Don Carlo
Don Carlo
Giuseppe Verdi (1813 – 1901)
With DON CARLO, Verdi created one of his great political operas. However, in his adaptation of Schiller's drama of freedom, he also emphasised the individual fate of the characters, their loves, passions, friendship, desire and disappointment. Marco Arturo Marelli's austere production deepens these conflicts in its visually powerful stage architecture reminiscent of the Escorial ... Conductor: Sir Donald Runnicles; Director: Marco Arturo Marelli; With Alex Esposito, Jonathan Tetelman, Gihoon Kim, Patrick Guetti, Federica Lombardi, Irene Roberts and others.
About the work
It is common knowledge that Giuseppe Verdi, by nature a critical man, not only found much to disapprove of in the trends of his day but also subjected his own work to a continuous process of editing and revision.
None of his operas did he alter, abridge, rearrange or rewrite more intensely than his grimmest work of all – DON CARLO -, whose web of political, religious and social constraints is most reminiscent of the inescapability of destiny associated with Greek drama.
Verdi began writing the opera in 1865, and twenty years were to pass before the premiere in Milan of the four-act version that we are most familiar with today. The composer not only wrestled with the two languages of the piece, each with its distinctive form of expression. He was also at pains to achieve the best possible result by repeatedly cutting, reducing and rearranging. The opera, extensive sections of which are faithful to Schiller’s play, went through no less than seven versions.
In none of the opera’s characters does the light of reason sparkle. Prisoners of their situations, prisoners of their own reins of control and of their own making, above all prisoners of a deadly, ever-looming spiritual power greater even than secular hegemony… Verdi captures the essential helplessness of human beings entangled in this network of terror: at best, death brings release.
About the production
Marco Arturo Marelli brings Verdi's epic opera classic to the stage in a visually stunning way. The struggle for freedom and independence under the rule of the absolutist King Philip II is emphasised as a central theme. The unshakeable power of the church, which is chiselled into the foundations of this society, is always present behind everything. Embodied in the Inquisition, it makes short work of anything that could pose a threat to it by attempting to shake up the existing conditions.
Language
Duration
3 Stunden 30 Minuten / Eine Pause
Cast
Credits
Mit Unterstützung des Förderkreises der Deutschen Oper Berlin e. V.
Opera in four acts
Libretto by Joseph Méry and Camille du Locle, based on the tragedy by Friedrich Schiller
First performance of the Italian version by Achille de Lauzières on 10. January, 1884 in Milan
Premiered at the Deutsche Oper Berlin on 23 October 2011
Pre-performance lecture (in German): 45 minutes prior to each performance
Deutsche Oper Berlin
Bismarckstraße 3510627 Berlin
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