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Jenůfa

Gran Teatre del Liceu: SalaLa Rambla, 51-59, Barcelona, Cataluña, 08002, España
Fechas/horas en zona horaria de Madrid
sábado 08 mayo 202719:00
martes 11 mayo 202719:30
viernes 14 mayo 202719:30
domingo 16 mayo 202717:00
jueves 20 mayo 202719:30
sábado 22 mayo 202719:00
Intérpretes
Gran Teatre del Liceu
Jonathan NottDirección
Àlex OlléDirección de escena
Alfons FloresDiseño de escena
Lluc CastellsDiseño de vestuario
Urs SchönebaumDiseño de iluminación
Orquesta Sinfónica del Gran Teatre del Liceu
Coro del Gran Teatre del Liceu
Mar FloresDiseño de escena
Pablo AssanteDirección de coro
Raquel LucenaSopranoVoice 1
Helena ZaborowskaSopranoVoice 1
Dimitar DarlevBajoVoice 2
Alessandro VandinBajoVoice 2
Asmik GrigorianSopranoJenůfa
Nina StemmeSopranoKostelnička
James LeyTenorŠteva Buryja
Pavel ČernochTenorLaca Klemeň
Marta InfanteMezzosopranoGrandmother Buryjovka
Alexandra ZabalaSopranoBarena
Mariel FontesSopranoBarena
Olga SzabóMezzosopranoPastuchyňa
Mariel AguilarMezzosopranoPastuchyňa
Christopher RobertsonBarítonoMayor
Laura VilaMezzosopranoMayor's wife
Ruth GonzálezSopranoJano
Rosa María AbellaSopranoKarolka
Guillem BatlloriBarítonoStárek, Mill foreman2027 may 08, 14, 20
Nojus ŽalysBarítonoStárek, Mill foreman2027 may 11, 16, 22
Elisabeth GillmingContraltoTetka (Aunt)
Cristina TenaMezzosopranoTetka (Aunt)

Jenůfa, by Leoš Janáček, floods the Liceu with overwhelming emotional power in Àlex Ollé’s new and exceptional production, with the ever-revealing conducting of Jonathan Nott and a luxury cast led by Asmik Grigorian and Nina Stemme.

Inspired by the harshness of rural life and the stern morality of a closed community, Jenůfa becomes a modern passion in which the sacred and the sacrilegious intertwine in an unsettling dance of devastating consequences.

At the heart of the drama beat two female figures in constant tension: Jenůfa, wounded by love and shame, and the Kostelnička, her stepmother, both moral beacon and author of a crime that changes everything. Jenůfa embodies profaned innocence that, despite the pain, remains sacred; The Kostelnička, on the other hand, represents the paroxysm of a law without compassion: the strict voice of community and religion.

His act —the murder of Jenůfa’s illegitimate child— is the sacrilegious gesture par excellence: not only because it is a crime, but because it is carried out in the name of a distorted love, an imposed honour, a perverted sense of the sacred. She kills to save, lies to protect, drowns one life to “redeem” another. Thus, the opera becomes a brutally contemporary parable: how far can moral fanaticism go? Can a forced sacrifice justify the destruction of innocence?

Janáček, with music that is direct, lyrical and spiritual to the limit, writes this drama with an intensity that pierces all defences. The vocal writing gives a tragic truth to the characters, while the orchestra delves into their deepest thoughts and anguish.

And yet, Jenůfa is also a work about forgiveness. When the protagonist forgives the Kostelnička, the opera reveals itself as a great spiritual tragedy in which compassion overcomes dogma and grace blossoms where only despair seemed possible.

Jenůfa
Heartbreak in real time: Corinne Winters on Jenůfa
How to sing infanticide: Karita Mattila on Jenůfa