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The Cunning Little Vixen

Staatsoper StuttgartUpper Schlossgarten 6, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, 70173, Alemania
Fechas/horas en zona horaria de Berlin
viernes 16 octubre 202619:30
jueves 22 octubre 202619:00
sábado 31 octubre 202619:30
sábado 07 noviembre 202619:00
sábado 21 noviembre 202619:00
Intérpretes
Staatsoper Stuttgart
Killian FarrellDirección
Stephan KimmigDirección de escena
Katja HaßDiseño de escena
Anja RabesDiseño de vestuario
Gerrit JurdaDiseño de iluminación
Staatsorchester Stuttgart
Johanna MangoldDramaturgia
Staatsopernchor Stuttgart
Kinderchor der Staatsoper Stuttgart
Bernhard MoncadoDirección de coro
Jonathan ReimannCoreografía
Natasha Te Rupe WilsonSopranoVixen (Bystrouška)
Paweł KonikBarítonoForesteroct 16, nov 07, 21
Jasper LeeverBajo-barítonoForesteroct 22, 31
Diana HallerMezzosopranoFox (Zlatohřbítek)oct 16, 22, 31
Ida RänzlövMezzosopranoFox (Zlatohřbítek)nov 07, 21
Andrew BogardBajoParson, Badger
Moritz KallenbergTenorSchoolmaster, Mosquito
Olivia JohnsonMezzosopranoForester’s wife, Owl
Itzeli del RosarioMezzosopranoLapák, Woodpecker
Ilia SkvirskiiTenorRooster
Carmen Larios CaparrósSopranoChocholka
Michael NaglBarítonoHarašta
Torsten HofmannTenorPásek
Catriona SmithSopranoMrs Paškova, Jay

Leoš Janáček’s The Cunning Little Vixen (1924) is his most personal stage work and a poetic-philosophical parable about desire, transience, and the cycle of life. In Stephan Kimmig’s acclaimed Stuttgart production, vitality becomes the driving force of the evening, shaping both humans and animals alike. The Vixen appears as the untamable female counterpart, a force that challenges order and awakens longing. Natasha Te Rupe-Wilson will be appearing as the Vixen this season, with Diana Haller and Ida Ränzlöv sharing the role of the Fox, and Paweł Konik once again embodying the Forester. The chorus, children’s choir, and State Orchestra perform under the musical direction of Killian Farrell.

In Czech language with German surtitles

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

© Martin Sigmund
© Martin Sigmund