Die Zauberflöte
Mozart
There are wonderful tales that are meant to be heard by children and adults alike: for the former, those tales help them grow up, for the latter, those tales can teach them to live. Such is the case with Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute), Mozart’s testamentary opera, completed a few weeks before his death.
Having escaped from the clutches of a giant serpent, Prince Tamino is given a magic flute by three attendant ladies of the Queen of the Night. With his companion, the bird catcher Papageno, he sets out in search of Princess Pamina, who is being held captive by the High Priest Sarastro with his mysterious rites of passage. But appearances can be deceptive and our intrepid adventurers will have to learn to distinguish good from evil, darkness from light, and the sun from the night.
How can we breathe the magic of opera into our daily lives? How can we surprise an audience that has already lived half of their lives? For the Austrian director Anna Bernreitner, breaking down barriers is nothing new: as the head of the artistic collective OPER RUND UM, she has staged performances in places as disparate as a pub, a swimming pool, a tropical greenhouse, and a supermarket. In Mozart’s fabulous initiatory opera, fear was the white rabbit: morbid fear, childish fears, fear which leaders weaponize in order to control their citizens, fear of silence, fear of death, fear of fire which has to be tamed in order to become the author of one’s own history.
An heir of the Enlightenment, Mozart dreamt of composing a work that could appeal to scholars and the masses alike: just like the flute with the power to charm the animals in the forest. From the electrifying overture to the final note as the curtain falls, his music chases after his goal: to set the Earth on a par with Heaven and humans equal to the gods. It is a goal he manages to attain: during the final chorus, the composer succeeds in creating a musical utopia. As such, The Magic Flute bursts forth through the night and 230 years later, it continues to light up our world.
The performances on Sunday 19 and 26 December at 3 p.m. offer a Sunday workshop.
Duration
2h45 with interval
Performed in german with subtitles
Open to all aged 8 and above
Conference
1 hour before the start of the performance (free, upon presentation of ticket)
Die Zauberflöte, opera in two acts
First performed at Theater auf der Wieden in Vienne on September 30, 1791
New production Opéra national de Lorraine
Coproduction Opéra Orchestre national Montpellier Occitanie
Libretto
Emmanuel Schikaneder
Music
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Conductor
Bas Wiegers
Orchestra and Chorus of the Opéra national de Lorraine
Director
Anna Bernreitner
Sets, costumes et animationsHannah Oellinger, Manfred Rainer
LightsOlaf Freese
Assistant directorOlga Poliakova
Assistant conductorChloe Rooke
Assistant to the video animationStefan Wirnsperger
Voice training of the Three Childrenprofessors from the Conservatoire of Nancy
Pamina
Christina Gansch
The Queen of the NightChristina Poulitsi
First LadySusanna Hurrell
Second LadyRamya Roy
Third LadyGala El Hadidi
Papagena / the Old womanAnita Rosati
TaminoJack Swanson
SarastroDavid Leigh
PapagenoMichael Nagl
MonostatosMark Omvlee
The SpeakerChristian Immler
The Three ChildrenBenjamin Gegout, Pauline Greco, Nalia Girodon (Young singers from the Conservatoire of Nancy)
First Armoured ManIll Ju Lee
Second Armoured ManBenjamin Colin
ExtrasBenoît Andrieux, Virginie Benoist, Antonin Cloteau, Anna Moriot, Pauline Zaia