Laurence Equilbey | Musikalische Leitung | |
David Bobée | Regie, Bühnenbild | |
Stéphane Babi Aubert | Licht | |
Nicolas Girard-Michelotti | Assistant director | |
Léa Jézéquel | Assistant set designer | |
Wojtek Doroszuk | Video | |
Insula orchestra | ||
accentus | ||
Stanislas de Barbeyrac | Tenor | Florestan |
Sinéad Campbell-Wallace | Sopran | Leonore |
Sebastian Holecek | Bariton | Don Pizarro |
Christian Immler | Bariton | Rocco |
Hélène Carpentier | Sopran | Marzelline |
Patrick Grahl | Tenor | Jaquino |
Beethoven’s only opera Fidelio is an explosion of ideas. Part family drama, part political treatise, it’s an ode to love and freedom, as moving today as it was when first performed over 200 years ago.
The plot sees our heroine, Leonore, attempt to rescue her husband, Florestan, from a harrowing political prison by going undercover as a guard, Fidelio. Playing our lovers are two ‘truly outstanding singers with major careers ahead of them’: Stanislas de Barbeyrac is set to be a fixture of opera house stages for years to come, praised for his ‘vocal weight, easy top notes and sweetness of tone’ (Guardian), while Sinead Campbell-Wallace is 'a remarkable Leonore' (Opera Magazine).
Alongside singing of the highest calibre, expect to witness a novel staging from David Bobée. Calling on influences from outside traditional opera, Bobée will happily incorporate video, light, dance, actors and even circus acrobats if it will enhance the story, creating an interesting contrast to the period instrument ethos of Laurence Equilbey’s Insula orchestra.