Arrigo Boito: Mefistofele
About this event
Best-known today as the librettist of Verdi’s final Shakespearean masterpieces, Otello and Falstaff, the multi-talented Arrigo Boito was also a journalist, a poet and a fine composer in his own right. Hugely ambitious in scope, and some 20 years in the making, his first (and only completed) opera, Mefistofele, sets out to encompass nothing less than the whole of Goethe’s vast poetic drama Faust (part I and II).
Unlike Gounod’s more familiar version, Boito’s opera focuses not just on the human tragedy of Faust’s callous seduction of the innocent Margherita (Goethe’s Gretchen) but also on the original poem’s more metaphysical conflict between Good and Evil. Thus, at the start, we see Mefistofele betting God that he can tempt the old philosopher Faust into the ways of sin, while, at the end, we witness the devil’s defeat as the disillusioned and dying Faust finally has a fleeting vision of happiness and is redeemed.
Making his debut at the Bayerische Staatsoper with Munich’s first ever staging of Boito’s masterpiece, director Roland Schwab (a protégé of the legendary Ruth Berghaus) plays devil’s advocate by setting the opera in what looks like a garbage-strewn nightclub that then transforms into a geriatric hospital ward, by way of a drunken detour to Munich’s own Oktoberfest. Is Hell, then, simply the hell-on-earth that passes for the modern world?
Singing “with clear, strong bass lines” (Deutschlandradio Kultur), René Pape plays Mefistofele as the sardonic leader of a satanic cult. As Faust, his slave, Maltese tenor Joseph Calleja “hits his high notes with formidable vigour” (Financial Times). Latvian soprano Kristine Opolais’s Margherita “shines with understated Grace Kelly elegance” (Opera Today), while as Elena – the fabled Helen of Troy – Armenian soprano Karine Babajanyan “shines with heroic high notes” (Süddeutsche Zeitung). Finally, in the pit, Israeli conductor Omer Meir Wellber “holds all the musical textures together with admirable control” (BR Klassik).
Featuring
Orchestra: Bayerisches Staatsorchester
Chorus: Chorus and Children's Chorus of the Bayerische Staatsoper
Conductor: Omer Meir Wellber
Stage Director: Roland Schwab
Mefistofele: René Pape
Faust: Joseph Calleja
Margherita: Kristine Opolais
Marta: Heike Grötzinger
Wagner: Andrea Borghini
Elena: Karine Babajanyan
Pantalis: Rachael Wilson
Nerèo: Joshua Owen Mills
Repertoire
Arrigo Boito: Mefistofele
Duration: approx. 140 minutes.
Subtitles available in English and German.
This video is provided free of charge as a teaser video as part of a cooperation with UNITEL in connection with the relaunch of myfidelio.
Dieses Video wird im Rahmen einer Kooperation mit UNITEL im Zusammenhang mit dem Relaunch von myfidelio als Teaser-Video kostenlos zur Verfügung gestellt.
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