Bachtrack logo
Programación
Críticas
Artículos
Noticias
Video
Site
Jóvenes artistas
Viajes

Kátya Kabanová

Janáček Theatre (Janáčkovo divadlo)Rooseveltova 1- 7, Brno, Southern Moravia, 602 00, República Checa
Fechas/horas en zona horaria de Prague
viernes 13 noviembre 202620:00
Festival: Janáček Brno Festival
Intérpretes
Bayerische Staatsoper
Robert JindraDirección
Krzysztof WarlikowskiDirección de escena
Małgorzata SzczęśniakDiseño de escena
Felice RossDiseño de iluminación
Bayerischer Staatsopernchor
Bayerisches Staatsorchester
Kamil PolakVideoarte
Christian LongchampDramaturgia
Lukas LeipfingerDramaturgia
Claude BardouilCoreografía
Franz ObermairDirección de coro
Samuel StopfordTenorA Man
Natalie LewisMezzosopranoA Woman
Corinne WintersSopranoKátya (Katerina)
Pavel ČernochTenorBoris
Violeta UrmanaMezzosopranoKabanicha (Marfa Ignatěvna Kabanová)
John DaszakTenorTichon
Milan SiljanovBajoDikój
James LeyTenorKudrjaš
Ena PongracMezzosopranoVarvara
Thomas MoleBajoKuligin
Elene GvritishviliSopranoFekluša
Ekaterine BuachidzeMezzosopranoGlaša

In Leoš Janáček’s opera, Kát’a Kabanová, the eponymous heroine is ensnared at the heart of an ominous mesh of relations. Her domineering mother-in-law, Kabanicha, oppresses and controls her son Tichon, whose marriage to Kát’a suffers massively from heteronomy. Because Kát’a finds no fulfilment in this family, she flees and fulfils her unsatisfied erotic desires in an affair with Boris. As composer and librettist, Janáček bundles the plot of the literary template, Alexander N. Ostrovsky’s drama, The Storm. The libretto largely dispenses with the portrayal of the external social circumstances, from whence Kát’a’s essence and choices are decisively determined. Instead, Janáček traces the development of the title character in a psychological-sensitive musical language. Kát’a’s feelings of guilt increase continuously until they discharge into a public confession as an emotional storm. The turbulent and in places fanciful music opens the space for passages of lyrical grace and allows us to experience the essence of the characters. In Kát’a, director Krzysztof Warlikowski sees an outsider, who is denied a life in harmony with her desires, and at the end prefers death over lies. The destructive power of religion behind it all is not only found in a small Russian town on the banks of the Volga in the 1860s, where the libretto places the plot, but rather can also be seen everywhere all over the world.

Críticas de Kátya Kabanová dirigida por Krzysztof Warlikowski