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Pelléas & Mélisande

Grand Théâtre de GenèveBoulevard du Théâtre 11, Geneva, 1204, Suiza
Fechas/horas en zona horaria de Zurich
domingo 26 octubre 202518:00
martes 28 octubre 202519:00
jueves 30 octubre 202519:00
domingo 02 noviembre 202515:00
martes 04 noviembre 202519:00
Intérpretes
Grand Théâtre de Genève
Juraj ValčuhaDirección
Damien JaletDirección de escena, Coreografía
Marina AbramovićDiseño de escena
Iris van HerpenDiseño de vestuario
Urs SchönebaumDiseño de iluminación
Sidi Larbi CherkaouiDirección de escena, Coreografía
Marco BrambillaVideoarte
Koen BollenDramaturgia
Chorus of the Grand Théâtre de Genève
Mark BigginsDirección de coro
Ballet du Grand Théâtre de Genève
Eastman Dance Company
Björn BürgerBarítonoPelléas
Mari EriksmoenSopranoMélisande
Leigh MelroseBarítonoGolaud
Nicolas TestéBajoArkel
Sophie KochMezzosopranoGeneviève
Charlotte BozziSopranoYniold
Mark KurmanbayevBajoShepherd, A Doctor

Lost in a forest, Golaud meets a mysterious young girl crying by a fountain. She has fled from those who were harming her and her name is Mélisande. Golaud persuades her to marry him and come with him to Germany, where his father King Arkel welcomes them into his dark castle. Misery and famine reign in Germany, but in the castle, essential things are kept silent. Its inhabitants are prey to trauma and repressed desires. It is only with Pelléas, Golaud’s half-brother, that Mélisande finds the shared awareness that the essential is not always the visible. A fatal triangle thus develops between Mélisande and the two brothers.

Maurice Maeterlinck’s play Pelléas and Mélisande is one of the key works of the Symbolist movement, in which so many other Belgian artists such as Émile Verhaeren, Georges Rodenbach and James Ensor distinguished themselves.

Claude Debussy was one of the many musicians to succumb to its timeless mystery, and asked Maeterlinck to adapt the play into a libretto for the only true opera that he would write: “I wanted the action never to stop, but for it to be continuous and uninterrupted. I never allowed my music to hasten or delay the movement of my characters’ feelings and passions due to technical demands.” Thanks to the anti-rhetoric character of Pelléas, who carefully avoids all emphatic gesture, it has become the flagship of anti-Wagnerians, even though Debussy’s opera constitutes an audible modernist response to Tristan und Isolde and Parsifal.

Streamed on Grand Théâtre Digital during the Covid epidemic, in January 2021, this staging which unites Ballet du GTG director Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui and the Ballet’s associate artist Damien Jalet with legendary visual artist and performer Marina Abramavoć, is finally arriving in front of the place de Neuve audience. In it, the creators draw their material from the continuous circle of life and its inherent link to the cosmos, following Debussy in refusing all illustration, but throwing rays of cosmic light here and there on the characters’ invisible energies and hidden emotions. Eight dancers from the Ballet du GTG accompany and express the inner feelings of the soloists, while the grande dame of avant- garde haute couture Iris van Herpen dresses their invisible meshes. Generating the mysterious frisson which makes this fragile drama so compelling is acclaimed Slovak conductor Juraj Valčuha, leading the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande for the very first time. As with the streamed 2021 production, Marie Eriksmoen with be a fragile, tender Mélisande opposite Leigh Melrose’s powerful Golaud. Björn Bürger, an outstanding Prince Andrej in War and Peace at the GTG in 2021, will bring his elegant baritone and intense stage presence to Pelléas.

Tickets from CHF 17.-

Críticas de Pelléas et Mélisande dirigida por Damien Jalet

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