Deutsche Oper Berlin
Violanta
Opera
Bismarckstraße 35, 10627 Berlin

© Ruth Tromboukis, Sandra Kastl
Description
With Violanta , Korngold captured the spirit of fin de siècle Vienna, oscillating between the Jugendstil and psychoanalysis, between Freud, Klimt and Schnitzler, and proved that he – at just 18 years old – had a diverse orchestral palette of timbres at his disposal and could write expressive and catchy melodies...
With the world premiere of his one-act opera, Violanta , the 18-year-old Erich Wolfgang Korngold shifted overnight from child prodigy to one of the leading opera composers of his generation. For Violanta not only heralded the arrival of a young maestro who was as independent as he was variegated in his musical palette, who had an unerring feel for how to render his vision on stage, and who could write melodies that were both expressive and catchy to boot; the 75-minute work to a libretto by Hans Müller, later to be known for co-writing The White Horse Inn, also served notice that Korngold had caught a contemporary Viennese mood that encapsulated Art Nouveau, psychoanalysis and an end-of-days atmosphere, a quintessence framed by Freud, Klimt and Schnitzler – all mirrored perfectly in the storyline: Violanta, the wife of Venice’s governor, plots during Carnival to avenge, through assassination, her sister, who committed suicide after being seduced by Prince Alfonso. When the moment comes, however, she acknowledges her true motive: to snuff out her own desire to abandon herself to passion. She sacrifices herself to free herself from “lust and guilt”.
At the Deutsche Oper Berlin, which hosted a much-discussed revival of The Miracle of Heliane (likewise to a text by Hans Müller), this new production of Violanta is the result of a collaboration between General Music Director Sir Donald Runnicles and the director David Hermann. The pair have already worked on two other new productions: The Makropulos Affair and Fidelio.
SpotlightLaura Wilde’s first contact with the music of Erich Wolfgang Korngold coincided with the start of her career. In 2018 she got the chance to sing the main role in The Ring of Polykrates at the Dallas Opera, the very work that shared a world-premiere tandem with Violanta in 1916. Since then the young soprano from South Dakota has come on in leaps and bounds, appearing at venues such as the Metropolitan Opera, the Staatstheater Stuttgart and the English National Opera. With a repertoire ranging from Mozart to Britten, she has tilted towards German works, taking roles that include Wagner’s Sieglinde and Strauss’s Salome. Now she takes on Violanta, which may well make her the first singer to have featured in both of Korngold’s debut works as a composer of opera.
With the world premiere of his one-act opera, Violanta , the 18-year-old Erich Wolfgang Korngold shifted overnight from child prodigy to one of the leading opera composers of his generation. For Violanta not only heralded the arrival of a young maestro who was as independent as he was variegated in his musical palette, who had an unerring feel for how to render his vision on stage, and who could write melodies that were both expressive and catchy to boot; the 75-minute work to a libretto by Hans Müller, later to be known for co-writing The White Horse Inn, also served notice that Korngold had caught a contemporary Viennese mood that encapsulated Art Nouveau, psychoanalysis and an end-of-days atmosphere, a quintessence framed by Freud, Klimt and Schnitzler – all mirrored perfectly in the storyline: Violanta, the wife of Venice’s governor, plots during Carnival to avenge, through assassination, her sister, who committed suicide after being seduced by Prince Alfonso. When the moment comes, however, she acknowledges her true motive: to snuff out her own desire to abandon herself to passion. She sacrifices herself to free herself from “lust and guilt”.
At the Deutsche Oper Berlin, which hosted a much-discussed revival of The Miracle of Heliane (likewise to a text by Hans Müller), this new production of Violanta is the result of a collaboration between General Music Director Sir Donald Runnicles and the director David Hermann. The pair have already worked on two other new productions: The Makropulos Affair and Fidelio.
SpotlightLaura Wilde’s first contact with the music of Erich Wolfgang Korngold coincided with the start of her career. In 2018 she got the chance to sing the main role in The Ring of Polykrates at the Dallas Opera, the very work that shared a world-premiere tandem with Violanta in 1916. Since then the young soprano from South Dakota has come on in leaps and bounds, appearing at venues such as the Metropolitan Opera, the Staatstheater Stuttgart and the English National Opera. With a repertoire ranging from Mozart to Britten, she has tilted towards German works, taking roles that include Wagner’s Sieglinde and Strauss’s Salome. Now she takes on Violanta, which may well make her the first singer to have featured in both of Korngold’s debut works as a composer of opera.
Cast
Sir Donald Runnicles
Conductor
David Hermann
Director
Jo Schramm
Stage design, Video
Sybilla Wallum
Costume design
Ulrich Niepel
Light design
Jörg Königsdorf
Dramaturgy
Jeremy Bines
Chorus master
Chor der Deutschen Oper Berlin
Chorus
Ólafur Sigurdarson
Simone Trovai, Captain of the Republic of Venice
Laura Wilde
Violanta, his wife
Mihails Culpajevs
Alfonso, son of the King of Naples
Kangyoon Shine Lee
Giovanni Bracca, painter
Lilit Davtyan
Bice, Violanta's chambermaid
Stephanie Wake-Edwards
Barbara, Violanta's nanny
Andrei Danilov
Matteo
Maria Vasilevskaya
First maid
Lucy Baker
Second maid
Michael Dimovski
First soldier
Paul Minhyung Roh
Second soldier
Orchester der Deutschen Oper Berlin
Orchestra
Dates
Deutsche Oper Berlin
Bismarckstraße 35, 10627 Berlin
To enable Google Maps please accept functional cookies.

