Approximate runtime: 5h 50min / 350min, Two Intervals
Sung in German with English subtitles.
An earth in ruin. The twilight of the Gods.
Deception
leads to treachery, then devastation, when Siegfried is tricked into
betraying Brünnhilde. Learning the truth of her beloved’s innocence,
Brünnhilde at last returns the ring to the Rhinemaidens,
before ordering that Valhalla be swallowed in flames. For the
long-awaited finale of Wagner’s epic saga, director Barrie Kosky
situates the rich apocalyptic drama in a contemporary world of
dream-like turmoil. Antonio Pappano, Conductor Laureate of The Royal
Opera, returns to take on the impassioned, otherworldly music –
including Siegfried’s transporting Funeral March and Brünnhilde’s
electrifying Immolation Scene. The brilliant cast is led by Elisabet
Strid, Andreas Schager and Mika Kares, who together with the full forces
of the Orchestra of the Royal Opera House and the Royal Opera Chorus
bring opera’s greatest journey to its shattering end.
Approximate runtime: 3h 30min / 210min, One Interval
Sung in Italian with English subtitles.
Spurred
on by a bet, two young men hatch a plan to test the fidelity of their
girlfriends. What follows is a slippery game of seduction and power, the
four lovers plunging into a dizzying world of shifting reality, where
truth becomes increasingly unstable.
Così fan tutte
has lost none of its sting since it first scandalised audiences in
1790. In her Main Stage debut, Netia Jones, Associate Director of The
Royal Opera, reimagines Mozart’s comedy of manners through a sharp
contemporary lens, where 18th-century romantic trickery meets deeply
satirical high-tech deceit. Taking on the roles of the lovers is an
exciting young cast led by Louise Alder, Simone McIntosh, Mingjie Lei
and Huw Montague Rendall, with Gerald Finley as their manipulative
game-master Don Alfonso and Emily Pogorelc as Despina. Thomas
Hengelbrock conducts, bringing out the exquisite melodies that underpin
the provocative, and resolutely modern, themes at the heart of the
opera.