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Video a la carta: The Devil and Kate

Ver on-line en operavision.euOperaVisionGrabado en Slovak National Theatre (New Building), Bratislava, Eslovaquia
Gratuito
Dates/times in your browser's time zone
On demand until domingo 14 septiembre 2025 12:00
Intérpretes
Slovak National Theatre
Jaroslav KyzlinkDirección
Zuzana FischerDirección de escena
David JanošekDiseño de escena, Diseño de vestuario
Daniel TesařDiseño de iluminación
Orchestra of the Slovak National Theatre
Choir of the Slovak National Theatre
Jan TrantaDiseño de iluminación
Jozef ČervenkaDramaturgia
Zuzana KadlčíkováDirección de coro
Tereza KmotorkováCoreografía
Zuzana LisoňováCoreografía
Andrea VizváriSopranoChambermaid
Martin MorháčBarítonoDevil Porter
Jiří ZouharTenorMusician
Vladimir StreltsovBajoMarshal
Emil LeegerBailarínChemberlain
Katarína Hano FlórováMezzosopranoKáča (Kate)
Jitka Sapara FischerováMezzosopranoKate's mother
Peter RačkoTenorJirka
Michal OnuferBajoMarbuel
Jolana FogašováMezzosopranoThe Princess
Peter MikulásBajoLucifer
Vladimir StreltsovBajoThe Devil's Gate-Keeper

Nobody wants to dance with the quirky and a little cheeky Káča (Kate) at a party. Angry, she declares that she would dance with the Devil. So when he arrives as the dashing Marbuelo, she is swept off her feet down to hell. With the help of the clever Shepherd Jirka, will Káča make it back to earth? Might the Devil actually be relieved to see the back of his garrulous and feisty visitor?

Dvořák wrote The Devil and Kate just before Rusalka at the height of his powers as an orchestral composer and at a period of keen interest in fairytale and mythological themes. There is much purely instrumental music partly justified by the story with its emphasis on dancing in the Act I pub scene and in hell. There are also surprisingly long scene-preludes, including a striking descent to a Nibelheim-like hell at the beginning of Act II. It is one of the few Czech operas to lack love interest altogether: Káca declares at the end of Act III that, now she has been richly rewarded for scaring off the Devil, she will be able to afford any bridegroom she likes. The Devil and Kate is one of Dvořák’s most popular operas in his home lands and is based on a fairy tale by Božena Němcová. Most Czech devils are comically incompetent; Marbuel is especially so, and is outwitted by one of the most assertive of all the strong women depicted in Czech opera. This joyous story full of movement and humour is staged by young director Zuzana Fischer, beautifully blending traditional fairytale and contemporary worlds, in OperaVision’s first stream from Slovakia - in the National Theatre’s new venue in Bratislava.

Recorded on 17.01.2025

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