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L’italiana in AlgeriNueva producción

Bâtiment des Forces MotricesPlace des Volontaires 2, Geneva, Suiza
Fechas/horas en zona horaria de Zurich
viernes 23 enero 202619:30
domingo 25 enero 202615:00
miércoles 28 enero 202619:30
viernes 30 enero 202619:30
domingo 01 febrero 202615:00
martes 03 febrero 202619:30
jueves 05 febrero 202619:30
Programa
Rossini, Gioachino (1792-1868)L'italiana en AlgeriLibreto de Angelo Anelli
Intérpretes
Grand Théâtre de Genève
Michele SpottiDirección
Julien ChavazDirección de escena
Amber VandenhoeckDiseño de escena
Hannah OellingerDiseño de vestuario
Eloi GianiniDiseño de iluminación
Orchestre de la Suisse Romande
Clara PonsDramaturgia
Chorus of the Grand Théâtre de Genève
Mark BigginsDirección de coro
Daniel Daniela Yrureta OjedaBailarín
Clara DelormeBailarín
Gaëlle ArquezMezzosopranoIsabella
Nahuel Di PierroBajo-barítonoMustafà
Maxim MironovTenorLindoro
Riccardo NovaroBarítonoTaddeo
Charlotte BozziSopranoElvira
Mi-Young KimSopranoZulma
Mark KurmanbayevBajoHaly

An Italian girl in Algiers, a Turk in Italy, an American in Paris, or worse, in Japan… But where are we going? Lost between worlds, though, Rossini was not. Straddled between musical and political periods, post-feudal Papal States, the Napoleonic wars and the emerging idea of nation-states, on the other hand – yes! The birth of the bourgeoisie and changing social mores quickly became the focus of attention for a young Rossini as talented as he was precocious, and who quickly swapped the heaviness of heroic drama and ancient tragedy for an opera bouffa as light as zabaglione.

The son of a father who was half-butcher, half-cornettist and above all member of the Resistance who constantly moved his family from town to town – from Pesari to Ferrara and then to Bologna – to evade prosecution by the papal state henchmen, and of an opera-singer mother, Gioacchino Rossini was a 21 year old already with ten operas under his belt when he took just 28 days to compose his political satire, The Italian Girl in Algiers, which culminates and fulminates in the ironic, far-fetched and absurd finale of the ‘Pappataci’ – an honorary title invented specially for the occasion, far removed from any heroism and in keeping with the tradition of Marivaux in his The Island of Slaves.

In a proto-Risorgimento-like spirit, the composer simultaneously overturned masters and slaves, codes and references, imitations and imitated, nationalisms and exoticisms. From from pastiche to self-pastiche, in a musical kingdom of allusion and quotation that he would cultivate until his death, he became the master of the game of inversions and of the carnivalesque tradition adored by Venice. So then, a work that is carnivalesque as defined by Bakhtine, i.e. comprised of a mixture of opposites (serious- comic, sublime-vulgar, oppressed-liberated), and comprised of “intercalary genres” – parodies and caricatured quotations from a “lost” tradition; which the author, while mastering and devaluing, would triumph over by reinventing the genre.

Comic works hold no fear for French-speaking Swiss director Julien Chavez, and especially not if they have a critical or subversive edge to them. He managed to make us wince in Peter Eötvös’s The Golden Dragon, which the Grand Théâtre presented in 2022 at the Comédie de Genève, as part of its La Plage season. Now he’s taking over the Bâtiment des Forces Motrices to change the exoticism-tainted Marivaudages into an absurdist imaginary world at the genre crossroads. We’re counting on his artistry to liberate the dichotomous myth from the eschatology of revolution, aided by the Rossinian irony revealed by young conductor and bel canto specialist Michele Spotti, the seductive beauty and finesse of French mezzo-soprano Gaëlle Arquez as Isabella, opposite the agile bass and charismatic presence of Nahuel di Pierro as Moustafa, and the clear, light bel canto tenor of Maxim Mironov in the role of the lover Lindoro.

Tickets from CHF 17.-

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