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Der RosenkavalierNueva producción

Staatsoper StuttgartUpper Schlossgarten 6, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, 70173, Alemania
Fechas/horas en zona horaria de Berlin
jueves 06 mayo 202716:00
lunes 17 mayo 202717:00
domingo 23 mayo 202717:00
jueves 27 mayo 202717:00
domingo 30 mayo 202717:00
domingo 06 junio 202717:00
Intérpretes
Staatsoper Stuttgart
Nicholas CarterDirección2027 may 06, 17, 23, 27, 30
Alexander JoelDirección2027 jun 06
Axel RanischDirección de escena
Saskia WunschDiseño de escena
Bettina WernerDiseño de vestuario
Valentin DäumlerDiseño de iluminación
Staatsorchester Stuttgart
Philipp Contag-LadaVideoarte
Ingo GerlachDramaturgia
Staatsopernchor Stuttgart
Jeremy BinesDirección de coro
Kinderchor der Staatsoper Stuttgart
Bernhard MoncadoDirección de coro
Simone SchneiderSopranoFeldmarschallin
David SteffensBajoBaron Ochs
Ida RänzlövMezzosopranoOctavian
Paweł KonikBarítonoHerr von Faninal
Claudia MuschioMezzosopranoSophie
Catriona SmithSopranoMarianne
Torsten HofmannTenorValzacchi
Maria Theresa UllrichMezzosopranoAnnina
Franz HawlataBajoPolice inspector
Liam ForrestTenorFeldmarschallin's Major-Domo, Faninal's Major-Domo, An innkeeper
Jaewoung LeeBajoNotary
Charles SyTenorItalian Singer

After Hugo von Hofmannsthal and Richard Strauss had brought Elektra, their first collaboration, to the stage—a work that was powerful in many respects – they followed it up in 1911 with Der Rosenkavalier. It no longer sounds archaically harsh, but rather sways with waltz-like softness; yet it remains a powerful work when the fabulously wealthy Herr von Faninal “sells” – no, “bargains away”; perhaps most accurately: “delivers” – his only daughter Sophie as a bride to the dissolute country nobleman Baron Ochs of Lerchenau, a coarse rake and practicing Don Juan. Faninal knows full well that money can buy anything. But if one truly wants to belong in the late heyday of Theresian Vienna (as well as that of the fin de siècle – and presumably the present day too), one needs a lineage that, if not flawless, is at least as long as possible. Origin is the future. Whatever pedigree old Ochs von Lerchenau carries with him, young Count Octavian Rofrano has at least that much.

On top of that, he’s gorgeous and a real gentleman. So refined, so perfect, and above all so completely different from everything around her that when he presents her with a silver rose, Sophie feels as if she could die right then and there. “Where have I ever been before and felt so blissful?” she asks herself, knowing: “I must return there!” And since returning is always such a tricky thing, especially when it comes to the past, she senses: “Even if it means my death.” It will never again be as beautiful as it could have been. In their second collaboration, Axel Ranisch and Nicholas Carter explore the finely chiseled aestheticism of the Rosenkavalier score and stage what is arguably the most melancholic comedy of all time as a chilling fairy tale.

In German with German and English surtitles

There will be a German introduction 45 minutes before the performance at the Upper Foyer (I. Rang).

Introductory matinee on “Der Rosenkavalier“ on April 18, 2027

© Rebecca Brodskis
© Rebecca Brodskis