Berg, Alban (1885-1935) | Wozzeck (new production) |
Festival d'Aix-en-Provence | ||
Sir Simon Rattle | Conductor | |
Simon McBurney | Director | |
Miriam Buether | Set Designer | |
Christina Cunningham | Costume Designer | |
Paul Anderson | Lighting Designer | |
London Symphony Orchestra | ||
Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir | ||
William Duke | Video | |
Gerard McBurney | Dramaturgy | |
Maîtrise des Bouches-du-Rhône | ||
Leah Hausman | Choreography | |
Malin Byström | Soprano | Marie |
Peter Hoare | Tenor | Captain |
Christian Gerhaher | Baritone | Wozzeck |
Brindley Sherratt | Bass | Doctor |
Thomas Blondelle | Tenor | Drum major |
Héloïse Mas | Soprano | Margret |
Robert Lewis | Tenor | Andres |
Tomasz Kumięga | Baritone | Second Apprentice |
Matthieu Toulouse | Bass | First Apprentice |
Wozzeck is a typical example of the poor humanity of modern times: a brave soldier, scapegoat of a whole social system, who kills his mistress out of jealousy and then commits suicide. The Romantic playwright Büchner painted this vivid portrait in the early days of industrialisation: a relentless movement of objectification of beings that culminates in the mass grave of the First World War – of which Berg's opera is, in its own way, the posttraumatic echo, as much as it prophesies the world to come. For his third time at the Festival, Simon McBurney captures Wozzeck’s last minute, the moment when he drowns, and makes it a spectacular externalisation of his tormented psyche, as well as a grotesque recollection of his obsessions. Sir Simon Rattle will conduct the London Symphony Orchestra and a first-rate cast; Christian Gerhaher brings all his Liedersänger skills in a subtle and heart-rending incarnation of the title role as a myth of our time.