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The Rake's ProgressNueva producción

Estates Theatre (Stavovské divadlo)Železná, Staré Město, Praga, Central Bohemian Region, 110 00, República Checa
Fechas/horas en zona horaria de Prague
jueves 21 enero 202719:00
viernes 05 febrero 202719:00
martes 09 febrero 202719:00
Programa
Stravinsky, Igor (1882-1971)The Rake's ProgressLibreto de W. H. Auden and Chester Kallman
Intérpretes
Prague National Theatre Opera
Robert JindraDirección
Mélanie HuberDirección de escena
Lena HiebelDiseño de escena, Diseño de vestuario
Dino StruckenDiseño de iluminación
Prague National Theatre Orchestra
Prague National Theatre Chorus
Joanne WillmottCoreografía

Almost three centuries have passed since the English painter, satirist and “forefather of the cartoon” William Hogarth created a series of eight paintings (and later on engravings), tellingly titled A Rake’s Progress – the path, development, simply the life of a libertine. They capture the story of a young man who inherits an immense fortune and proceeds to squander it on luxurious living, gambling and prostitutes. It is not a trait exclusive to the 18th century that people indulging in such a lifestyle end up at a psychiatric hospital, called during Hogarth’s time (and until recently) an “asylum”.

When, in 1947, Igor Stravinsky attended an exhibition in Chicago of Hogarth’s engravings, they struck him as an ideal subject for an opera. The composer duly turned to the poet W. H. Auden, with whom, and later on with the poet Chester Kallmann, he would create the libretto. They did not adapt Hogarth’s pictures literally, yet elaborated them in a form abounding in parody and references to 18th-century opera. Stravinsky’s Neoclassical piece, premiered in 1951 in Venice, can be construed as a modern variation on the Don Juan and, to a certain degree, Faust myths. Similarly to Mozart’s Don Giovanni, Stravinsky’s Tom Rakewell raises the question of the limits and controllability of human freedom, which upon reaching a certain point transforms into its very opposite – dependence, slavery, perdition, insanity …

One would be hard pressed indeed to think of a venue more fitting for hosting The Rake’s Progress than Prague’s Estates Theatre – owing to its Classicist atmosphere providing a balance to Stravinsky’s Neoclassicism, as well as its being for ever synonymous with Mozart’s famous rake.

Prague National Theatre