La Bohème
Giacomo Puccini
La Bohème or ‘le Spleen de Paris’
Living on love and art in a ice-cold attic, mocking poverty and turning light-heartedness into a weapon against adversity: such is the madcap challenge taken up by the characters in Scenes from the Life of Bohemians (1851), Henry Murger's short novel which later inspired Puccini's opera (1895). By showing ‘bohemians’ dreaming and failing in their lives, Puccini and his librettists subvert the success story that Murger had imagined. La Bohème is a bleak and disillusioned Christmas tale that exalts a sublime tragedy, so operatic (and inevitably tearful) that it strikes the audience deep in the heart. David Geselson's production places Bohème in the context of the revolutionary movements of the 19th century, with Delacroix as a political and pictorial reference. Mimì and Musetta are the emblematic figures of this social freedom that seeks to triumph in death and love respectively. In doing so, he reveals through these two women a poignant form of commitment: that of loving and living life to the full, even when the outcome is known in advance and everything seems to be conspiring against the possibility of future happiness.
‘They call me Mimì,But my real name is Lucia.
My story is a short one...’
A film and a book to delve deeper into the subject:
- La Vie de bohème (Aki Kaurismäki, 1992): A modern and stylised film adaptation of Murger's original story (to be discovered at Cinema Cameo Commanderie, more information here).
- Le Spleen de Paris (Charles Baudelaire): Prose poems blending beauty and misery, fleeting desires and vague sorrows. Love is often impossible or wounded. A poetic mirror to the world of Mimì and Rodolfo. (Poésie Gallimard)
Duration
2 h 30 with interval
Prices
5 - 85 €
Show in Italian, surtitles
From 7 years
La Bohème, opera in four acts
First performed on 1 February 1896 at the Teatro Regio in Turin
LibrettoGiuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica
MusicGiacomo Puccini
PrologueCrisantemi de Giacomo Puccini (arr. Duncan Fyfe Gillies)
New production
Opéra national de Nancy-Lorraine
Co-productionthéâtre de Caen, Théâtres de la Ville de Luxembourg, Opéra de Dijon, Opéra de Reims
Opéra national de Nancy-Lorraine Orchestra Opéra national de Nancy-Lorraine and Opéra de Dijon choruses Conductor
Marta Gardolińska
Assistant conductorRenaud Madore
Chorus masterAnass Ismat
Stage director
David Geselson
Set designLisa Navarro
CostumesBenjamin Moreau
LightingJérémie Papin
VideoJérémie Scheidler
Assistant stage directorSophie Bricaire
Mimì
Lucie Peyramaure
RodolfoAngel Romero
MusettaLilian Farahani
MarcelloYoann Dubruque
CollineBlaise Malaba
SchaunardLouis de Lavignère
BenoîtYong Kim*
AlcindoroJonas Yajure*
ParpignolTakeharu Tanaka*
Customs Officers SergeantHenry Boyles*
Customs OfficerMarco Gemini*
Prune sellerStéphane Wattez*
* Soloists from the Opéra national de Nancy-Lorraine or Opéra de Dijon choruses
Children's chorus of the Conservatoire régional du Grand Nancy Ragazzo soloAenaëlle Tea-Levavasseur
ChoirSaya Bonnot Colson,
Marion de Carné de Carnavalet,
Salma-Faïhrouz Jacquot Anseur,
Pauline Greco,
Alice Lacoste Remy,
Margot Mettauer-Tornambe,
Zora Perotto,
Victoria Pierson Gonzalez,
Lou Ruillet