Mariinsky Theatre tickets 9 May 2025 - The Dawns Here Are Quiet (concert performance) | GoComGo.com

The Dawns Here Are Quiet (concert performance)

Mariinsky Theatre, Concert Hall, Saint Petersburg, Russia
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Friday 9 May 2025
7 PM
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Important Info
Type: Opera in Concert
City: Saint Petersburg, Russia
Starts at: 19:00
Acts: 2
Duration: 1h 50min

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Cast
Performers
Chorus: Mariinsky Chorus
Creators
Composer: Kirill Molchanov
Writer: Boris Vasiliev
Overview

Today the name of Kirill Vladimirovich Molchanov says little to wider audiences – perhaps only to professional musicians, and even then only to the older generation. Yet it suffices to recall just two or three songs – Here Come the Soldiers, Crossing the Scorched Steppe..., No Hiding from People in the Village or So Many Unmarried Men, and I Love a Married Man – and you will immediately find yourself singing a familiar melody with a smile on your lips. Isn’t that the best reward for a composer, when his songs are part of people’s lives – sung both on the stage and around a table with friends or even at a campfire to the strains of a guitar?
Kirill Molchanov (1922–1982) composed eight operas (among them The Stone Flower after Pavel Bazhov and Romeo, Juliet and Darkness after Jan Otčenášek’s The Unknown Soldier...), the ballets Three Cards and Macbeth, pieces for piano, song cycles, music for some dozen films (including It Happened in Penkovo, On the Seven Winds and We’ll Live till Monday) and thirty drama productions... On Saratov’s pedestrianised “Arbat” there is even a memorial to his song, while the tower clock on the banks of the River Volga chimes out “So many golden lights // On the streets of Saratov...”
Boris Vasiliev’s strident tale The Dawns Here Are Quiet about the feats of female anti-aircraft gunners was to provide the plot for Molchanov’s final opera. A talented opera composer and dramatist (he wrote the librettos for most of his operas himself), Molchanov had a brilliant sense for the specific nature of musical theatre and yet, remaining true to the songful nature of his gift, he made wide use of continuous art form techniques. He strove to employ cinematographic “influxes”, to use scenes from his characters’ pasts that break up the linear narrative – scenes of remembrance and montage-based dramaturgy.
The musical language of the opera is just as unique, adorned with quotations – here we have “everyday” song, variety performance and music of the baroque. Like a symbol of peaceful life, in the crystalline timbre of the glockenspiel we can hear Dunaevsky’s Cradle Song and, in the same episode, a chorale by Handel.
The composer “paints a portrait” of the opera’s heroines, in conformity with their characters and using musical “lexis” that is close to them. For example, the peasant girl Liza Brichkina is depicted through an extensive song and folk ditty, while Sonya Gurvich, in love with Blok’s poetry, is drawn with intonations of the Russian romance and Handel’s melodies. Zhenya Komelkova initially appears in a simple waltz, almost as if it had been lifted from some town dance hall; with a guitar in her hands, before the eyes of the audience she “makes up” a simple song in couplet form to the now legendary verse by Konstantin Simonov Wait for Me – a generalised image of the loyalty of a woman protecting a soldier. Rita Osyanina, recalling with pain the young son she has left at home, sings Dunaevsky’s touching Cradle Song from The Circus...
Initially, the girls react towards their commander the sergeant-major Vaskov with a great deal of irony. He is characterised by a march to words attributed almost to Alexander Vasilievich Orlov himself: “Oh warrior, living to serve! // Read the Service Regulations before you sleep. // And in the morning, rising up from sleep, // Read the Service Regulations more earnestly.” The elderly sergeant-major looks after the girls like a father, empathising with them and sharing tragic death with them... There is something of each of the girls in his intonations, though more than anything else they are close to folk sources with Russian roots. Thus in the scene with Liza Brichkina we suddenly hear notes of lyrical “sufferings”.
With sparse and niggardly means, the orchestra conveys the atmosphere of the plot and raises the emotional “temperature” of the opera. The “trumpet” leitmotif that opens the opera then springs to life in a slightly varied form in Rita Osyanina’s plea “Do not feel sorry for us!” to verse by the frontline poet Semyon Semyon Gudzenko. Supported by the strings and the solo trumpet, it sounds as if the author is speaking to us.
The prologue and epilogue that frame the opera in a contrasting light depict the peaceful days of the present – they have been won for us by those who gave their lives in battle against the enemy. The security of our own moral and spiritual health lie in this sense of the succession of one generation to the next and in the unfading memory of military victory.
Iosif Raiskin

Synopsis

Setting – Karelia
Time – 1942 and the present day

Prologue
There are some tourists at a pier on Lake Legontovo. One of them is singing “Again night passes over the dark fields.” A veteran soldier appears, followed by four girls dressed in forage-caps and overcoats in the style of 1942. One of them calls on the rest to remember the war: “May the living recall and may generations know the bleak truth of this battle won by soldiers.”

Part I
A hut which is home to women anti-aircraft gunners. There is a comfortable, non-army atmosphere and the girls are singing “In the skies the sun’s rays have brightened.” Lyuda Yolkina jokingly tells her friends of a date she has been on. Vaskov appears; he tries to be stern with his staff and reminds them of regulations. “You remember? The female sex...” they reply to him. The commandant leaves, waving his arm at them.
The girls joke and gossip until a squabble erupts. Sonya, trying to calm the arguing women, reads a poem – Blok’s My Darling, My Prince, My Bridegroom. Subsequently the action unfolds in parallel in the girls’ room and Vaskov’s hut.
Marya and the commandant speak of a woman’s duty during war. Polina brings the girls a gramophone. Hearing the music, the commandant resolves to put a stop to his staff’s amusement and sets off to the girls’ quarters.
Zhenka sings a romance to the famous poem by Simonov Wait for Me. The girls are dancing to the gramophone. Vaskov appears and the girls are embarrassed. Liza, who is in love with the sergeant-major, attempts to offer some hospitality, but Rita demonstratively insists it is late: “Regulations!” All depart.
Zhenka meets Rita in secret and takes her into town for a date at night.
The sergeant-major is distressed that he cannot find a common language with his staff. He tells Marya about his wife’s infidelity and the death of his child: “here I have forgotten how people can laugh.”
Rita runs in and says that Germans have been seen in the forest. Vaskov sounds the alarm. He naggingly inspects the troops who have risen at the alarm and selects three of them. Zhenka, Liza and Sonya are selected as scouts. The act ends as the girls are bidden farewell.

Part II
On the shore of Lake Legontovo, Vaskov, inspecting each observation point in turn, becomes closer to each of the girls. The confiding talks with the sergeant-major are interspersed with the heroines’ memories of home. Liza Brichkina performs a lyrical vocalise. Sonya Gurvich, an intelligent girl with volumes of Blok in her hands, reads Life Is without Beginning, without End against the background of Handel’s aria Dignare.
Suddenly Sonya notices the enemy approaching. Vaskov is beside himself – there are not two Germans, as they initially supposed, but sixteen. The sergeant-major orders that they take a defensive position. He sends Liza off for help. Bidding farewell to her friends, she rushes off to fulfil the order, but dies in the swamps.
Vaskov, Zhenka, Rita and Sonya are hidden in a shelter. The sergeant-major is convinced that Liza has already reached the village and sought help. Suddenly Sonya jumps up – she has decided to bring the flagging sergeant-major his tobacco-pouch. Everyone, listening in great tension, await her return. The anxious Vaskov goes in search and returns with the body of Sonya, which has been stabbed by the Germans.
He resolves to send Rita and Zhenya back and remain himself to deal with the saboteurs. The girls ignore the order and wage war to the death.

Venue Info

Mariinsky Theatre - Saint Petersburg
Location   1 Theatre Square

The Mariinsky Theatre is a historic theatre of opera and ballet in Saint Petersburg, Russia. Opened in 1860, it became the preeminent music theatre of late 19th-century Russia, where many of the stage masterpieces of Tchaikovsky, Mussorgsky, and Rimsky-Korsakov received their premieres. Through most of the Soviet era, it was known as the Kirov Theatre. Today, the Mariinsky Theatre is home to the Mariinsky Ballet, Mariinsky Opera and Mariinsky Orchestra. Since Yuri Temirkanov's retirement in 1988, the conductor Valery Gergiev has served as the theatre's general director.

The theatre is named after Empress Maria Alexandrovna, wife of Tsar Alexander II. There is a bust of the Empress in the main entrance foyer. The theatre's name has changed throughout its history, reflecting the political climate of the time.

The theatre building is commonly called the Mariinsky Theatre. The companies that operate within it have for brand recognition purposes retained the Kirov name, acquired during the Soviet era to commemorate the assassinated Leningrad Communist Party leader Sergey Kirov (1886–1934).

The Imperial drama, opera and ballet troupe in Saint Petersburg was established in 1783, at the behest of Catherine the Great, although an Italian ballet troupe had performed at the Russian court since the early 18th century. Originally, the ballet and opera performances were given in the wooden Karl Knipper Theatre on Tsaritsa Meadow, near the present-day Tripartite Bridge (also known as the Little Theatre or the Maly Theatre). The Hermitage Theatre, next door to the Winter Palace, was used to host performances for an elite audience of aristocratic guests invited by the Empress.

A permanent theatre building for the new company of opera and ballet artists was designed by Antonio Rinaldi and opened in 1783. Known as the Imperial Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre the structure was situated on Carousel Square, which was renamed Theatre Square in honour of the building. Both names – "Kamenny" (Russian word for "stone") and "Bolshoi" (Russian word for "big") – were coined to distinguish it from the wooden Little Theatre. In 1836, the Bolshoi Kamenny Theatre was renovated to a design by Albert Cavos (son of Catterino Cavos, an opera composer), and served as the principal theatre of the Imperial Ballet and opera.

On 29 January 1849, the Equestrian circus (Конный цирк) opened on Theatre Square. This was also the work of the architect Cavos. The building was designed to double as a theatre. It was a wooden structure in the then-fashionable neo-Byzantine style. Ten years later, when this circus burnt down, Albert Cavos rebuilt it as an opera and ballet house with the largest stage in the world. With a seating capacity of 1,625 and a U-shaped Italian-style auditorium, the theatre opened on 2 October 1860, with a performance of A Life for the Tsar. The new theatre was named Mariinsky after its imperial patroness, Empress Maria Alexandrovna.

Under Yuri Temirkanov, Principal Conductor from 1976 to 1988, the Opera Company continued to stage innovative productions of both modern and classic Russian operas. Although functioning separately from the Theatre’s Ballet Company, since 1988 both companies have been under the artistic leadership of Valery Gergiev as Artistic Director of the entire Theatre.

The Opera Company has entered a new era of artistic excellence and creativity. Since 1993, Gergiev’s impact on opera there has been enormous. Firstly, he reorganized the company’s operations and established links with many of the world's great opera houses, including the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, the Metropolitan Opera, the Opéra Bastille, La Scala, La Fenice, the Israeli Opera, the Washington National Opera and the San Francisco Opera. Today, the Opera Company regularly tours to most of these cities.

Gergiev has also been innovative as far as Russian opera is concerned: in 1989, there was an all-Mussorgsky festival featuring the composer’s entire operatic output. Similarly, many of Prokofiev’s operas were presented from the late 1990s. Operas by non-Russian composers began to be performed in their original languages, which helped the Opera Company to incorporate world trends. The annual international "Stars of the White Nights Festival" in Saint Petersburg, started by Gergiev in 1993, has also put the Mariinsky on the world’s cultural map. That year, as a salute to the imperial origins of the Mariinsky, Verdi's La forza del destino, which received its premiere in Saint Petersburg in 1862, was produced with its original sets, costumes and scenery. Since then, it has become a characteristic of the "White Nights Festival" to present the premieres from the company’s upcoming season during this magical period, when the hours of darkness practically disappear as the summer solstice approaches.

Presently, the Company lists on its roster 22 sopranos (of whom Anna Netrebko may be the best known); 13 mezzo-sopranos (with Olga Borodina familiar to US and European audiences); 23 tenors; eight baritones; and 14 basses. With Gergiev in charge overall, there is a Head of Stage Administration, a Stage Director, Stage Managers and Assistants, along with 14 accompanists.

Important Info
Type: Opera in Concert
City: Saint Petersburg, Russia
Starts at: 19:00
Acts: 2
Duration: 1h 50min
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