Deutsche Oper Berlin

Carmen

Opera

Bismarckstraße 35, 10627 Berlin

Georges Bizet

Clémentine Margaine as Carmen, Chorus of the Deutsche Oper Berlin
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Charles Castronovo as Don José, Chorus of the Deutsche Oper Berlin
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Markus Brück as Escamillo
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Clémentine Margaine as Carmen
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Clémentine Margaine as Carmen, Chorus and Children's Chorus of the Deutsche Oper Berlin
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Clémentine Margaine as Carmen
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Clémentine Margaine as Carmen, Charles Castronovo as Don José
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Chorus of the Deutsche Oper Berlin, Markus Brück as Escamillo
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Charles Castronovo as Don José, Nicole Haslett as Frasquita, Clémentine Margaine as Carmen, Dean Murphy as Dancairo, Jana Kurucová as Mercédès
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Markus Brück as Escamillo, Clémentine Margaine as Carmen, Chorus of the Deutsche Oper Berlin
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Markus Brück as Escamillo, Clémentine Margaine as Carmen
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Clémentine Margaine as Carmen, Charles Castronovo as Don José
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Charles Castronovo as Don José, Clémentine Margaine as Carmen
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Heidi Stober as Micaëla, Charles Castronovo as Don José, Clémentine Margaine as Carmen
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Chorus of the Deutsche Oper Berlin
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Clémentine Margaine as Carmen, Chorus of the Deutsche Oper Berlin
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Chorus of the Deutsche Oper Berlin
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Heidi Stober as Micaëla, Charles Castronovo as Don José, Clémentine Margaine as Carmen
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz
Charles Castronovo as Don José, Clémentine Margaine as Carmen
Marcus Lieberenz
© Marcus Lieberenz

Description

Bizet described his opera as an "operetta with a bad ending" - and rightly so, because what is unique about Carmen is the mixture of romantic opera, realistic drama and Offenbach operetta. Ole Anders Tandberg's production tells the story in powerful images that constantly alternate between shock, grotesqueness and great emotion ... 

About the work
Georges Bizet’s titular heroine is as captivating a character as any in the history of opera. The different interpretations of Carmen are legion: we have the seductress, the personification of forbidden yearning, the standard bearer for the “eternally female” in the brutal battle of the sexes, the anarchist unfettered by bourgeois angst and compulsions, the archaic clairvoyante seeing her own death in the cards - yet free, as she does not dread her destiny. Few opera heroines are so open to interpretation and hence so able to serve as a mirror held up to society.

With Carmen Bizet was throwing down the gauntlet to Romantic opera. His naturalistic presentation of a proletarian milieu with its poverty and crime was a direct challenge to the conventions of opera. It is a setting in which Don José’s dreams are doomed to be dashed. His fixation on Carmen sucks him into a pit of wretchedness and felony and he persistently rejects his chance to lead a steady, secure life with Micaëla the peasant girl.

This clash of principles – feminine versus masculine; bourgeoisie versus anarchy – is illustrated by the bullfighting scene, which is much more than a colourful bit of folklore used as a backdrop to the storyline; it is a gory ritual involving the survival of the fittest, where no quarter is given.

About the production
In his version Norwegian director Ole Anders Tandberg has embraced the unique blend of great opera, working-class tragedy and overstoked operetta. He packs his triumphant ramped-up production with emotional realism, bloody corrida symbolism and grotesque, Tarantino-esque scenes of absurd cruelty. And the iconic character of the work is playfully reflected in the opulent Andalusian garb of Carmen and Escamillo.

Tandberg is interested in the eponymous heroine’s openness and the mystery surrounding her. He sees in her not just the seer, the anarchist or the focus of male gaze but also a person playing these different roles for fear of emotional injury, a woman who is led by Don José’s true love to glimpse, at least for isolated moments, behind the façade of her own Carmen poses.

---

Carmen - Opera in four acts by Georges Bizet
Libretto by Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy
With English surtitles
Einführung im Rang-Foyer rechts: 45 Minuten vor Vorstellungsbeginn

Cast

Giulio Cilona
Conductor
Ole Anders Tandberg
Stage direction
Erlend Birkeland
Set design
Maria Geber
Costume design
Ellen Ruge
Light design
Jeremy Bines
Chorus Master
Christian Lindhorst
Children’s chorus
Silke Sense
Choreography
Irene Roberts
Carmen
Meechot Marrero
Frasquita
Martina Baroni
Mercédès
Sua Jo
Micaëla
Oreste Cosimo
Don José
Geon Kim
Moralès
Jared Werlein
Zuniga
Byung Gil Kim
Escamillo
Kieran Carrel
Remendado
Artur Garbas
Dancairo
Orchester der Deutschen Oper Berlin
Chor der Deutschen Oper Berlin
Kinderchor der Deutschen Oper Berlin

Dates

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Deutsche Oper Berlin

Bismarckstraße 35, 10627 Berlin

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