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SemeleNeuinszenierung

Diese Veranstaltung fand in der Vergangenheit statt
Komische Oper BerlinBehrenstraße 55-57, Berlin, Deutschland
Datum/Zeit in Berlin Zeitzone
Darsteller
Komische Oper Berlin
Konrad JunghänelMusikalische Leitung
Barrie KoskyRegie
Natacha Le Guen de KerneizonBühnenbild
Carla TetiKostüme
Chorsolisten der Komischen Oper Berlin
David CaveliusChorleitung
Nicole ChevalierSopranSemele
Katarina BradićMezzosopranIno
Evan HughesBassbaritonSomnus
Eric JurenasCountertenorAthamas
Nora FriedrichsSopranIris
Ezgi KutluMezzosopranJuno
Allan ClaytonTenorJupiter

Jupiter, god of gods and master of disguise when it comes to conquering desirable women, kidnaps and seduces the king’s daughter Semele. Juno, Jupiter’s deeply hurt wife, does everything in her power to put an end to the unbridled affair. She even asks the idle god Somnus for help. She too puts her faith in the power of disguise: she appears to her rival as Semele’s sister Ino, and persuades her to make Jupiter reveal himself to her in his true, godly form. Semele’s persistence is greater than Jupiter’s masculine fortitude. Yet her fate is therefore sealed: she dies gruesomely in the burning rays of godly lighting. However, out of Semele’s ashes arises an unborn child: Bacchus, god of intoxication, excess and ecstasy.
Despite the splendid choirs typical of oratorios and the expressive arias which did not have to adhere to the rigid formula of opera seria, Handel’s contemporaries turned their noses up at the saucily erotic and more than a little humorous subject matter, which they deemed to be wholly inappropriate for an oratorio. Yet that all quickly changed. Today, Semele is one of the most popular works penned by Georg Friedrich Handel. Baroque specialist Konrad Junghänel, and director and choreographer Laura Scozzi – who will be giving her Berlin stage début with this dramatic oratorium – discover the female will to power in the Ovidian myth.

Rezensionen von Semele, HWV 58 inszeniert von Barrie Kosky

Komische Oper Berlin
Bachtrack top ten: Handel operas