Opera Antwerpen tickets 14 June 2024 - Jenůfa | GoComGo.com

Jenůfa

Opera Antwerpen, Antwerp, Belgium
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Important Info
Type: Opera
City: Antwerp, Belgium
Starts at: 20:00
Intervals: 1
Duration: 2h 30min
Sung in: Czech
Titles in: Dutch,English
Cast
Performers
Soprano: Agneta Eichenholz (Jenufa)
Conductor: Alejo Pérez
Tenor: Jamez McCorkle (Laca Klemen)
Choir: Koor Opera Ballet Vlaanderen
Tenor: Ladislav Elgr (Steva Buryja)
Mezzo-Soprano: Maria Riccarda Wesseling (Grandmother Buryjovka)
Mezzo-Soprano: Natascha Petrinsky (Kostelnička Buryjovka)
Orchestra: Symfonisch Orkest Opera Ballet Vlaanderen
Creators
Composer: Leoš Janáček
Writer: Gabriela Preissová
Librettist: Leoš Janáček
Director: Robert Carsen
Overview

Robert Carsen's purified take on Leoš Janáček's opera takes you on a gripping journey along the all-too-human.

With Jenůfa, Leoš Janáček broke through as a music theatre composer once and for all. His third opera is set in the countryside, in a tight-knit community with stifling social control. Jenůfa becomes pregnant from Števa. He promises to marry her but breaks his word. At the highest possible price, Jenůfa’s stepmother, the respected sexton in the village, tries to save the girl’s honour. For his composition, Janáček was guided by the natural rhythm of the Czech language and thus came to an innovative operatic style through which Moravian folk music also meanders.

In what has become one of Opera Ballet Vlaanderen’s most successful creations, director Robert Carsen drills down to the core of this poignant psychodrama full of unrequited feelings, envy and good intentions. After a twentyyear journey through the greatest international opera stages – from Spain to Luxembourg, Germany, France and even Japan – our Jenůfa comes home.

History
Premiere of this production: 21 January 1904, National Theatre, Brno

Jenůfa ("Her Stepdaughter" in Czech) is an opera in three acts by Leoš Janáček to a Czech libretto by the composer, based on the play Její pastorkyňa by Gabriela Preissová. It was first performed at the National Theatre, Brno on 21 January 1904. Composed between 1896 and 1902, it is among the first operas written in prose.

Venue Info

Opera Antwerpen - Antwerp
Location   Frankrijklei 1

The Royal Flemish Opera was the almost 100-year-old independent Antwerp city opera until its merger in 1981 with the Royal Opera in Ghent. Both city operas were merged into the Opera voor Vlaanderen organization, renamed Opera Ballet Vlaanderen in 2014. Anyone entering an opera house immediately gets a special feeling. The imposing buildings with their ancient decorations and stately staircases and columns immediately transport you to another era: that of red carpets and opulent luxury. Going to a performance in this unique setting gives your opera visit that little bit more. However, opera houses are not only venues for performances, they also tell a story in themselves. Although they are old, they have not always existed, and both locations have undergone extensive restoration.

  • Opera has been performed in Antwerp since 1660, first in the Spaansche Pant on the Grote Markt and later in the Tapissiers building on the site where the Bourlaschouwburg would later be built.
  • In 1834, the Bourlaschouwburg opened as the Théâtre Royal. Only French repertoire was performed. Some locals still refer to the Bourlaschouwburg as 'French opera'.
  • Spurred on by composer Peter Benoit, among others, Antwerp decided in 1899 to build a Flemish Opera as a counterpart to the Bourlaschouwburg.
  • One of the ideas was to build an opera house in the city park, but this met with much protest. It was feared that the park would lose its character.
  • Eventually, the choice was made to build the Kunstlei (the current Frankrijklei) on the spot where the covered Hallen en Markten (the Criée) used to be. These had moved to the Van Wesenbekestraat. Construction started in 1904 and lasted three years.
  • On 18 October 1907, the Flemish Opera in Antwerp was festively opened. The neo-baroque building decorated in Louis XVI style was immediately loved by the public.
  • All the public, rich and not so rich, entered the hall, a very democratic idea for that time. Those with money walked straight up the stately stairs to the ground floor or first balcony. Those who sat on the higher, cheaper balconies had to take a separate staircase to get there.
  • Today, the hall has 1081 seats. The ceiling fresco represents Rythmus and shows a male figure surrounded by nine female muses.
  • At the opening, the opera was technically very modern, as it made full use of the new electric light. The opening of the stage measures 11.90 metres in width.
  • The stage tower is 23 metres high.
  • In 2004, the opera closed for the first time for a thorough renovation, which was to last three years. The technology was modernized, the stage was given a side stage, and a new building for offices and workrooms was built.
Important Info
Type: Opera
City: Antwerp, Belgium
Starts at: 20:00
Intervals: 1
Duration: 2h 30min
Sung in: Czech
Titles in: Dutch,English
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