Deutsche Oper Berlin

Rigoletto

Opera

Bismarckstraße 35, 10627 Berlin

Giuseppe Verdi

Andrei Danilov as the Duke, Roman Burdenko as Rigoletto, chorus and extras of the Deutsche Oper Berlin
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Artur Garbas as A Bailiff
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
including Kyle Miller as Marullo, Paul Kaufmann as Matteo Borsa, Andrei Danilov as the Duke
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Andrei Danilov as the Duke, Roman Burdenko as Rigoletto
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Kyle Miller as Marullo
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Kyle Miller as Marullo, Paul Kaufmann as Matteo Borsa
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Byung Gil Kim as The Count of Monterone, Roman Burdenko as Rigoletto
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Roman Burdenko als Rigoletto a. o.
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Patrick Guetti as Sparafucile, Roman Burdenko as Rigoletto
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Roman Burdenko as Rigoletto
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Julia Muzychenko as Gilda, Roman Burdenko as Rigoletto, Nicole Piccolomini as Maddalena
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Andrei Danilov as the Duke, Julia Muzychenko as Gilda
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Andrei Danilov as the Duke, Julia Muzychenko as Gilda
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Julia Muzychenko as Gilda
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Julia Muzychenko as Gilda, Roman Burdenko as Rigoletto a. o.
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Roman Burdenko as Rigoletto
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß
Chorus of the Deutsche Oper Berlin, Andrei Danilov as the Duke
Bettina Stöß
© Bettina Stöß

Description

The title character in Verdi's classic is an overprotective father, but at the same time, as the Duke's court jester, he is the archetype of the sad clown. He maliciously attacks his master's enemies until his worst fears are realised: he and his daughter fall victim to aristocratic despotism... 

About the work
“As for the effect that a work has as a piece of theatre, I’d say that RIGOLETTO is the best material that I’ve ever set to music […]. It has very powerful scenes, there’s temperament, pathos, a lot of variety.” [Verdi to Antonio Somma, 22nd April 1853]

In describing the attributes of his 1851 melodrama based on Victor Hugo’s acclaimed play “Le roi s’amuse” Verdi also puts his finger on the challenges that any director has to address: RIGOLETTO is namely a masterpiece whose particularity lies in the clash between the characters’ psychology and the improbable action of a fantasy storyline.

It’s a tale that smacks of gothic horror. In his role as court jester to the Duke of Mantua, the hunchbacked Rigoletto is despised by the collected courtiers and in return makes fun of all the men whose wives have been ravished by his boss, a notorious womaniser. So nervous is he that his own daughter, Gilda, might fall victim to the Duke that he conceals her very existence. Finally Rigoletto realises that his attempt to preserve the cocoon of his family life is doomed to fail in this environment of wanton violence. Gilda is seduced too by the Duke, even laying down her life for him.

It is Verdi’s music that gives the story its emotional credibility and makes RIGOLETTO a tragedy that unfurls as a result of the interaction of three very different people – the Duke, a rake for whom Verdi wrote such seductive music that Gilda and the audience alike are swept up in his aura; Rigoletto, one of those typical Verdi creations who have good and bad sides to them; and finally Gilda, a pristine personification of innocence and sympathy. In RIGOLETTO we identify especially with these three people and come to view even the craziest chance incidents as the characters’ inescapable destiny.

About the production
In his first opera production in Berlin, Jan Bosse too was attracted by this exploitation of musical theatre to maximum effect. In his production Bosse transforms the auditorium of the Deutsche Oper into the Court of Mantua and the under-stage trap room into the hiding place used by Gilda, the daughter of Rigoletto the jester. Rigoletto’s efforts to keep his private life separate from his job in the service of a corrupt regime are futile, however, and his world gradually collapses into its component parts. In the end, with his daughter dead and all his plans dashed, Rigoletto is left, literally, with nothing.

Cast

Roberto Rizzi Brignoli
Conductor
Jan Bosse
Director
Stéphane Laimé
Stage-Design
Kathrin Plath
Costume-Design
Jeremy Bines
Chorus Master
Chor der Deutschen Oper Berlin
Chorus
Andrei Danilov
The Duke of Mantua
Xabier Anduaga
The Duke of Mantua
Daniel Luis de Vicente
Rigoletto
Juan Jesús Rodríguez
Rigoletto
Nina Solodovnikova
Gilda
Lilit Davtyan
Gilda
Michael Bachtadze
The count of Monterone
Jared Werlein
The count of Ceprano
Hye-Young Moon
The countness of Ceprano
Benjamin Dickerson
Marullo
Michael Dimovski
Matteo Borsa
Tobias Kehrer
Sparafucile
Patrick Guetti
Sparafucile
Aleksandra Meteleva
Maddalena / Giovanna
Stephanie Wake-Edwards
Maddalena / Giovanna
Paul Minhyung Roh
A bailiff
Lucy Baker
A court lady
Orchester der Deutschen Oper Berlin
Orchestra
Daniele Squeo
Conductor

Dates

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Deutsche Oper Berlin

Bismarckstraße 35, 10627 Berlin

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