Verdi, Giuseppe (1813-1901) | Aida | Libretto by Antonio Ghislanzoni |
Teatro Real | |||
Nicola Luisotti | Conductor | 2022 Oct 24, 25, 26, 28, 29, 30, 31, Nov 02, 03, 05, 06 | |
Diego García Rodríguez | Conductor | 2022 Nov 04 | |
Daniel Oren | Conductor | 2022 Nov 08, 09, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 | |
Hugo de Ana | Director, Set Designer, Costume Designer | ||
Vinicio Cheli | Lighting Designer | ||
Orquesta Titular del Teatro Real | |||
Coro Titular del Teatro Real | |||
Jamie Barton | Mezzo-soprano | Amneris | 2022 Oct 24, 28, 31, Nov 03, 06, 09, 12 |
Sonia Ganassi | Mezzo-soprano | Amneris | 2022 Oct 25, 29, Nov 02, 05, 08, 11, 14 |
Ketevan Kemoklidze | Mezzo-soprano | Amneris | 2022 Oct 26, 30, Nov 04, 10, 13 |
Piotr Beczała | Tenor | Radamès | 2022 Oct 24, 28, 31, Nov 03, 06, 09, 12 |
Yusif Eyvazov | Tenor | Radamès | 2022 Oct 25, 29, Nov 02, 05, 08, 11, 14 |
Jorge de Léon | Tenor | Radamès | 2022 Oct 26, 30, Nov 04, 10, 13 |
Carlos Álvarez | Baritone | Amonasro | 2022 Oct 24, 28, 31, Nov 03, 06, 09, 12 |
Artur Ruciński | Baritone | Amonasro | 2022 Oct 25, 29, Nov 02, 05, 08, 11, 14 |
Gevorg Hakobyan | Baritone | Amonasro | 2022 Oct 26, 30, Nov 04, 10, 13 |
Krassimira Stoyanova | Soprano | Aida | 2022 Oct 24, 28, 31, Nov 03, 06, 09, 12 |
Maria Agresta | Soprano | Aida | 2022 Oct 25, 29, Nov 02, 05, 08, 11, 14 |
Anna Netrebko | Soprano | Aida | 2022 Oct 30, Nov 02 |
Roberta Mantegna | Soprano | Aida | 2022 Oct 26, Nov 04, 10, 13 |
Deyan Vatchkov | Bass | King of Egypt | |
David Sánchez | Bass | King of Egypt | |
Alexander Vinogradov | Bass | Ramfis | 2022 Oct 24, 28, 31, Nov 03, 06, 09, 12 |
Jongmin Park | Bass | Ramfis | 2022 Oct 25, 29, Nov 02, 05, 08, 11, 14 |
Simón Orfila | Bass | Ramfis | 2022 Oct 26, 30, Nov 04, 10, 13 |
Jaquelina Livieri | Soprano | Priestess | |
Fabián Lara | Tenor | A messenger |
One of the greatest ironies of the French grand opéra - the absolute spectacle of early Romanticism - is that its legacy has come down to us, on the whole, via foreign alternatives such as Aida, whose premiere in Cairo in 1871 was surrounded by all the paraphernalia of grand geopolitical conclaves. Far from giving in to the mundane plot, a characteristic of the genre, this master piece and defining moment for Verdi, converted all the crowd scenes into an integral part of the drama - and not just an extravaganza - and instilled its characters with a fire that reaches solar temperatures in the last act before melting in a loving embrace of resignation and oblivion.
Any production that attempts to reach the stature of this work must get around challenges which are no less thorny: that the drama shines over and above the spectacle, and that the passions release their red-hot glow without being consumed in the macabre flames of melodrama. Nearly a quarter of a century after its premiere in 1998, these are precisely the reasons that validate this historic production by Hugo de Ana in an updated revival that demonstrates once again - at the risk of sounding redundant - its perennial actuality.