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Lear

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State Opera (Státní opera)Wilsonova 4, Praga, Central Bohemian Region, 110 00, República Checa
Fechas/horas en zona horaria de Prague
Intérpretes
Prague State Opera
Hermann BäumerDirección
Richard HeinDirección
Barbora HorákováDirección de escena
Rhea EcksteinDiseño de escena
Benjamin BurgunderDiseño de vestuario
Sascha ZaunerDiseño de iluminación
Prague National Theatre Orchestra
Prague National Theatre Chorus
Adria Bieito CamìVideoarte
Ondřej HučínDramaturgia
Prague National Theatre Opera Ballet
Adolf MelicharDirección de coro
Tómas TómassonBarítonoLear
Victoria KhoroshunovaSopranoGoneril
Petra Šimková-AlvarezSopranoRegan
Barbora PernáSopranoCordelia
Csaba KotlárBarítonoDuke of Albany
Jaroslav BřezinaTenorDuke of Cornwall
Ivo HrachovecBajoKing of France
Miloš HorákBajo-barítonoEarl of Gloucester
Hagen MatzeitContratenorEdgar
Florian SternTenorEdmund
Josef MoravecTenorEarl of Kent
Dietrich HenschelBarítonoFool

Yet, oddly enough, none of the operatic settings has become a repertoire staple, unlike, for instance, Charles Gounod’s Roméo et Juliette or Guiseppe Verdi’s Otello. It may be down to the fact that none of the composers who have tackled the subject have been of Verdi’s calibre (although Verdi always intended to adapt King Lear).

There is, however, a modern-day opera inspired by Shakespeare’s tragedy, a work dating from the final quarter of the 20th century, that met with immense acclaim and has been staged at the world’s most prestigious opera houses – Lear, created by the German composer Aribert Reimann (b. 1936). Among his ten stage works are pieces based on Franz Kafka’s novel The Castle and August Strindberg’s play The Ghost Sonata, yet the best-known and most popular is his fourth opera, after Shakespeare’s King Lear. Written in 1978 to commission for the Bayerische Staatsoper in Munich, the subject was suggested by the illustrious baritone Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, who would portray the title role. Reimann did not set King Lear in its entirety and verbatim, replacing that which he omitted with a forcible, now and then harsh or, contrariwise, very moving music, clearly pursuing the trail blazed by the German Expressionists.

The parable about foolish human pride, the delusion of self-importance, the danger of rejection, as well as acceptance of responsibility and decay of a seemingly stable world, cannot perhaps be more poignantly wrought than in Reimann’s opera.