Freitag 05 Juni 2026 | 19:00 |
Samstag 13 Juni 2026 | 18:00 |
Freitag 19 Juni 2026 | 19:00 |
Samstag 27 Juni 2026 | 18:00 |
Janáček, Leoš (1854-1928) | Jenůfa |
Prague National Theatre Opera | |||
Robert Jindra | Musikalische Leitung | ||
Calixto Bieito | Regie | ||
Anna-Sofia Kirsch | Bühnenbild | ||
Paula Keiller | Kostüme | ||
Martin Bronec | Licht | ||
Prague National Theatre Orchestra | |||
Prague National Theatre Chorus | |||
Pavel Vaněk | Chorleitung | ||
Alžběta Poláčková | Sopran | Jenůfa | |
Dana Burešová | Sopran | Kostelnička | |
Rosie Aldridge | Mezzosopran | Kostelnička | |
Martin Šrejma | Tenor | Štewa Buryja | |
Aleš Briscein | Tenor | Laca Klemeň | |
Peter Berger | Tenor | Laca Klemeň | |
Eva Urbanová | Sopran | Großmutter Buryjowka | |
Magdaléna Hebousse | Sopran | Barena | |
Michaela Zajmi | Mezzosopran | Magd | |
Pavel Švingr | Bass | Bürgermeister | |
Maria Kobielska | Sopran | Frau des Bürgermeisters | |
Marie Šimůnková | Sopran | Jano | |
Ekaterina Krovateva | Sopran | Karolka | |
Jiří Hájek | Bariton | Stárek, Mill foreman | |
Jiří Sulženko | Bass | Stárek, Mill foreman | |
Romana Kajzlerová | Sopran | Tetka (Aunt) | |
Magdalena Vaňková | Mezzosopran | Tetka (Aunt) | 2026 Jun 05, 13, 19, 27 |
Leoš Janáček was enthralled by the Czech writer Gabriela Preissová’s realistic drama Her Stepdaughter, which had been staged in 1890 at the National Theatre without great success. Janáček himself adapted the play into a libretto, while retaining the original literary form, thus being one of the pioneers of opera sung in prose, not in verse, as had been the convention.
With an acute sense for earthy drama and with enormous empathy, he depicted human relationships amid the harsh universe of a self-contained village community, where everyone knows each other’s business. This milieu affects the life of the young Jenůfa and, particularly, governs the behaviour of her stepmother Kostelnička, who strives to maintain her reputation as a virtuous woman and the villagers’ respect. Determined to preserve her standing, she even goes so far as to secretly murder Jenůfa’s illegitimate child.
Jenůfa is an overwhelming drama about distrust, jealousy, various forms of love and the ability to forgive the unforgivable. Janáček completed the opera in early 1903.
Owing to the dispute between the composer and its then music director, Karel Kovařovic, the National Theatre in Prague rejected it. Consequently, Jenůfa was undertaken by the National Theatre in Brno, which gave its world premiere on 21 January 1904 at the Divadlo na Veveří. Prague’s National Theatre first performed Janáček’s opera, in a revised version, 12 years later. It was subsequently staged in Vienna (1918) and other cities. Today, Jenůfa is a repertoire staple at many opera houses worldwide.
Audiences are advised that the show contains violent scenes and is not suitable for children.
Suitable for audiences aged 15 and over.