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LibušeKids event

National Theatre (Národní divadlo)Ostrovní 1, Praha 1, Prague, Central Bohemian Region, 11000, Czech Republic
Dates/times in Prague time zone
Tuesday 28 October 202517:00
Performers
Prague National Theatre Opera
Robert JindraConductor
Jan BurianDirector
Petr ZuskaSet Designer
Kateřina ŠtefkováCostume Designer
Daniel DvořákLighting Designer, Set Designer
Prague National Theatre Orchestra
Prague National Theatre Chorus
Ondřej HučínDramaturgy
Prague National Theatre Opera Ballet
Prague Philharmonic Children's Choir
Charles University Choir
Pavel VaněkChoirmaster / chorus director
Eva EsterkováSopranoFirst harvestman
Veronika KaiserováSopranoFirst harvestman
Lucie HájkováSopranoSecond harvestman
Yvona ŠkvárováMezzo-sopranoThird harvestman
Petr DvořákTenorFourth harvestman
Dana BurešováSopranoQueen Libuše
Mária PorubcinováSopranoQueen Libuše
František ZahradníčekBassChrudoš
Martin BártaBaritoneChrudoš
Aleš BrisceinTenorSťáhlav
Kateřina JalovcováMezzo-sopranoRadmilla
Jana SýkorováMezzo-sopranoRadmilla
Michaela ZajmiMezzo-sopranoRadmilla
Petra Šimková-AlvarezSopranoKrasava
Tamara MorozováSopranoKrasava
Pavel ŠvingrBassLutobor
Adam PlachetkaBass-baritonePřemysl
Jiří BrücklerBaritonePřemysl
Svatopluk SemBaritonePřemysl
Aleš JenisBaritoneRadovan

The speculations about whether Libuše is Bedřich Smetana’s most mature work within the context of his opera oeuvre, or even within the context of Czech opera in general, whether and how it can stand its ground as against the airiness of The Bartered Bride, the lyricism and absorptive power of Dvořák’s Rusalka, or the emotion and drama of Leoš Janáček’s operas, do not result in definitive conclusions – it will always depend on the angle from which Libuše and any other renowned Czech opera is viewed.

The visual angle that appertains to Libuše most naturally is determined by the very intention pursued by the composer and the consequent tradition. Bedřich Smetana earmarked Libuše for being performed on the festive occasions relating to the life of Czech society, which after 1860 had begun markedly and palpably emancipating itself in terms of culture, politics and economics. Such an occasion was a seminal event in the history of Czech society – the opening of the National Theatre, first temporarily in 1881, and definitively two years later. An event that at the symbolic level widely transcended the narrow universe of Czech theatre-making and became one of the inherent harbingers of the attainment of independence in 1918. Accordingly, the centenary of the foundation of the Czechoslovak Republic was a momentous anniversary for the National Theatre itself, thus affording it the opportunity to create a new production of Libuše as a natural contribution to the celebrations.

There are several genre attributions by means of which we try to characterise Libuše, with one of them being a “scenic ritual of conciliation and purgation”. At variance with the expectations placed on an opera dramatist, Smetana does not sharpen the conflicts and antimonies in Libuše, deliberately seeking instead the path to their timely pacific settlement. Whether it concerns the main plot-forming dispute between two brothers about the inheritance after their late father, the antagonisms between a man and a woman, rigorous justice and friendly amiability, between those of “plebeian” and “noble” decent, between the motifs of light and darkness, all the conflicts in Smetana’s opera are redeemed in the central character of Princess Libuše, who is not just a mythical sovereign foretelling glory for the Czech nation but, first and foremost, a cathartic fabulous symbol of womanhood and motherhood, clemency and peaceful life.

Reviews of Libuše directed by Jan Burian

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