| Saturday 03 October 2026 | 18:00 |
| Friday 09 October 2026 | 19:00 |
| Sunday 11 October 2026 | 18:00 |
| Thursday 15 October 2026 | 19:00 |
| Sunday 18 October 2026 | 14:00 |
| Tuesday 20 October 2026 | 19:00 |
| Friday 23 October 2026 | 19:00 |
| Sunday 01 November 2026 | 18:00 |
| Donizetti, Gaetano (1797-1848) | Lucia di Lammermoor | Libretto by Salvadore Cammarano |
| Staatsoper Stuttgart | |||
| Andriy Yurkevych | Conductor | Oct 03, 09, 11, 15, 18 mat, 20 | |
| Vlad Iftinca | Conductor | Oct 23, Nov 01 | |
| Katie Mitchell | Director | ||
| Vicki Mortimer | Set Designer, Costume Designer | ||
| Jon Clark | Lighting Designer | ||
| Staatsorchester Stuttgart | |||
| Johanna Mangold | Dramaturgy | ||
| Staatsopernchor Stuttgart | |||
| Bernhard Moncado | Choirmaster / chorus director | ||
| Joseph W. Alford | Choreography | ||
| Chelsea Lehnea | Soprano | Lucia | |
| Kai Kluge | Tenor | Edgardo | |
| Johannes Kammler | Baritone | Enrico | Oct 03, 20, 23, Nov 01 |
| Björn Bürger | Baritone | Enrico | Oct 09, 11, 15, 18 mat |
| Charles Sy | Tenor | Arturo | |
| Adam Palka | Bass | Raimondo | |
| Laura Orueta | Mezzo-soprano | Alisa | |
| Liam Forrest | Tenor | Normanno |
In Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor, love, hope, and human relationships are caught in a destructive spiral under the pressure of patriarchal violence. At the center of the story is Lucia, whose brother Enrico must secure the family’s future and therefore forces her to marry the wealthy Lord Arturo. But Lucia loves Edgardo, her brother’s arch-enemy. When Enrico learns of this, he sets in motion a spiral that leads to violence and death. In Katie Mitchell’s production, created in 2016 for the Royal Opera House in London, Lucia’s perspective is consistently at the center. Mitchell portrays her not as a fragile figure succumbing to madness, but as a life-affirming, multifaceted personality who finds fulfillment for the first time in her love for Edgardo. The loss of that love, the forced marriage, and her murder of Arturo ultimately lead to her mental breakdown. The famous “mad scene” in the third act thus appears not as an operatic convention, but as a comprehensible consequence of concrete, traumatic experiences. Unlike Walter Scott’s original novel, which is set in the late 17th century, this production transposes the action to the 1830s and 1840s, the era of Dark Romanticism. Gothic-Romantic imagery creates an eerie, conspiratorial atmosphere, transforming the story into a psychological thriller. Through the interplay of Donizetti’s stirring music and bel canto singing – which lays bare the voice and emotions without restraint – Mitchell succeeds in making the work feel like a deeply moving, contemporary drama, far removed from decorative historicism.
In Italian with German and English surtitles
An introduction will take place in the first-tier foyer 45 minutes before the performance begins.
Introductory matinee on “Lucia di Lammermoor“ on September 27, 2026
Reviews of Lucia di Lammermoor directed by Katie Mitchell

