| Strauss, Richard (1864-1949) | Salomé |
| Festival d'Aix-en-Provence | ||
| Ingo Metzmacher | Direction | |
| Andrea Breth | Mise en scène | |
| Raimund Orfeo Voigt | Décors | |
| Alexandra Charles | Costumes | |
| Alexander Koppelmann | Lumières | |
| Orchestre de Paris | ||
| Klaus Bertisch | Dramaturgie | |
| Beate Vollack | Chorégraphie | |
| Elsa Dreisig | Soprano | Salomé |
| Angela Denoke | Soprano | Hérodias |
| John Daszak | Ténor | Hérode Antipas |
| Joel Prieto | Ténor | Narraboth |
| Gábor Bretz | Basse | Jochanaan |
| Katharina Bierweiler | Soprano | un escalve |
| Carolyn Sproule | Soprano | le page de Hérodias |
| Léo Vermot-Desroches | Ténor | premier Juif |
| Anton Bochkaryov | Ténor | deuxième Juif |
| Dmitry Pianov | Ténor | troisième Juif |
| Yaroslav Abaimov | Ténor | quatrième Juif |
| Vasily Gurylev | Baryton | second Nazaréen |
| Kristján Jóhannesson | Baryton | premier Nazaréen, un Cappadocien |
| Dmitry Orlov | Basse | premier soldat |
| Mikhail Pervushin | Basse | second soldat, cinquième Juif |
In a twilight Palestine – shortly before the coming of the Messiah – Salome falls in love with the prophet Iokanaan who rejects her. Her stepfather Herod has eyes only for her, but she rejects him as well. Dual and morbid frustration: in exchange for a dance, the princess demands the head of the saint. Life and death urges, sexuality and religion intertwine and thus shape an inflammatory meteorite. Salome – an adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s play – is a high point of vocal incandescence that is carried by the most expressive and elaborate orchestration of modern times. This decadently orientalist and symbolist masterpiece was thereby first banned from public performance but was then programmed everywhere. Andrea Breth and Ingo Metzmacher – to whom the Festival owes the unforgettable Jakob Lenz in 2019 – tell together a story that goes from German Romanticism to the end of the contemporary world: an extraordinary love story above all and an exemplary quest for the absolute. Elsa Dreisig sings the title role for the first time and combines total engagement and youthful appeal.
