Thursday 23 April 2026 | 19:30 |
Saturday 25 April 2026 | 19:30 |
Sunday 26 April 2026 | 15:00 |
Tuesday 28 April 2026 | 19:30 |
Wednesday 29 April 2026 | 20:00 |
Thursday 30 April 2026 | 19:30 |
Saturday 02 May 2026 | 19:30 |
Sunday 03 May 2026 | 15:00 |
Puccini, Giacomo (1858-1924) | Madama Butterfly | Libretto by Luigi Illica, Giuseppe Giacosa |
Grand Théâtre de Genève | |||
Antonino Fogliani | Conductor | ||
Barbora Horáková | Director | ||
Wolfgang Menardi | Set Designer | ||
Eva Maria van Acker | Costume Designer | ||
Sascha Zauner | Lighting Designer | ||
Orchestre de la Suisse Romande | |||
Diana Markosian | Video | ||
Chorus of the Grand Théâtre de Genève | |||
Mark Biggins | Choirmaster / chorus director | ||
Corinne Winters | Soprano | Cio-Cio-San (Madama Butterfly) | 2026 Apr 23, 26 mat, 28, 30, May 03 mat |
Heather Engebretson | Soprano | Cio-Cio-San (Madama Butterfly) | 2026 Apr 25, 29, May 02 |
Stephen Costello | Tenor | Pinkerton | |
Andrey Zhilikhovsky | Baritone | Sharpless | |
Kai Rüütel-Pajula | Mezzo-soprano | Suzuki | |
Denzil Delaere | Tenor | Goro | |
Mark Kurmanbayev | Bass | The Bonze | |
Charlotte Bozzi | Soprano | Kate Pinkerton | |
Vladimir Kazakov | Baritone | Prince Yamadori |
Giacomo Puccini chose the subject of his sixth opera after attending a performance of David Belasco’s single-act play, Madame Butterfly: A Tragedy of Japan, in London in June 1900. This was not the first time that the composer and his two librettists Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa had been inspired by the literature of their own time – there was also Victorien Sardou’s Tosca, for example – and this time again, in 1904, it would be a masterpiece that was born. The world’s most performed opera almost every season, its story is of a geisha who renounces everything for the love of an American marine who is passing through. If only it had been just a passing love affair!
And what if what we were seeing were just a tiny fraction of the whole? If each piece of the jigsaw only made sense with all the others? If what appeared whole and linear was just a fragment of the tapestry, and we weren’t able to distinguish the figure in the tapestry until 120 years had passed since its creation? And what would have happened if this story had been embodied by a son, such as the son accidentally born of the alliance between the geisha Cio Cio San and the marine F. Pinkerton, caught in a time other than that of his young and passionate parents, who themselves are caught up in their daily paradoxes of decisions that they don’t know are decisive? Loving each other but incapable of foreseeing the consequences of their actions and thus building the epigenetics of the generations to come? And why so if they were merely the extras and not the protagonists of their story – a colonial story, in this case.
This story of a Madame Butterfly all in filigree sees director Barbara Horáková take her first steps on the Romande stage, with accompanying video by photographer and filmmaker Diana Markosian – who illustrated the 2024-2025 season for the Grand Théâtre –. Theirs will be an intergenerational and intercontinental double narrative of the story of Cio Cio San, caught between traditions and her own expectations, as found in the most emotional pages the composer wrote. We’re reunited with Antonino Fogliani, out favourite specialist in the Italian repertoire, who conducts an exceptional cast, starting with Corinne Winters in the lead role – known on our stages for her unforgettable interpretations of Jenufa and Kat’a Kabanova, and now a world star –, alongside her compatriot Stephen Costello, with his powerful and elegant tenor, in the role of the maladroit American soldier, Benjamin Franklin Pinkerton.
Tickets from CHF 17.-