| Saturday 27 June 2026 | 19:00 |
| Monday 29 June 2026 | 19:00 |
| Dean, Brett (b. 1961) | Of One Blood | Libretto by Heather Betts |
| Bavarian State Opera | ||
| Vladimir Jurowski | Conductor | |
| Claus Guth | Director | |
| Étienne Pluss | Set Designer | |
| Ursula Kudrna | Costume Designer | |
| Michael Bauer | Lighting Designer | |
| Bayerisches Staatsorchester | ||
| Lukas Leipfinger | Dramaturgy | |
| Yvonne Gebauer | Dramaturgy | |
| Sommer Ulrickson | Choreography | |
| Mahan Esfahani | Harpsichord | |
| Johanni van Oostrum | Soprano | Queen Elizabeth |
| Vera-Lotte Boecker | Soprano | Mary Stuart |
| Rose Naggar-Tremblay | Contralto | Jane Kennedy, Female Courtier V |
| Michael Butler | Tenor | Lord Darnley, Male Courtier I |
| Andrew Hamilton | Baritone | David Rizzio, Male Courtier III |
| Seonwoo Lee | Soprano | Female Courtier I |
| Mirjam Mesak | Soprano | Female Courtier II |
| Lotte Betts-Dean | Mezzo-soprano | Female Courtier III |
| Natalie Lewis | Mezzo-soprano | Female Courtier IV |
| Joel Williams | Tenor | Male Courtier II |
| Armand Rabot | Bass-baritone | Male Courtier IV |
| Martin Snell | Bass | Male Courtier V, Excecutioner |
The two closely related powerful women, whose graves now lie right beside each other in London’s Westminster Abbey, were “Of One Blood”, so of the same blood. Both were of course as conceivably far apart as possible during their lives. Elizabeth I ruled for almost half a century as Queen of England and Ireland, while Mary Stuart reigned over Scotland for a quarter of a century. A bitter power struggle between the Protestant hegemony and the Catholic opposition and ultimately the pressure of parliament forced the English Queen to have Mary Stuart executed.
It is all related not only by countless history books and Friedrich Schiller’s play – it is also told by Brett Dean’s new opera, which will celebrate its world premiere at the Bayerische Staatsoper. Heather Betts found what she needed for the libretto in letters of the two queens and other 16th century sources. In her composition she condenses the spiralling claims to power, intrigues, violence and aristocratic influence, peaking over several decades, into a captivating dramaturgy of situations as the welcome structure for Brett Dean’s music. This offers sound surfaces of an immensely dynamic bandwidth, in which extremes are exhausted, whereby unconventional playing styles are also applied. Director Claus Guth will focus on the ambivalent relationship of the two women with one another and thus examine how the more than four-hundred-year-old conflict is continued to this day and is told anew again and again. Iconic settings are brought to us here in an interplay from an historical, analytically-distanced viewpoint and emotional emphasis.
Tickets: € 193 / 168 / 142 / 117 / 90 / 64 / 16 / 14
