ENFRDEES
The classical music website

Bastien und Bastienne / The Telephone

Hungarian State Opera: AuditoriumAndrássy út 22, Budapest, Central Hungary, 1061, Hungary
Dates/times in Budapest time zone
Sunday 18 January 202611:00
Saturday 24 January 202611:00
Saturday 07 February 202611:00
Saturday 11 April 202611:00
Performers
Hungarian State Opera
Andrea ValkaiDirector
Zsófia Mihály-GeresdiSet Designer, Costume DesignerBastien und Bastienne
Enikő PerczelDramaturgyBastien und Bastienne
One NikonSet DesignerThe Telephone
Krisztina LisztopádCostume DesignerThe Telephone
Klára PatakyChoreographyThe Telephone

Bastien und Bastienne

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was barely 12 years old when he composed his bucolic little opera, Bastien et Bastienne, which was performed at an “alternative location”, in the garden of a certain Doctor Mesmer whose studies of magnetism are referred to with such comical effect towards the end of Mozart's career as an opera composer, namely, in Così fan tutte. According to the sources, the young Wolfgang wrote Colas's wizard aria in gibberish himself (“Diggi, daggi, schurri, murri...”), and in the overture we can discover a real curiosity: the main theme is practically the same main theme in the first movement of Beethoven's Eroica composed much later…
Bastien is now presented to young audiences as a love story with a bit of magic, at a truly alternative location: on the front stage of Opera House auditorium, on the raised platform of the orchestra pit – under Károly Lotz's famous ceiling fresco.

The Telephone

When it premiered in 1947, Menotti’s one-act opera was a funny jab at the modern world. But today it is a tragicomic view of a symptom of our modern world: mobile communication has redefined our world and has given new meaning to the piece. Our production places the story in the business of a modern big city and tells the story of not just two people, but the generation that lives its life over the phone, in emails, and on social media platforms while slowly forgetting to look into other people’s eyes. Chamber opera with contemporary physical theatrical elements and (maybe) a happy end.
András Almási-Tóth’s production is adapted for young audiences by Andrea Valkai.

The performance is not recommended for children under 6 years of age.

© No credit