Bavarian State Opera tickets 13 July 2024 - The Passenger | GoComGo.com

The Passenger

Bavarian State Opera, Munich, Germany
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Important Info
Type: Opera
City: Munich, Germany
Starts at: 19:00
Acts: 2
Sung in: Multilingual
Titles in: German,English
Cast
Performers
Orchestra: Bavarian State Orchestra
Tenor: Charles Workman (Valter)
Chorus: Chorus of the Bavarian State Opera
Baritone: Jacques Imbrailo (Tadeush)
Mezzo-Soprano: Larissa Diadkova (Bronka)
Contralto: Noa Beinart (Hannah)
Conductor: Vladimir Jurowski
Creators
Composer: Mieczysław Weinberg
Librettist: Alexander Medvedev
Director: Tobias Kratzer
Festival

Munich Opera Festival 2024

The tradition of the Munich Opera Festival dates back to 1875, when a "Festive Summer" was organized for the first time. This tradition will continue under the directorship of Serge Dorny. The 2024 Munich Opera Festival will showcase the new productions of the season, based on the central theme of "A Fountain That Looks to Heaven."

Overview

Following the Opera Studio production of Così fan tutte in the 2008/2009 season, with The Passenger Tobias Kratzer, born in 1980 in Landshut, Bavaria, now stages his second opera at the Bayerische Staatsoper.

The same team has accompanied him on all new productions he has directed in recent years: Rainer Sellmaier is responsible for stage and costume, Manuel Braun is responsible for video, in the new production also with Jonas Dahl. General Music Director Vladimir Jurowski conducts. Michael Bauer, lighting, had already worked on the Munich Opera Studio production at the time.

Murder is never statute-barred. And nor is guilt. Lisa, an SS overseer in the Auschwitz concentration camp during the Second World War, is confronted late in life with the crimes of her youth. Travelling on a ship, she thinks she recognises a passenger, Marta, a prisoner she perfidiously lied to in the camp. And so the past, which she has so meticulously and carefully suppressed all these years, rushes back into her consciousness. The two-act opera by Mieczysław Weinberg was composed in 1968. Weinberg’s parents and sister were murdered in the Trawniki concentration camp. The basis for the libretto was the novella by Zofia Posmysz. After internment in Auschwitz for two and a half years, Posmysz was moved to the Neustadt-Glewe concentration camp, until it was liberated in 1945. She died in August 2022, having seen every performance of The Passenger since its concert world premiere in 2006.

History
Premiere of this production: 25 December 2006, Svetlanov Hall of the Moscow International House of Music

The Passenger is a 1968 opera by Mieczysław Weinberg to a Russian libretto by Alexander Medvedev. Medvedev's libretto is based on the 1959 Polish radio play Pasażerka z kabiny 45 (Passenger from Cabin Number 45) by concentration-camp survivor Zofia Posmysz. The opera, scheduled for the Bolshoi Theatre in 1968, was not premiered until 2006, when musicians of the Stanislavsky Theatre presented a semi-staging conducted by Wolf Gorelik in the Svetlanov Hall of the Moscow International House of Music on 25 December. Medvedev's libretto was reworked in 2010 for the first staged performance of the opera at the Bregenzer Festspiele into German, English, Polish, Yiddish, French, Russian and Czech. It has then been performed internationally.

Venue Info

Bavarian State Opera - Munich
Location   Max-Joseph-Platz 2

The Bavarian State Opera or the National Theatre (Nationaltheater) on Max-Joseph-Platz in Munich, Germany, is a historic opera house and the main theatre of Munich, home of the Bavarian State Opera, Bavarian State Orchestra, and the Bavarian State Ballet.

During its early years, the National Theatre saw the premières of a significant number of operas, including many by German composers. These included Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde (1865), Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (1868), Das Rheingold (1869) and Die Walküre (1870), after which Wagner chose to build the Festspielhaus in Bayreuth and held further premières of his works there.

During the latter part of the 19th century, it was Richard Strauss who would make his mark on the theatre in the city in which he was born in 1864. After accepting the position of conductor for a short time, Strauss returned to the theatre to become principal conductor from 1894 to 1898. In the pre-War period, his Friedenstag (1938) and Capriccio were premièred in Munich. In the post-War period, the house has seen significant productions and many world premieres.

First theatre – 1818 to 1823
The first theatre was commissioned in 1810 by King Maximilian I of Bavaria because the nearby Cuvilliés Theatre had too little space. It was designed by Karl von Fischer, with the 1782 Odéon in Paris as architectural precedent. Construction began on 26 October 1811 but was interrupted in 1813 by financing problems. In 1817 a fire occurred in the unfinished building.

The new theatre finally opened on 12 October 1818 with a performance of Die Weihe by Ferdinand Fränzl, but was soon destroyed by another fire on 14 January 1823; the stage décor caught fire during a performance of Die beyden Füchse by Étienne Méhul and the fire could not be put out because the water supply was frozen. Coincidentally the Paris Odéon itself burnt down in 1818.

Second theatre – 1825 to 1943
Designed by Leo von Klenze, the second theatre incorporated Neo-Grec features in its portico and triangular pediment and an entrance supported by Corinthian columns. In 1925 it was modified to create an enlarged stage area with updated equipment. The building was gutted in an air raid on the night of 3 October 1943.

Third theatre – 1963 to present
The third and present theatre (1963) recreates Karl von Fischer's original neo-classical design, though on a slightly larger, 2,100-seat scale. The magnificent royal box is the center of the interior rondel, decorated with two large caryatids. The new stage covers 2,500 square meters (3,000 sq yd), and is thus the world's third largest, after the Opéra Bastille in Paris and the Grand Theatre, Warsaw.

Through the consistent use of wood as a building material, the auditorium has excellent acoustics. Architect Gerhard Moritz Graubner closely preserved the original look of the foyer and main staircase. It opened on 21 November 1963 with an invitation-only performance of Die Frau ohne Schatten under the baton of Joseph Keilberth. Two nights later came the first public performance, of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, again under Keilberth.

Important Info
Type: Opera
City: Munich, Germany
Starts at: 19:00
Acts: 2
Sung in: Multilingual
Titles in: German,English
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