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Hungarian State Opera: AuditoriumAndrássy út 22, Budapest, Central Hungary, 1061, Ungarn
Datum/Zeit in Budapest Zeitzone
Dienstag 24 Februar 202618:30
Programm
Puccini, Giacomo (1858-1924)ToscaLibretto von Luigi Illica, Giuseppe Giacosa
Darsteller
Hungarian State Opera
Gergely KesselyákMusikalische Leitung
Szilveszter ÓkovácsRegie
Krisztina LisztopádBühnenbild, Kostüme
Tamás PillingerLicht
Hungarian State Opera Orchestra
Hungarian State Opera Chorus
Zsombor CzeglédiAnimation
Hungarian State Opera Children's Chorus
Ailyn PérezSopranFloria ToscaFeb 07, 12, 14
Zsuzsanna ÁdámSopranFloria Tosca
Natália TuznikSopranFloria Tosca
Boldizsár LászlóTenorMario Cavaradossi
Szabolcs BricknerTenorMario Cavaradossi
Károly SzemerédyBaritonBaron Scarpia
Bence PatakiBassCesare Angelotti
András KissBaritonMesner
Attila ErdősBassSpoletta
Boldizsár ZajkásBassSciarrone, Gefängiswärter

The point of Puccini's Tosca is not that it is set in Rome or in the summer of 1800. The dilemmas, emotions, and shocking plot twists make the piece interesting. Equally important to the story is the frame of a totalitarian regime where the chief of police can do as he pleases: he can capture without warrant, unlawfully torture, imprison without trial, and execute without verdict whomever he wants. The opera showcases the bravery, faithfulness, and inevitable tragedy of the singer Tosca and the painter Mario, for which a setting of Budapest in the 50's, when the Opera House itself became a spot of events of dictatorship and cult of personality, is a perfect analogy. This new production of Tosca does not have any obvious symbols or historic figures, but the suffocating air of this dark era is palpable: innocent and harmless artists had to die just like they had in the world of the fictional Baron Scarpia.