|
|||||
Turandot
Turandot
Theater Tickets
Royal Opera House
Booking from
Mon, 12th January 2009
Booking to
Fri, 23rd January 2009
Supplier
This item is supplied by Seatem Group and is subject to their terms & conditions.
Terms & Conditions
The Ice Princess returns this Season with her hot-blooded Prince once more ready to challenge, thaw and win her. Turandot is one of the most famously spectacular productions of The Royal Opera, evoking in Andrei Serban’s now-classic staging the pageantry, colour and savagery of ancient China that forms the setting for Puccini’s great and final opera.
It is an oriental fairytale of disguised identities, riddles, ritual executions and – of course – powerful, triumphant love. Besides its great tenor aria ‘Nessun dorma’, the music ranges from the exotic and portentous as the moon rises at the start, through the grandeur and mysticism of Turandot’s riddles, to the tragic beauty of the servant girl Liù’s appeals to and final sacrifice for her beloved master, Prince Calaf. Young, acclaimed Italian conductor Nicola Luisotti returns to conduct two casts of great international voices, headed up by José Cura and Iréne Theorin as Prince and Princess, then three performances in January by Johan Botha and Jennifer Wilson, a thrilling and fast-risen star in this role making her Covent Garden debut. Always popular with audiences, The Royal Opera’s Turandot offers wonderful music and fine spectacle with its huge chorus, many dancers and world-class singing. Running time: 2 hours 5 minutes | 2 Intervals Performed in Italian with English Surtitles CREDITS Composer: Giacomo Puccini Revival Director: Jeremy Sutcliffe Designs: Sally Jacobs Lighting: F. Mitchell Dana Choreography: Kate Flatt PERFORMERS Original Production: Andrei Serban Conductor: Nicola Luisotti Princess Turandot: Jennifer Wilson Iréne Theorin Calaf: Johan Botha José Cura Liù: Latonia Moore Svetla Vassileva Timur: Paata Burchuladze Willard White Ping: Giorgio Caoduro Pang: Ji-Min Park§ Pong: Alasdair Elliott Emperor Altoum: Robert Tear Mandarin: Kostas Smoriginas§ § Jette Parker Young Artist The present theatre was built in 1858. During World War II it was used as a dance hall but after the war the decision was made to establish the Royal Opera House as the permanent year-round home of the opera and ballet companies now known as the Royal Opera and the Royal Ballet. The ballet company reopened the building on 20 February 1946 with The Sleeping Beauty. The two companies combined for Purcell's The Fairy Queen that December, and on 14 January 1947, Covent Garden Opera Company gave its first complete opera performance, Bizet's Carmen.
TRAVEL InfoNearest Rail: Charing Cross Nearest Tube: Covent Garden (Piccadilly line) |
|||||