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Kasuta sisselogimiseks parooli
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Ballet by Igor Stravinsky and opera by Maurice Ravel
Music Director and Conductor Arvo Volmer
Conductors Kaspar Mänd
Stage Director Guillaume Gallienne
Dramaturge and Assistant to the Stage Director Marie Lamber-Le Bihan
Choreographer Clairemarie Osta
Set Designer Sylvie Olive
Costumes Designer Olivier Beriot
Lighting Designer John Torres
Ballet Repetiteurs Linnar Looris, Daniel Kirspuu
Production Assistant Pirjo Levandi
Chief Pianist-Repetiteur Jaanika Rand-Sirp
Pianist-Repetiteur Ave Wagner, Jaanika Rand-Sirp, Riina Pikani
Stage Managers Anton Osul, Riina Airenne, Rein Lepnurm
Estonian National Opera Orchestra
Within one night, the audience can experience two masterpieces of the 20th century: Stravinsky’s ballet with songs "Pulcinella" and Ravel’s short opera "L’Heure Espagnol".
"Pulcinella"
One-act ballet with songs
Music By Igor Stravinsky after Giovanni Battista Pergolesi
World premiere on May 15, 1920 in Opéra de Paris
"Pulcinella" tells a story about a vivid commedia dell’arte character, rogue Pulcinella whose cheeky charm helps him to woo other men’s lovers and saves him from intricate plans of revenge …
When the director of Ballets Russes, Sergei Diaghilev proposed that Igor Stravinsky write a ballet with songs based on Giovanni Battista Pergolesi’s (1710–1736) music and a commedia dell’arte libretto, Stravinsky thought that Diaghilev must be out of his mind. After having acquainted himself with the musical material that included also music of some less know Italian composers, he was hooked, "I took a look at the music and fell in love!". The commission resulted in an artistic pearl that combines song and dance, Stravinsky’s musical humour and Pablo Picasso’s designs.
"L’Heure Espagnol"
Musical comedy by Maurice Ravel after the eponymous play by Franc-Nohain
World premiere on May 19, 1911 in Opéra-Comique
A story about a woman yearning for a love affair, an unsuspecting husband, three concealed lovers and a room full of clocks ...
The opera is based on Franc-Nohain’s eponymous play that premiered in 1904 that in its clear and realistic expression opposed Symbolism that had emerged in the 19th century France and was popularised by Mallarmé, Verlaine and Maeterlinck. The colourful characters and events of the play offered Ravel a chance to experiment with musical means and sonorities. We can hear clocks chiming in various rhythms and characteristic Spanish dances, such as habanera and jota. The critique of Ravel’s first opera can be summed up with an opinion published after the premiere: "This is a musical comedy that is full of brilliant clockwork and seductive joie de vivre – Ravel’s first opera is a masterpiece, bristling with dazzling music!"
Recommended age 12+