Deutsche Oper Berlin
Die Fledermaus
Opera
Bismarckstraße 35, 10627 Berlin
Johann Strauß

© Ruth Tromboukis

© Bettina Stöß

© Bettina Stöß

© Bettina Stöß

© Bettina Stöß

© Thomas M. Jauk

© Thomas M. Jauk

© Bettina Stöß

© Thomas M. Jauk

© Bettina Stöß

© Bettina Stöß

© Bettina Stöß

© Bettina Stöß

© Bettina Stöß

© Bettina Stöß

© Bettina Stöß

© Thomas M. Jauk

© Bettina Stöß

© Bettina Stöß

© Bettina Stöß
Description
From waltz bliss to social satire: Villazón stages the operetta as a whimsical journey through the ages, according to the motto ‘love and betrayal will always exist’...
“Blame it on the champagne, tra la la la la !” That’s the half-truth that the protagonists in Johann Strauss’s The Bat sign up to at the end of a drink-fuelled night of mistaken identities and erotic escapades. But alcohol is only partly to blame; the confusion is largely due to the wiles of the humiliated Dr Falke, who was once exposed to small-town ridicule dressed in the costume of a bat and is now seizing his chance to avenge himself on his ‘good pal’, bon vivant Gabriel von Eisenstein. And so it is that the maid disguises herself as an actress, the wife as a Hungarian countess and Eisenstein himself as a French marquess and off they trot to Prince Orlofsky’s masked ball. That they end up bewailing their fate in jail early the next morning is less down to champagne than to the natural course of events. In The Bat Johann Strauss pulled off a work that proved to be the prototypical Viennese operetta, bursting with waltzes and polkas and oozing wicked irony. Inspired by Offenbach’s opéras buffes from Paris, Strauss’s work was merciless in the way it held up a mirror to the bourgeois salon-going public - and many audience members recognised themselves in the absurd antics onstage.
“Blame it on the champagne, tra la la la la !” That’s the half-truth that the protagonists in Johann Strauss’s The Bat sign up to at the end of a drink-fuelled night of mistaken identities and erotic escapades. But alcohol is only partly to blame; the confusion is largely due to the wiles of the humiliated Dr Falke, who was once exposed to small-town ridicule dressed in the costume of a bat and is now seizing his chance to avenge himself on his ‘good pal’, bon vivant Gabriel von Eisenstein. And so it is that the maid disguises herself as an actress, the wife as a Hungarian countess and Eisenstein himself as a French marquess and off they trot to Prince Orlofsky’s masked ball. That they end up bewailing their fate in jail early the next morning is less down to champagne than to the natural course of events. In The Bat Johann Strauss pulled off a work that proved to be the prototypical Viennese operetta, bursting with waltzes and polkas and oozing wicked irony. Inspired by Offenbach’s opéras buffes from Paris, Strauss’s work was merciless in the way it held up a mirror to the bourgeois salon-going public - and many audience members recognised themselves in the absurd antics onstage.
Cast
Patrick Hahn
Conductor
Rolando Villazón
Director
Johannes Leiacker
Stage-design
Thibault Vancraenenbroeck
Costume-design
Davy Cunningham
Light Design
Philippe Giraudeau
Choreography
Wieland Hilker
Video
Dorian Häfner
Video
Jeremy Bines
Chorus Director
Chor der Deutschen Oper Berlin
Chorus
Gideon Poppe
Gabriel von Eisenstein
Thomas Blondelle
Gabriel von Eisenstein
Flurina Stucki
Rosalinde, Eisenstein's wife
Hulkar Sabirova
Rosalinde, Eisenstein's wife
Joel Allison
Frank, a prison governor
Padraic Rowan
Frank, a prison governor
Karis Tucker
Prince Orlofsky
Stephanie Wake-Edwards
Prince Orlofsky
Thomas Cilluffo
Alfred, a singer teacher
Kieran Carrel
Alfred, a singer teacher
Thomas Lehman
Dr Falke, a notary
Philipp Jekal
Dr Falke, a notary
Jörg Schörner
Dr Blind, a lawyer
Alexandra Oomens
Adele, Rosalinde's maid
Lilit Davtyan
Adele, Rosalinde's maid
Kathleen Bauer
Ida
Judith Shoemaker
Ida
N. N.
Frosch
Orchester der Deutschen Oper Berlin
Orchestra
Opernballett der Deutschen Oper Berlin
Dancer
Dates
Deutsche Oper Berlin
Bismarckstraße 35, 10627 Berlin
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