Egyptian Museum of Cairo (and whose reputation for great archaeological successes was somewhat tainted when he accidentally blew up an intact tomb). Camille du Locle (1832–1903), who collaborated on the scenario with Mariette and suggested the story to Verdi, had worked with the composer on the libretto of Don Carlos. An opera impresario in Paris, he commissioned Carmen from Georges Bizet for the Opéra Comique in 1875. Aida’s librettist, Antonio Ghislanzoni (1824–1893), was a novelist and poet as well as the creator of some 85 librettos, most of which are forgotten today. He had previously worked with Verdi on the revision of La Forza del Destino (1869).

The Setting
The libretto indicates merely that the opera takes place in “ancient Egypt, in the time of the pharaohs.” This may sound vague, but it was a clear direction to approach the drama as myth rather than anthropology or history. Europe’s fascination with the ancient Nile civilization had been piqued with stories from Napoleon’s Egyptian expedition at the end of the 18th century, and continued into the mid-19th century with the numerous archaeological discoveries being taken from the sands of Egypt and shipped to museums in the European capitals.

The Music
The score of Aida is a sophisticated example of Italian Romanticism, imbued with a convincingly mysterious and exotic hue. Making no claims to authenticity (nobody knows what music in ancient Egypt sounded like), Verdi created a unique musical palette for this opera. The grandeur of the subject is aptly conveyed with huge patriotic choruses (Acts I and II) and the unforgettable Triumphal March in Act II. These public moments often serve as frames for the solos of the leading tenor and soprano: his grueling “Celeste Aida” right at the beginning of Act I, her demanding “Ritorna vincitor!” that follows, and her great internal journey, “O patria mia,” in Act III. Perhaps most impressive in this drama of public versus private needs are the instances of solo voice pitted directly against complex ensembles and vast choruses: the tenor in the temple scene in Act I, the mezzo-soprano in the judgment scene in Act IV, and especially the soprano in the great triumphal scene in Act II.

Aida at the Met
The opera came to the Met during the “German Seasons” of the 1880s and
was performed in German until 1891. (The Met’s 1883–84 season was a financial disaster, so for a few seasons the company hired less expensive German singers and had them sing in their native language.) Aida has been among the most popular operas in the Met’s repertory since those early days. Conductor Arturo Toscanini inaugurated his Met career with a spectacular new production of Aida (even though the previous production was only a year old) for opening night of the 1909–10 season. That performance featured the Met debut of Czech sensation Emmy Destinn (who would sing the title role 52 times at the Met through 1920), American mezzo Louise Homer (who sang Amneris 97 times between 1900 and 1927), Enrico Caruso (91 performances as Radamès at the Met between 1903 and 1919), and the great baritone Pasquale Amato (79 appearances between 1903 and 1919). Other unforgettable and frequent Aidas at the Met include Zinka Milanov (75 performances, 1938–1958), Elisabeth Rethberg (67 performances, 1922–1942), and the legendary Leontyne Price (42 performances from 1961 until her farewell appearance at the Met in 1985). The current production by Sonja Frisell, with sets by the acclaimed film production designer Gianni Quaranta (A Room With a View), premiered in 1988 with James Levine conducting a cast headed by Leona Mitchell, Fiorenza Cossotto, Plácido Domingo, Sherrill Milnes, and Paul Plishka.

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Il Barbiere di Siviglia at the Metropolitan Opera in New York

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Il Barbiere di Siviglia

Metropolitan Opera, NYC

Tuesday, November 18, 2014   7:30 pm

Approximate running time 3 hrs. 0 min.

In Bartlett Sher’s effervescent production of Rossini’s most popular opera, Isabel Leonard is the beautiful and feisty Rosina, who won’t be kept under lock and key. Lawrence Brownlee is her conspiring flame, Almaviva, and Christopher Maltman is the omnipotent barber, Figaro. Michele Mariotti conducts.

SYNOPSIS

Act I
Seville. Count Almaviva comes in disguise to the house of Doctor Bartolo to serenade Rosina. Bartolo keeps her confined to the house, and Almaviva decides to wait until daylight. Figaro the barber, who knows all the town’s secrets and scandals, arrives. He explains to Almaviva that Rosina is Bartolo’s ward, not his daughter, and that the doctor intends to marry her. Figaro devises a plan: the Count will disguise himself as a drunken soldier quartered at Bartolo’s house to gain access to the girl. Almaviva is excited while Figaro looks forward to a nice cash pay-off.

Rosina reflects on the voice that has enchanted her and resolves to use her considerable wiles to meet the Count, who she thinks is a poor student named Lindoro. Bartolo appears with Rosina’s music master, Don Basilio, who warns him that Count Almaviva, Rosina’s admirer, has been seen in Seville. Bartolo decides to marry Rosina immediately. Basilio suggests slander as the most effective means of getting rid of Almaviva. Figaro, who has overheard the plot, warns Rosina and promises to deliver a note from her to Lindoro. Suspicious, Bartolo tries to prove that Rosina has written a letter, but she outwits him at every turn. Angry at her defiance, Bartolo warns her not to trifle with him.

Isabel Leonard as Rosina

Isabel Leonard as Rosina

Almaviva arrives, disguised as a drunken soldier, and secretly passes Rosina a note, while Bartolo argues that he has exemption from billeting soldiers. Figaro announces that a crowd has gathered in the street, curious about all the noise coming from inside the house. The civil guard bursts in to arrest Almaviva but when he secretly reveals his true identity to the captain he is instantly released. Everyone except Figaro is amazed by this turn of events.

Act II
Bartolo suspects that the “soldier” was a spy planted by Almaviva. The Count returns, this time disguised as Don Alonso, a music teacher and student of Don Basilio. He has come to give Rosina her music lesson in place of Basilio, who, he says, is ill at home. “Don Alonso” also tells Bartolo that he is staying at the same inn as Almaviva and has found the letter from Rosina. He offers to tell her that it was given to him by another woman, seemingly to prove that Lindoro is toying with Rosina on Almaviva’s behalf. This convinces Bartolo that “Don Alonso” is indeed a student of Don Basilio and he allows him to give Rosina her music lesson. She sings an aria, and, with Bartolo dozing off, Almaviva and Rosina express their love.

Figaro arrives to give Bartolo his shave and manages to snatch the key that opens the balcony shutters. Suddenly Basilio shows up looking perfectly healthy. Almaviva, Rosina, and Figaro convince him with a quick bribe that he is sick with scarlet fever. Basilio leaves, confused but richer. Almaviva plots with Rosina to elope that night while Bartolo gets his shave. When the doctor hears the phrase “my disguise,” he furiously realizes he has been tricked again. Everyone leaves.

The maid Berta comments on the crazy household. Basilio is summoned and told to bring a notary so Bartolo can marry Rosina that evening. Bartolo then shows Rosina her letter to Lindoro. Heartbroken and convinced that she has been deceived, she agrees to marry Bartolo and tells him of the plan to elope with Lindoro. A storm passes. Figaro and the Count climb over the wall. Rosina is furious until Almaviva reveals his true identity. Basilio arrives with the notary. Bribed and threatened, he agrees to be a witness to the marriage of Rosina and Almaviva. Bartolo appears with soldiers, but it is too late. Almaviva explains to Bartolo that it is useless to protest and Bartolo accepts that he has been beaten. Figaro, Rosina, and the Count celebrate their good fortune.

 

mariottimicheleMichele Mariotti

CONDUCTOR (Urbino, Italy)
DEBUT Carmen, 2012
REPERTORY La Donna del Lago, Il Barbiere di Siviglia

 

 

Leonard,-Isabel-(Jared-Slater)Isabel Leonard (Rosina)

Hometown: New York, New York
Met debut Stéphano in Roméo et Juliette (2007)
Performance history Blanche in Dialogues des Carmélites, Rosina in The Barber of Seville, Miranda in The Tempest, Dorabella in Così fan tutte, Zerlina in Don Giovanni, and Cherubino in Le Nozze di Figaro

 

 

brownleelawrenceLawrence Brownlee (Count Almaviva)

TENOR (Youngstown, Ohio)
DEBUT Count Almaviva, Il Barbiere di Siviglia, 2007
REPERTORY Count Almaviva, Il Barbiere di Siviglia

 

 

maltmanchristopherChristopher Maltman (Figaro)

BARITONE (Cleethorpes, England)
DEBUT Harlequin, Ariadne auf Naxos, 2005
REPERTORY Figaro, Il Barbiere di Siviglia

 

 

muraromaurizioMaurizio Muraro (Dr. Bartolo)

BASS-BARITONE (Como, Italy)
DEBUT Dr. Bartolo, Le Nozze di Figaro, 2005
REPERTORY Dr. Bartolo, Le Nozze di Figaro

 

 

burchuladzepaataPaata Burchuladze (Don Basilio)

BASS (Tbilisi, Republic of Georgia)
DEBUT Ramfis, Aida, 1989
REPERTORY Don Basilio, Il Barbiere di Siviglia

 

 

Production Team

Production: Bartlett Sher
Set Designer: Michael Yeargan
Costume Designer: Catherine Zuber
Lighting Designer: Christopher Akerlind
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“The Murderess” premieres in Greece!

Giorgos Koumendakis

The murderess

Libretto by Yannis Svolos, based on the eponymous novel by Alexandros Papadiamantis
Conductor: Vassilis Christopoulos
Director: Alexandros Efklidis

PREMIERE 19 NOVEMBER 2014
19, 21, 23, 26 November 2014

Megaron, the Athens Concert Hall – Alexandra Trianti Hall
World premiere – Commissioned by the Greek National Opera
Perfomances begin at 20.00

murderessSets: Petros Touloudis
Costumes: Petros Touloudis – Ioanna Tsami
Lighting: Vinicio Chelli
Video production: Andreas Diktyopoulos
Chorus master: Agathangelos Georgakatos
Children’s Chorus Mistress: Mata Katsouli

CAST:

Frangoyannoù (The murderess): Irini Tsirakidou (19, 23/11), Julia Souglakou (21, 26/11), Maroussò Elena Kelessidi (19, 23/11), Marina Fideli (21, 26/11)

The soprano Marina Fideli

The soprano Marina Fideli

Ioassaf: Tassos Apostolou
Delcharò: Georgia Eliopoulos (19, 23/11), Zoe Kappou (21, 26/11)
Yannis Perivolàs: Kostis Rasidakis (19, 23/11), Costas Mavrogenis (21, 26/11)
Yannoù: Ines Zikou (19, 23/11), Eleni Davou (21, 26/11)
Xenoula’s mother: Evdokia Hadjioannou
First police officer: Nikos Stefanou (19, 21, 26/11), Dimitris Nalbantis (23/11)
Magistrate: Vangelis Maniatis (19, 21, 23/11), Nikos Karagkiaouris (26/11)
Second police officer/Assessor: Dimitris Nalbantis (19, 21, 26/11), Charalambos Velissarios (23/11)

Zenia Argenti

Zenia Argenti

Kriniò: Niki Chaziraki (19, 23/11) Zenia Argenti (21, 26/11)
Toula: Vassia Zacharopoulou (19, 23/11), Dimitra Kotidou (21, 26/11)
Myrsouda: Theodora Baka (19, 23/11), Miranda Makrynioti (21, 26/11)
Doctor: Dionyssis Tsantinis, Amersa: Ines Zikou (19, 23/11), Eleni Davou (21, 26/11)
Konstantìs: Vangelis Maniatis (19, 23/11), Nikolaos Karagkiaouris (21, 26/11)
Polyphonic ensemble:
Irini Derebei
Maria Melachrinou
Martha Mavroidi
Maria Kotti

The Greek National Orchestra

The Greek National Orchestra

With the GNO Orchestra, Chorus and the GNO Children’s Chorus, in the framework of its educational programme

The world premiere of George Koumendakis’s new opera, commissioned by the Greek National Opera, will be given on 19 November 2014 at Megaron the Athens Concert Hall (Alexandra Trianti Hall). Yannis Svolos’s libretto is based on The Murderess one of the greatest works of Modern Greek literature, by Alexandros Papadiamantis. This season’s major production will be directed by Alexandros Efklidis. The GNO Orchestra will be conducted by Vassilis Christopoulos.
The GNO, by commissioning a new opera to George Koumendakis, proves its support to Greek creativity. Koumendakis is one the most important Greek composers with a clear and distinct personal idiom combining in a productive manner the contemporary music language with elements of the Greek folk tradition. This aspect of Koumendakis’s music matches ideally with Papadiamantis’s Murderess, a masterwork of the Modern Greek literature, on which this new opera is based.

The composer Giorgos Koumendakis

The composer Giorgos Koumendakis

Koumendakis’s music does not attempt to revive an era, but to create an “inner revival” of the psyche of Frangoyannoù herself, the leading female character of the work. The composition follows every step of the Murderess, sometimes expressing her mental state, sometimes sinking into the gloominess of her dark soul. Occasionally, she gives the world a straight stare and at times she is lost in reverie. There are times we sense the boundless loneliness she experiences, whereas some other times sarcasm comes to release some of the pressure of the emotionally charged plot.
“I allowed the music to wander and express without constraints the inner psyche of Frangoyannoù, reaching to areas that reason fails to see. I tried to reach for the hidden corners of the psychopathological, psychoneurotic, dynamic, austere and undoubtedly complex personality incarnated through the compelling approach of the Grand Papadiamantis. In fact, much too often, the dividing line between the heroine and the author fades, becoming a single character inside me. While I was composing The Murderess, I tried to forget her physical appearance, her age, the features of her face and turn to and reach out for the mind, which, according to Papadiamantis, “is exalted”.”
The action of the opera follows the action of the novella itself, focusing though on the essentials. Hadoula or Frangoyannoù is the leading character; a wretched middle-aged woman who has spent her life serving others: her parents, her husband, her children, her grandchildren. Her exhaustion and the realisation of the unfavourable position of women in poor, agrarian societies such as hers, leads her to the conviction that her mission in life is to free the world from the burden of girls. She sets about strangling her newly-born granddaughter and she commits yet again the crime of murder by drowning other girls too. The authorities pursue her in the mountains, and Frangoyannoù decides to confess her sins. However, in her effort to reach to the hermitage of Aghios Sostis, she is lost at sea.
The Murderess is placed under the heading Literaturoper, for it is an opera directly based on a literary piece of work. Surely, this is not a novel attempt; on the contrary, it is encountered in the very heart of the first stages of the opera history in the early 17th century, and much more intensely during the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, whereby the libretto is written in distinct accordance to the original literary text. Theatre and literature works by Ancient Greek authors, as well as by Metastasio, Shakespeare, Hugo, Mérimée, Goethe, Scott, Buchner, D’Annunzio, Hofmannstahl, Maeterlinck, Dostoyevsky, Gogol and Kazantzakis have been the basis of successful operas by baroque, classical, romantic and modern composers. Librettist Yannis Svolos says: “When I proposed George Koumendakis to compose an opera based on The Murderess by Papadiamantis, I was motivated by the intriguing core of the novella, the confrontation with the emotions that pile up through time in this emblematic piece of work, and also by my curiosity to watch it and hear it, while it is set in a contemporary musical language.”

The Director Alexandros Efklidis

The Director Alexandros Efklidis

The Murderess will be presented on stage under the direction of Alexandros Efklidis. Petros Touloudis designed the visual and stage installation, as well as the costumes along with Ioanna Tsami, whereas Vinicio Chelli is the production’s lighting designer. Alexandros Efklidis states: “George Koumendakis’s opera focuses on the character traits of the Murderess; through music, it highlights an element hard to render via a conventional staging of the novella: the heroine’s soul. What is at stake in this approach is whether it will manage to render this very element, breathing life into the nightmarish world of Frangoyannoù on stage. Consequently, the opera is played out as a monodrama through the subjective and disordered glance of its protagonist. After all, George Koumendakis’ Murderess oscillates between major and minor scales: the four chorus ensembles and the grand orchestra are conceived for the purpose of rendering these subtle, inner nuances of the heroine’s soul which is the ultimate focal point of the action. The first staging of an opera is an immense – and rare – challenge for the creative team, as its members are required to stage the work without having heard it before and to work directly from the composer’s score.”
The stage installation by Petros Touloudis shows the landscape of a settlement by the sea. The Greek nature, the open horizon, as well as the unexpected turn of the pursuit (Act 2) are rendered with sensitivity and originality. So, instead of watching the Murderess taking to the mountains – as described by Papadiamantis in his novella –, we see that things work the other way round on stage: the Μurderess does not move; on the contrary, it is nature that revolves around her, surrounds her and chokes her, until she perishes.
Vassilis Christopoulos, the distinguished maestro and former Art Director of the Athens State Orchestra (KOA), is the conductor of the production. Apart from the solo singers, the composition requires a big symphonic orchestra (GNO Orchestra), three on-stage solo musicians (bayan, saxophone, percussions), as well as four choirs. In the background of the stage, the male chorus, chanting as an isokrate (ison holders or drone keepers in Byzantine music), focuses on the inflictions of human nature, whereas a large-scale female vocal ensemblefunctions as a mirror of the daily life. A much smaller second female ensemble of four women chanting funeral songs (mirologistres), performs choral parts based on the polyphonic tradition of Epirus. The GNO Children Choir (Chorus Mistress: Mata Katsouli) plays and sings the part of a young chorus, which feeds Frangoyannoù’s criminal nature. Agathangelos Georgakatos is the GNO Chorus Master.
Composer George Koumendakis says characteristically that the eponymous role is “of huge dimensions”, while it requires unprecedented stamina because Frangoyannoù is roughly two hours on stage, observing and manipulating everything. The leading role will be sung by Irini Tsirakidou (first cast) and Julia Souglakou (second cast).
Irini Tsirakidou made her debut with the opera Simon Boccanegra, as Amelia Grimaldi. She enjoys an international career of important performances in major opera houses and concert halls, such as La Scala of Milan, the Royal Opera House in London, the Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona, the Carnegie Hall in New York, as well as in other lyric theatres in Europe,  and North and South America (Bilbao, Rome, Trieste, Dallas, Tulsa, Minnesota, Strasburg, St Petersburg, Santiago, Amsterdam et. al.). She has won the Maria Callas Debut Artist of the Year Award for her performance in Rossini’s Ermione at the Dallas Opera.
Julia Souglakou studied singing in Athens and London on a “Maria Callas” scholarship. She has appeared in the Greek National Opera, Megaron the Athens Concert Hall, Megaron the Thessaloniki Concert Hall, the Athens and Epidaurus Festivals, as well as at the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino. She has interpreted the roles of Donna Anna and Donna Elvira (Don Giovanni), Countess Almaviva (Le nozze di Figaro), Nedda (I pagliacci), Freia (Das Rheingold), Lady Macbeth (Macbeth), Leonora (Il trovatore), Mother (Il prigioniero), Brünnhilde (Götterdämmerung), and the leading roles in Anna Bolena and La Gioconda. She has also given chamber music concerts and personal recitals.
The cast of the production gives the public an excellent opportunity to enjoy the performances of renowned Greek singers (Elena Kelessidi, Tassos Apostolou, Nikos Stefanou, Dimitris Nalbantis, etc.), along with the voices of younger artists (Vangelis Maniatis, Niki Haziraki, Dionyssis Tsantinis and others).

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La Boheme in Athens, Greece

boheme
Giacomo Puccini

La bohème

Conductor: Lukas Karytinos
Director: Lina Wertmüller

PREMIERE 6 DECEMBER 2014
6, 7, 10, 12, 13, 14, 28, 30, 31 December 2014

Olympia Theatre
Perfomances begin at 20.00 (on 31/12, at 18.30)

Revival Director: Katerina Petsatodi
Sets- costumes: Enrico Job
Lighting: tba
Chorus master: Agathangelos Georgakatos
Children’s Chorus mistress: Mata Katsouli

The tenor Luciano Ganci

The tenor Luciano Ganci

Rodolfo: Luciano Ganci (6, 12, 14, 28, 30/12)
Yannis Christopoulos (7, 10, 13, 31/12)
Mimì: Cellia Costea (6, 12, 14, 28, 30/12)
Anna Stylianaki (7, 10, 13, 31/12)
Μarcello: Dionyssis Sourbis (6, 7, 28, 31/12)
Κyros Patsalides (10, 12, 13, 14, 30/12)
Schaunard: Akis Laloussis (6, 12, 14, 28, 30/12)
Zafiris Koutelieris (7, 10, 13, 31/12)
Colline: Τassos Apostolou (6, 12, 14, 28, 30/12)
Petros Magoulas (7, 10, 13, 31/12)
Μusetta: Μaria Mitsopoulou (6, 12, 14, 31/12)
Vassiliki Karayanni (7, 13, 28/12)
Katia Paschou (10, 30/12)
Benoit: Pavlos Maropoulos (6, 12, 14, 28, 30/12)
Panagiotis Athanasopoulos (7, 10, 13, 31/12)
Αlcindoro: Christos Amvrazis (6, 12, 14, 28, 30/12)
Kostas Dotsikas (7, 10, 13, 31/12)
Parpignol: Thanassis Evangelou (6, 12, 14, 28, 30/12)
Stavros Giannoulis (7, 10, 13, 31/12)
Sergeant: Nikos Karagkiaouris (6, 12, 14, 28, 30/12)
Theodore Moraitis (7, 10, 13, 31/12)
Customs Official: Pavlos Sampsakis (6, 12, 14, 28, 30/12)
Nikos Syropoulos (7, 10, 13, 31/12)
The Greek National Orchestra

The Greek National Orchestra

With the GNO Orchestra, Chorus and members of the GNO Children’s Chorus, in the framework of its educational programme

The Greek National Opera re-emerges with one of its oldest productions:  a work loved by the audience all over the world, Puccini’s popular La Bohème, in the version of the celebrated Italian director, Lina Wertmüller Images evoking nostalgic postcards flooded with colour, and sets and costumes inspired by Toulouse-Lautrec’s Paris will revive at the Olympia Theatre stage. The plot is about the love of a poet, Rodolfo, for a seamstress, Mimi, against the backdrop of a freezing Paris in Christmas, from the moment they first meet until the death of the girl from tuberculosis.
  • greektheaterOLYMPIA THEATRE
    Akadimias 59-61, 10679 Athens
    Panepistimio METRO Station
    Box Office
    Monday
    9.00-16.00
    Tuesday to Sunday 9.00-21.00
    Tel.: +30 210 3662100
    Fax: +30 210 3662019
    Email: info@nationalopera.gr

 

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La Bohème at the San Francisco Opera

La Bohème

sanfranciscologoMUSIC BY Giacomo Puccini

Libretto by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa

NEW PRODUCTION

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Fri 12/5/14 7:30pm    Sun 12/7/14 2:00pm

When an aspiring poet falls in love with a fragile seamstress, their intense passion is only matched by their youthful idealism. Can their tender relationship survive the cruelties of life? John Caird, the director of two of the biggest stage hits of recent years, Les Misérables and Nicholas Nickleby, brings his unique touch to this new production of Puccini’s beloved opera. Resident Conductor Giuseppe Finzi leads two superb casts. One is headed by the “warm, luminous tone and urgently communicative phrasing” (TheClassicalReview.com) of Greek soprano Alexia Voulgaridou in her Company debut, the “intensely expressive” Michael Fabiano (The New York Times) and Nadine Sierra, whose commanding artistry inspires “awe and delight” (San Francisco Chronicle). The other features Leah Crocetto, “a major operatic star” (San Francisco Chronicle), “stylish and brilliant” young tenor Giorgio Berrugi (Examiner.com) and the “passionately lyrical” Ellie Dehn (The New York Times)
Sung in Italian with English supertitles
Approximate running time: 2 hours, 20 minutes including one intermissionPre-Opera Talks are free to ticketholders and take place in the Opera House in the Orchestra section, 55 minutes prior to curtain.Co-production with Houston Grand Opera and Canadian Opera Company

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CAST
Mimì Leah Crocetto
Rodolfo Giorgio Berrugi *
Musetta Ellie Dehn
Marcello Brian Mulligan
Colline Christian Van Horn
Schaunard Hadleigh Adams
Benoit Dale Travis
Alcindoro Dale Travis

*San Franciso Opera debut

Production Credits

Conductor Giuseppe Finzi
Director John Caird *
Production Designer David Farley
Lighting Designer Michael James Clark
Chorus Director Ian Robertson

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Synopsis

ACT I
Christmas Eve

As Marcello paints, Rodolfo, unable to write, gazes through the windows at the smoking chimneys of the Parisian rooftops. The bohemians are suffering from the cold. Marcello is about to sacrifice one of the sparse furnishings to the empty stove when Rodolfo has an inspiration: pages of his drama will warm them. Colline returns from a fruitless visit to the pawnbrokers. As the fire dies, Schaunard saves the day by arriving with food, firewood, and pockets full of money. The table is already laid before Schaunard can announce that for Christmas they will dine out. The friends are about to leave when Benoit, the landlord, comes for the rent. The bohemians trick him into talking about his amours; then, feigning moral indignation, they throw him out, unpaid. The friends leave, but Rodolfo stays behind to finish an article he is writing.

Presently, there is a knock on the door. A young woman enters. She asks if she may light her candle and Rodolfo invites her in. As soon as her candle is lighted, she departs only to return moments later in search of her key. Rodolfo secretly finds and pockets the lost key. As they continue to search, their hands touch. He tells her of his life as a penniless poet. She enchants Rodolfo with a description of her modest existence as a seamstress. As she ends her narrative, the voices of Rodolfo’s friends rise from the street, urging him to hurry. Rodolfo goes to the window and tells them to meet later at the Café Momus. He turns to Mimì and declares his love, which she timidly admits is returned.

Boheme_SFOB4_P Boheme_SFOB7_PACT II

A holiday crowds mills about the small square in the Latin Quarter dominated by the Café Momus. Enjoying the Christmas spirit, the bohemians spend their money: Schaunard buys a horn, Colline an overcoat, and Rodolfo purchases a bonnet for Mimì. They meet at the café and order dinner, after Rodolfo has presented Mimì to his friends.

Musetta and Alcindoro, an elderly admirer whom she orders around like a pet poodle, take the table adjoining the friends. Marcello studiously avoids looking at Musetta, with whom he has recently broken up. Musetta tries to attract his attention by staging a temper tantrum. Raising her voice so that all may hear, Musetta delivers an oration on her beauty and its devastating effects. She decides it is time to rid herself of Alcindoro and feigns a terrible pain in her foot. Musetta sends Alcindoro off for a new pair of shoes. The merry making is dampened by the arrival of the bill. The bohemians search their pockets hopelessly until Musetta takes the bill from the waiter and deposits it together with her own. She announces that Alcindoro will pay both bills on his return. Alcindoro returns with Musetta’s new shoes and is confronted with the bills.

Boheme_SFOB9_PACT III
February

At dawn, the city’s early risers begin their daily routines, while the revelers in a tavern continue the night’s festivities. Mimì asks directions of a sergeant who points out the tavern decorated with Marcello’s paintings. She asks the innkeeper to send Marcello out to her. Tearfully, she appeals to him for help. She refuses to go into the tavern because Rodolfo, who has left her, is inside. Marcello promises to talk to him. Rodolfo attempts to justify his cruelty to Mimì on the grounds of her coquettishness, but Marcello sees through the pretext. Rodolfo admits that the still loves Mimì, but says he cannot endure watching her health fail because of his inability to provide for her. Coughing and violent sobs betray Mimì’s presence. Rodolfo takes her into his arms, while Marcello charges into the tavern to investigate the cause of a burst of Musetta’s brazen laughter. Mimì says goodbye to Rodolfo and tells him they must part without bitterness. They quickly realize that they cannot go through with the separation. Their decision to stay together until spring is made against the background of violent quarreling between Musetta and Marcello.

ACT IV

Sadly reminiscing about their broken love affairs, Marcello and Rodolfo try to work. Both try unsuccessfully to appear pleased that their former companions are flourishing. Schaunard and Colline arrive with frugal provisions and a more cheerful outlook. They fall upon the food and stage a mock ball which is followed by a simulated duel. At the height of their clowning, Musetta appears. Mimì is waiting on the stairs; she is seriously ill. Rodolfo rushes to Mimì and brings her in. Musetta sends Marcello to pawn a pair of earrings and bring back a doctor. Colline bids a fond farewell to his overcoat which is destined for the same fate as Musetta’s jewels. One by one the friends find discreet reasons to leave. The lovers are alone. Feeble attempts at their former banter are succeeded by reminiscences of their love. Musetta returns with a muff to warm Mimì’s hands. Marcello announces that a doctor is on the way. Mimì falls asleep as Musetta murmurs a prayer. Rodolfo notices that a change has come over his friends, who already know what he only now realizes: Mimì is dead.

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Giuseppe Verdi’s Don Carlo at the New National Theatre in Tokyo

mainmenuTokyo

Music by Giuseppe VERDI
Opera in 4 acts
Sung in Italian with Japanese surtitles
Opera Palace

This is a masterwork from VERDI’s mature period. At the centre of this massive historic drama is the grief of a prince, whose sweetheart becomes his father’s bride. Confrontations in politics, religion and in the relationship between father and son, love and jealousy, friendship, as well as complicated intertwinement, between the characters are all expressed in the stately, dignified music. The staging by Marco Arturo MARELLI comprises a space surrounded by prison-like walls and a symbolic cross. It was first presented in 2006 and is here being re-presented 8 years later.

doncarloThe title role is played by Sergio ESCOBAR, a lyrical tenor whose star is ascending, and who is being besieged with offers from prestigious conductors and opera houses. Markus WERBA will sing Rodrigo, the core role in this opera. Pietro RIZZO, a familiar face from the successful NNTT productions of Il trovatore in 2011 and Rigoletto in 2013, will be conducting.

Staff

Conductor Pietro RIZZO 1

Production and Scenery Design Marco Arturo MARELLI 2

Costume Design Dagmar NIEFIND-MARELLI

Lighting Design YAGI Maki


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2

Cast

Filippo II Rafal SIWEK 3

Don Carlo Sergio ESCOBAR 4

Rodrigo Markus WERBA 5

Elisabetta di Valois Serena FARNOCCHIA 6

La Principessa d’Eboli Sonia GANASSI 7

Il Grande Inquisitore TSUMAYA Hidekazu 8

Un frate OTSUKA Hiroaki

Tebaldo YAMASHITA Makiko

Il Conte di Lerma/Un araldo reale MURAKAMI Toshiaki

Una voce dal cielo UNOKI Eri


3

4

5

6

7

8

Chorus New National Theatre Chorus

Orchestra Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra

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OPERA “PUNCH AND JUDY” BY HARRISON BIRTWISTLE WINNER OF TWO GREAT PRIZES IN BUDAPEST

Mr. Punch (derived from the Italian character Pulcinella) and his wife Judy are puppet characters, who are popular in England and occupy a status comparable to that of the Kasperltheater genre in Austria. Typically, a hand puppeteer will present several brief sequences that usually lead to conflicts of a somewhat rough and naive nature. These usually include violence, and it was this violence in Harrison Birtwhistle’s opera Punch and Judy that sparked off heated debate in the wake of its 1968 world premiere. To this day, the opera has retained its polarizing effect.

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Just a few minutes into the action, Mr. Punch brutally murders his own child and Judy –and as the plot progresses, he ends up killing almost everyone else he encounters. He allows only Pretty Polly -whom he practically worships -/to stay alive. But eventually, Punch is overcome by horrible nightmares and the music begins to change in character…

10703572_723407504404645_5375735756551272416_nPaul Griffiths once wrote that Birtwistle’s Mr. Punch is the diametric opposite of Petrushka in Stravinsky’s eponymous ballet. While Petrushka is a puppet, which behaves more and more like a human being, Mr. Punch is a human being, who treats those surrounding him like puppets –carelessly, brutally, and devoid of conscience.

Harrison Birtwistle and his librettist Stephen Pruslin created a stylized tragedy full of grotesque moments. The music is as capable of portraying a monstrous being as it is of portraying love. Their work opens up a positively other-worldly realm, with insane twists and the atmosphere of the marketplace.Written commissioned by Aldeburgh Festival, the work is presented as a tragic comedy, focuses on the adventures of Punch, a mad man suffering from severe personality disorders.

10701973_723407391071323_4197965706741301479_nThe Opera, in the production of Neue Oper Wien (Wien, Austria), in october 2014 won the great prize of the jury at the ARMEL FESTIVAL and the audience prize at ARTE LIVE TELEVISION, in Budapest.

A tragical comedy or comical tragedy in one act. Scenario and libretto written by Stephen PRUSLIN, Director: Leonard PRINSLOO, Conductor: Walter KOBÉRA.

10609528_723407354404660_6182004286197680360_nPunch – Richard RITTELMANN (Hungary) Judy; Fortune teller – Manuela LEONHARTSBERGER Choregos; Jack Ketch – Till VON ORLOWSKY Pretty Polly; Witch – Jennifer YOON Lawyer – Lorin WEY Doctor – Johannes SCHWENDINGER Dancer – Evamaria MAYER

WITH: amadeus ensemble-wien Set and costume – Monika BIEGLER Video design – Bernd PREIML Lighting design – Norbert CHMEL Language coach – Stephen CHAUNDRY Musical coach – Anna SUSHON Musical assistant – Jack RIDLEY Dramaturgy – Axel PETRI-PREIS Stage manager – Lucija DEDIC Assistant – Thomas WAHL Production manager – Su PITZEK Technical director – Norbert CHMEL Make-up artist – Henriette ZWÖLFER Assitant director – Barbara PREIS Orchestra management – Wolfgang TROJAN Stage construction – winter artservice

This Opera’s production will be performed at the theatre Opera of Avignon on june 2015.

rittermanRichard RITTELMANN (baritone, Hungary) – Punch Richard Rittelmann debuted at the age of 22 at the Opéra National de Lyon in Doktor Faust (Busoni). Since then he has been a winner at various international competitions. His discography covers a wide repertoire, from baroque to classical, romantic, 20th-century and contemporary repertoire, including some world premieres. His most memorable roles include Harlekin in Ariadne auf Naxos (Strauss), Le Bret in Cyrano de Bergerac (Alfano), Figaro in Il barbiere di Siviglia (Rossini), Danilo in The Merry Widow (Lehár), Tarquinius in The Rape of Lucretia (Britten), and Pelléas in Pelléas et Mélisande (Debussy), for which he gained worldwide reputation…

neueNEUE OPER WIEN The Neue Oper Wien was founded in 1990. The company specialises in modern music theatre, with the uncompromising policy of selecting only works from the 20th and 21st centuries. New discoveries as well as world and local premieres are central to the company’s work. Its objective is to revive modern opera repertoire. The Viennese audience enthusiastic about the works of Benjamin Britten was impressed by the Neue Oper Wien, when they staged Billy Budd for the first time in Austria in 1996. The first performance of Lachenmann’s Das Mädchen mit den Schwefelhölzern was also put on stage by the Neue Oper Wien in 2003 – this production was a sensational success and drew much international attention. Lacking its own venue or a constant company, the Neue Oper Wien could remain flexible; it regularly changes the venue of its performances. It selects stages for the work to be to be performed, with the constant modification of the space, the scenery is adapted closely to the space, aiming at the best acoustic effect possible. Under the leadership of Walter Kobéra, the Neue Oper Wien has demonstrated that innovation and popular success are not mutually exclusive, and that modern opera and innovative stagings need not distract lovers of music from this genre, but rather lead to intense discussions between audience and artists. The Neue Oper Wien considers the music theatre as a laboratory of “new music,” a forum to discuss timely social issues.

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Rossini Opera Festival 2015 preliminary program

logofestivalRossiniRecent decisions of the government, inviting the drawing-up of triennial artistic projects, have led the organizers to change the order of presentation of the operas that they are planning to stage in the next few years. The 2015 Festival will offer a particularly brilliant program, opening with Damiano Michieletto’s legendary production of La gazza ladra, which won the 2007 Abbiati Prize for stage direction. Another welcome return will be that of Graham Vick, who, on the heels of his recent international successes, will stage a new version of the farsa semiseria [serio-comic one-act opera] L’inganno felice, not performed in Pesaro for 21 years. The third opera on the bill is La gazzetta, directed by Marco Carniti, in a new production that will restore the complete score as originally performed, including the lost quintet that has recently been re-discovered. Among the various performances that, as always, frame the operas, we can announce two great sacred works: the rarely heard Messa di gloria and, on the last night of the Festival, both the Rossini and the Pergolesi settings of the Stabat Mater.

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Menotti’s “Amahl and the Night Visitors” in Iowa

Des Moines Metro Opera 

PRESENTS:

Menotti / Amahl and the Night Visitors

Menotti / Amahl and the Night Visitors
Presenting Premier Sponsor is American Equity

Opera in One Act
Libretto by Gian Carlo Menotti
First performance: NBC Television Opera Theatre in New York City, Broadcast on December 24, 1951
Performed in English

While giving shelter to the three Wise Men on their journey to find the newborn Child, a poor mother and her crippled son, Amahl, discover the healing power of love. Amahl and the Night Visitors has become a holiday classic for the whole family. Hoyt Sherman Place Theatre will provide the historic backdrop for this beautiful production. In many places around the world, Gian Carlo Menotti’s Amahl and the Night Visitors rings in the Holiday Season. Originally composed for television in 1951, the opera is a delightful and touching story of a poor woman and her child who play hosts to three mysterious strangers bearing gold, frankincense and myrrh.

This production is presented in memory of Wendy Waugaman, who was a remarkable president of the Des Moines Metro Opera Board of Directors and a passionate entrepreneur in bringing new audiences to this dynamic art form. American Equity is the Premier Presenting Sponsor and Wendy’s many friends and colleagues are working together with Des Moines Metro Opera to bring this production to the stage in her honor. Support for Amahl and the Night Visitors has generously been provided by the many colleagues and friends of Wendy Waugaman. Presenting Premier Sponsor is American Equity Investment Life Insurance and Presenting Sponsor is Sammons Financial Group. Additional support provided by Major Sponsors Lou Waugaman and Marla Lacey/Steve Znerold and Supporting Sponsors Athene USA, Brokers International Ltd, David E. Franasiak, Knapp Properties, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP, and Bankers Trust/Ruan Transportation.

7:30 EVENING December 6 | December 7
2:00 MATINEE December 7

CAST:
Amahl, a crippled boy Pierce Mansfield
His Mother Julie Makerov
King Kaspar Edwin Griffith
King Melchior Todd Thomas
King Balthazar Patrick Blackwell
The Page Craig Irvin

Chorus of Shepherds and Villagers

PRODUCTION:
Conductor David Neely
Stage Director Robert L. Larsen
Musical Preparation Kyle Naig
Set Designer Steven J. McLean
Costume Supervisor Virginia McKeever
Lighting Designer James R. Trenberth
Make-Up/Hair Designer Joanne Weaver
Costumes Malabar, LTD.
Choreographer Albert Adams

Cast, production and opera are subject to change without notice.

Des Moines Metro Opera
106 West Boston Avenue, Indianola, IA 50125

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TOSCA at the Royal Danish Theater in Copenhagen

Experience one of the world’s most cherished tragic operas, by Puccini. The story of Tosca, who sets out to save her beloved, is rife with jealousy, murder, lust and deception.
Add to this Puccini’s marvellous music and beautiful arias and the opera stage is set for a night of emotion.
Tosca is in love with artist Mario Cavaradossi but is pursued by the chief of police, Scarpia, who uses every means, even miscarriage of justice, fraud and murder in order to conquer this beautiful woman. Scarpia’s predator instinct and Tosca’s personality clash with disastrous consequences.
If you have not previously experienced Puccini’s masterful opera then you can expect a sensation – and if you are already familiar with Tosca you can look forward to a moving reunion. Peter Langdal’s successful staging has played to full houses in previous seasons. The title role is performed by Ylva Kihlberg.
Starring as Tosca’s beloved Mario Cavaradossi is the young Italian-Brazilian tenor Tiago Arancam who is taking the world’s opera stages by storm.
Tosca is performed in Italian with Danish supertitles.

Video on Tosca

Performance period: 12. Oct. – 02. Dec. 2014
Duration: 2 hours 30 minutes. 2 intervals.

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Synopsis

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Act 1

In the church of Sant’Andrea della Valle

toscadenmark2Cesare Angelotti, a political prisoner, has escaped from the Castel Sant’Angelo in Rome. He seeks refuge in the family chapel at the church of Sant’Andrea della Valle using a key hidden by his beautiful sister, Marchioness Attavanti. The Sacristan turns up but thinks that the noise at the door was made by the artist Mario Cavaradossi. The painter is currently working on a depiction of the Madonna inspired by the Marchioness, who has sat for the portrait in the church over the last couple of days. The artist also likens the portrait to a miniature of the woman he loves, the singer Floria Tosca.

toscadenmark1Once the Sacristan has left, Angelotti comes out of hiding and recognises Cavaradossi – a friend whom he can trust in his struggle for the republic. Cavaradossi gives him the lunch basket prepared by the Sacristan but urges Angelotti to hide in the far end of the chapel when he hears Tosca, who goaded by jealousy pounds on the church door and calls out to her lover, convinced as she is that he has locked the door to seek privacy with another woman. He lets her in.

toscadenmark3Cavaradossi attempts to reassure Tosca, but she notices that the eyes of the Madonna on the portrait resemble those of Marchioness Attavanti and she accuses him of cheating on her. He, however, assures her that she has nothing to fear. When Tosca has left the church Cavaradossi fetches Angelotti and together they find the women’s clothing that Angelotti has hidden as disguise for his escape. Cavaradossi advises Angelotti to seek refuge in his personal villa. No sooner has Angelotti left the church before canon fire is heard from the Castel Sant’Angelo, signalling that the jailbreak has been discovered. Cavaradossi decides to accompany Angelotti through Rome.

toscadenmark4The Sacristan returns with tidings of the defeat of Napoleon by the Austrians, thus securing the continued rule of monarchy in Rome. The church chorists rejoice in the prospect of grand celebrations to be held at Palazzo Farnese the same evening, including a cantata by none other than Floria Tosca. There is also promise of a bonus to be paid for the Te Deum, staged by the church as part of the festivities. Baron Scarpia of the secret police turns up, which immediately quells the jubilation, although revellers are quick to reassure him that their jubilant behaviour is a mere expression of their joy of victory.

toscadenmark5Scarpia and his henchmen look for leads in their search for Angelotti. They soon find Attavanti’s fan in the church, which Scarpia uses to convince Tosca – the object of his desire – of Cavaradossi’s faithlessness. He sends a spy to trail Tosca while she hastens to Cavaradossi fearing she will find him in the arms of his mistress.

Act 2

At Scarpia’s office in Palazzo Farnese

toscadenmark6Tosca and Baron Scarpia are to rendezvous the same evening, following her performance. Scarpia hopes his scheme will work – soon Tosca will be his! Scarpia is unsuccessful in his pursuit of Angelotti but his men arrest Cavaradossi instead on the charge of abetting a fugitive. He refuses to reveal Angelotti’s hideout and Scarpia orders him to be interrogated in the next room.

When Tosca arrives her dilemma soon dawns on her: she can only save her beloved Cavaradossi from torture if she reveals Angelotti’s hideout. At first she refuses to cooperate but is soon unnerved by Cavaradossi’s harrowing agony and reveals Angelotti’s whereabouts. Cavaradossi has, however, confessed to republican leanings and is to be executed at dawn the next day, unless Tosca yields herself to Scarpia.

toscadenmark7However, Angelotti commits suicide in his hiding place before the arrival of Scarpia’s men. So is Cavaradossi now to face the firing squad? Initially, Tosca agrees to Scarpia’s conditions for Cavaradossi’s release but she also demands free passage out of Rome for them both. Scarpia issues a pass and orders a mock execution of Cavaradossi using blanks. toscadenmark11But Tosca has a trump up her sleeve. She stabs Scarpia with a dagger and flees from the room with the pass in her hand.

Act 3

At the top of Castel Sant’Angelo

toscadenmark12At the break of dawn, Cavaradossi prepares himself for death. He bribes a guard to bring a farewell letter to Tosca and he recalls their happiest hours together.

toscadenmark16Tosca, in reply, shares the good news with him and they rejoice in the prospect of starting a new life together far from Rome. Cavaradossi faces the firing squad with a self-assured air as the soldiers raise their muskets. When the shots are fired he falls down to the ground. Tosca’s future happiness now depends on the unfolding events of the next few seconds….

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