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Classical concerts featuring
Alexander Roslavets

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Quick overview of musician Alexander Roslavets by associated keywords

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These concerts featuring Alexander Roslavets became visible lately at Concert Pulse.

Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Ruslan und Ljudmila

Sun, Nov 9, 2025, 18:00
Ben Glassberg (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorleitung), Gabriela Legun (Ljudmila), Ilia Kazakov (Ruslan), Giorgi Manoshvili (Farlaf), Nicky Spence (Bajan), Nicky Spence (Finn), Artem Krutko (Ratmir), Kristina Stanek (Naina), Natalia Tanasii (Gorislawa), Alexander Roslavets (Swetosar), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
A REDISCOVERY - NATIONAL EPIC OR FAIRYTALE OPERA ABOUT THE FIGHT AGAINST EVIL? Who is good and who is evil in this fairytale opera - and why? The nucleus of Pushkin's setting of Ruslan and Lyudmila by Mikhail Glinka is the abduction of the princess's daughter Lyudmila from Kiev, the center of both the Russian and Ukrainian founding myths. For Ruslan, the warrior promised to her, this marks the beginning of an adventurous journey through the magical realm of a powerful dwarf. The rescue operation escalates into a showdown between the men fighting for Lyudmila. But she herself increasingly becomes a distant vision of love - the longed-for prize for heroism. In 1842, in the midst of the awakening Russian national sentiment, Glinka conceived the idea of a culturally united tsarist empire, in which he merged Slavic, Finnish and Arabic melos with the bel canto fashion of his time. Hungarian directors Alexandra Szemerédy and Magdolna Parditka look behind the magical façade of the legendary world and approach the characters with great curiosity for their most primal human fears, their emotional abrasions and abysses. They also follow trails that lead into authoritarian systems of yesterday and today - and ultimately end in a wedding. Or is the happy ending of this fairy tale pure utopia? Musical direction: Ben Glassberg Production, stage and costumes: Alexandra Szemerédy, Magdolna Parditka Chorus: Alice Meregaglia Dramaturgy: Judith Wiemers Grand magic opera in five acts (1842) Libretto: Konstantin Bakturin, Valeriyan Shirkov, Nestor Kukolnik, Mikhail Godenov, Nikolai Markevich and Mikhail Glinka based on the poem of the same name by Alexander Pushkin
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Ruslan und Ljudmila

Wed, Nov 12, 2025, 19:00
Ben Glassberg (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorleitung), Gabriela Legun (Ljudmila), Ilia Kazakov (Ruslan), Giorgi Manoshvili (Farlaf), Nicky Spence (Bajan), Nicky Spence (Finn), Artem Krutko (Ratmir), Kristina Stanek (Naina), Natalia Tanasii (Gorislawa), Alexander Roslavets (Swetosar), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
A REDISCOVERY - NATIONAL EPIC OR FAIRYTALE OPERA ABOUT THE FIGHT AGAINST EVIL? Who is good and who is evil in this fairytale opera - and why? The nucleus of Pushkin's setting of Ruslan and Lyudmila by Mikhail Glinka is the abduction of the princess's daughter Lyudmila from Kiev, the center of both the Russian and Ukrainian founding myths. For Ruslan, the warrior promised to her, this marks the beginning of an adventurous journey through the magical realm of a powerful dwarf. The rescue operation escalates into a showdown between the men fighting for Lyudmila. But she herself increasingly becomes a distant vision of love - the longed-for prize for heroism. In 1842, in the midst of the awakening Russian national sentiment, Glinka conceived the idea of a culturally united tsarist empire, in which he merged Slavic, Finnish and Arabic melos with the bel canto fashion of his time. Hungarian directors Alexandra Szemerédy and Magdolna Parditka look behind the magical façade of the legendary world and approach the characters with great curiosity for their most primal human fears, their emotional abrasions and abysses. They also follow trails that lead into authoritarian systems of yesterday and today - and ultimately end in a wedding. Or is the happy ending of this fairy tale pure utopia? Musical direction: Ben Glassberg Production, stage and costumes: Alexandra Szemerédy, Magdolna Parditka Chorus: Alice Meregaglia Dramaturgy: Judith Wiemers Grand magic opera in five acts (1842) Libretto: Konstantin Bakturin, Valeriyan Shirkov, Nestor Kukolnik, Mikhail Godenov, Nikolai Markevich and Mikhail Glinka based on the poem of the same name by Alexander Pushkin
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Ruslan und Ljudmila

Sat, Nov 22, 2025, 19:30
Ben Glassberg (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorleitung), Gabriela Legun (Ljudmila), Ilia Kazakov (Ruslan), Giorgi Manoshvili (Farlaf), Nicky Spence (Bajan), Nicky Spence (Finn), Artem Krutko (Ratmir), Kristina Stanek (Naina), Natalia Tanasii (Gorislawa), Alexander Roslavets (Swetosar), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
A REDISCOVERY - NATIONAL EPIC OR FAIRYTALE OPERA ABOUT THE FIGHT AGAINST EVIL? Who is good and who is evil in this fairytale opera - and why? The nucleus of Pushkin's setting of Ruslan and Lyudmila by Mikhail Glinka is the abduction of the princess's daughter Lyudmila from Kiev, the center of both the Russian and Ukrainian founding myths. For Ruslan, the warrior promised to her, this marks the beginning of an adventurous journey through the magical realm of a powerful dwarf. The rescue operation escalates into a showdown between the men fighting for Lyudmila. But she herself increasingly becomes a distant vision of love - the longed-for prize for heroism. In 1842, in the midst of the awakening Russian national sentiment, Glinka conceived the idea of a culturally united tsarist empire, in which he merged Slavic, Finnish and Arabic melos with the bel canto fashion of his time. Hungarian directors Alexandra Szemerédy and Magdolna Parditka look behind the magical façade of the legendary world and approach the characters with great curiosity for their most primal human fears, their emotional abrasions and abysses. They also follow trails that lead into authoritarian systems of yesterday and today - and ultimately end in a wedding. Or is the happy ending of this fairy tale pure utopia? Musical direction: Ben Glassberg Production, stage and costumes: Alexandra Szemerédy, Magdolna Parditka Chorus: Alice Meregaglia Dramaturgy: Judith Wiemers Grand magic opera in five acts (1842) Libretto: Konstantin Bakturin, Valeriyan Shirkov, Nestor Kukolnik, Mikhail Godenov, Nikolai Markevich and Mikhail Glinka based on the poem of the same name by Alexander Pushkin

Upcoming Concerts

Concerts featuring Alexander Roslavets in season 2024/25 or later

Artistic depiction of the event
Next week
In Hamburg

Maria Stuarda

Sun, Mar 16, 2025, 18:00
Karin Beier (Inszenierung), Antonino Fogliani (Musical Director), Amber Vandenhoeck (Bühnenbild), Eva Dessecker (Costume), Annette ter Meulen (Licht), Severin Renke (Video), Rita Thiele (Dramaturgie), Eberhard Friedrich (Chorleitung), Barno Ismatullaeva (Elisabetta), Ermonela Jaho (Maria Stuarda), Aebh Kelly (Anna), Long Long (Roberto), Alexander Roslavets (Talbot), Gezim Myshketa (Cecil), Katja Danowski (Double Elisabetta), Sandra Gerling (Double Maria Stuarda), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Maria and Elisabetta: two queens fight for power and love. Between them stands Count Leicester, Elisabetta's lover, who is attracted to Maria. The two women meet in the park of Fotheringhay Castle - a duel of emotions, fought with the weapons of bel canto, coloratura on a knife's edge. In the end, the Catholic Maria will ascend the scaffold with her head held high, while the Protestant Elisabetta will keep her throne but lose her love. Musical Direction: Antonino Fogliani Production: Karin Beier Stage: Amber Vandenhoeck Costumes: Eva Dessecker Lighting: Annette ter Meulen Lighting Dramaturgy: Rita Thiele
Artistic depiction of the event
Next week
In Hamburg

Maria Stuarda

Wed, Mar 19, 2025, 19:00
Karin Beier (Inszenierung), Antonino Fogliani (Musical Director), Amber Vandenhoeck (Bühnenbild), Eva Dessecker (Costume), Annette ter Meulen (Licht), Severin Renke (Video), Rita Thiele (Dramaturgie), Eberhard Friedrich (Chorleitung), Barno Ismatullaeva (Elisabetta), Ermonela Jaho (Maria Stuarda), Aebh Kelly (Anna), Long Long (Roberto), Alexander Roslavets (Talbot), Gezim Myshketa (Cecil), Katja Danowski (Double Elisabetta), Sandra Gerling (Double Maria Stuarda), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Maria and Elisabetta: two queens fight for power and love. Between them stands Count Leicester, Elisabetta's lover, who is attracted to Maria. The two women meet in the park of Fotheringhay Castle - a duel of emotions, fought with the weapons of bel canto, coloratura on a knife's edge. In the end, the Catholic Maria will ascend the scaffold with her head held high, while the Protestant Elisabetta will keep her throne but lose her love. Musical Direction: Antonino Fogliani Production: Karin Beier Stage: Amber Vandenhoeck Costumes: Eva Dessecker Lighting: Annette ter Meulen Lighting Dramaturgy: Rita Thiele
Artistic depiction of the event
Next week
In Hamburg

Maria Stuarda

Sat, Mar 22, 2025, 19:00
Karin Beier (Inszenierung), Antonino Fogliani (Musical Director), Amber Vandenhoeck (Bühnenbild), Eva Dessecker (Costume), Annette ter Meulen (Licht), Severin Renke (Video), Rita Thiele (Dramaturgie), Eberhard Friedrich (Chorleitung), Barno Ismatullaeva (Elisabetta), Ermonela Jaho (Maria Stuarda), Aebh Kelly (Anna), Long Long (Roberto), Alexander Roslavets (Talbot), Gezim Myshketa (Cecil), Katja Danowski (Double Elisabetta), Sandra Gerling (Double Maria Stuarda), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Maria and Elisabetta: two queens fight for power and love. Between them stands Count Leicester, Elisabetta's lover, who is attracted to Maria. The two women meet in the park of Fotheringhay Castle - a duel of emotions, fought with the weapons of bel canto, coloratura on a knife's edge. In the end, the Catholic Maria will ascend the scaffold with her head held high, while the Protestant Elisabetta will keep her throne but lose her love. Musical Direction: Antonino Fogliani Production: Karin Beier Stage: Amber Vandenhoeck Costumes: Eva Dessecker Lighting: Annette ter Meulen Lighting Dramaturgy: Rita Thiele
Artistic depiction of the event
This month
In Hamburg

Maria Stuarda

Tue, Mar 25, 2025, 19:00
Karin Beier (Inszenierung), Antonino Fogliani (Musical Director), Amber Vandenhoeck (Bühnenbild), Eva Dessecker (Costume), Annette ter Meulen (Licht), Severin Renke (Video), Rita Thiele (Dramaturgie), Eberhard Friedrich (Chorleitung), Barno Ismatullaeva (Elisabetta), Ermonela Jaho (Maria Stuarda), Aebh Kelly (Anna), Long Long (Roberto), Alexander Roslavets (Talbot), Gezim Myshketa (Cecil), Katja Danowski (Double Elisabetta), Sandra Gerling (Double Maria Stuarda), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Maria and Elisabetta: two queens fight for power and love. Between them stands Count Leicester, Elisabetta's lover, who is attracted to Maria. The two women meet in the park of Fotheringhay Castle - a duel of emotions, fought with the weapons of bel canto, coloratura on a knife's edge. In the end, the Catholic Maria will ascend the scaffold with her head held high, while the Protestant Elisabetta will keep her throne but lose her love. Musical Direction: Antonino Fogliani Production: Karin Beier Stage: Amber Vandenhoeck Costumes: Eva Dessecker Lighting: Annette ter Meulen Lighting Dramaturgy: Rita Thiele
Artistic depiction of the event
This month
In Hamburg

Maria Stuarda

Fri, Mar 28, 2025, 19:00
Karin Beier (Inszenierung), Antonino Fogliani (Musical Director), Amber Vandenhoeck (Bühnenbild), Eva Dessecker (Costume), Annette ter Meulen (Licht), Severin Renke (Video), Rita Thiele (Dramaturgie), Eberhard Friedrich (Chorleitung), Barno Ismatullaeva (Elisabetta), Ermonela Jaho (Maria Stuarda), Aebh Kelly (Anna), Long Long (Roberto), Alexander Roslavets (Talbot), Gezim Myshketa (Cecil), Katja Danowski (Double Elisabetta), Sandra Gerling (Double Maria Stuarda), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Maria and Elisabetta: two queens fight for power and love. Between them stands Count Leicester, Elisabetta's lover, who is attracted to Maria. The two women meet in the park of Fotheringhay Castle - a duel of emotions, fought with the weapons of bel canto, coloratura on a knife's edge. In the end, the Catholic Maria will ascend the scaffold with her head held high, while the Protestant Elisabetta will keep her throne but lose her love. Musical Direction: Antonino Fogliani Production: Karin Beier Stage: Amber Vandenhoeck Costumes: Eva Dessecker Lighting: Annette ter Meulen Lighting Dramaturgy: Rita Thiele
Artistic depiction of the event
This month
In Hamburg

Maria Stuarda

Sun, Mar 30, 2025, 17:00
Karin Beier (Inszenierung), Antonino Fogliani (Musical Director), Amber Vandenhoeck (Bühnenbild), Eva Dessecker (Costume), Annette ter Meulen (Licht), Rita Thiele (Dramaturgie), Eberhard Friedrich (Chorleitung), Barno Ismatullaeva (Elisabetta), Ermonela Jaho (Maria Stuarda), Aebh Kelly (Anna), Long Long (Roberto), Alexander Roslavets (Talbot), Gezim Myshketa (Cecil), Katja Danowski (Double Elisabetta), Sandra Gerling (Double Maria Stuarda), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Maria and Elisabetta: two queens fight for power and love. Between them stands Count Leicester, Elisabetta's lover, who is attracted to Maria. The two women meet in the park of Fotheringhay Castle - a duel of emotions, fought with the weapons of bel canto, coloratura on a knife's edge. In the end, the Catholic Maria will ascend the scaffold with her head held high, while the Protestant Elisabetta will keep her throne but lose her love. Musical Direction: Antonino Fogliani Production: Karin Beier Stage: Amber Vandenhoeck Costumes: Eva Dessecker Lighting: Annette ter Meulen Lighting Dramaturgy: Rita Thiele
Artistic depiction of the event
Next month
In Hamburg

Maria Stuarda

Wed, Apr 2, 2025, 19:00
Karin Beier (Inszenierung), Antonino Fogliani (Musical Director), Amber Vandenhoeck (Bühnenbild), Eva Dessecker (Costume), Annette ter Meulen (Licht), Severin Renke (Video), Rita Thiele (Dramaturgie), Eberhard Friedrich (Chorleitung), Barno Ismatullaeva (Elisabetta), Ermonela Jaho (Maria Stuarda), Aebh Kelly (Anna), Long Long (Roberto), Alexander Roslavets (Talbot), Gezim Myshketa (Cecil), Katja Danowski (Double Elisabetta), Sandra Gerling (Double Maria Stuarda), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
Maria and Elisabetta: two queens fight for power and love. Between them stands Count Leicester, Elisabetta's lover, who is attracted to Maria. The two women meet in the park of Fotheringhay Castle - a duel of emotions, fought with the weapons of bel canto, coloratura on a knife's edge. In the end, the Catholic Maria will ascend the scaffold with her head held high, while the Protestant Elisabetta will keep her throne but lose her love. Musical Direction: Antonino Fogliani Production: Karin Beier Stage: Amber Vandenhoeck Costumes: Eva Dessecker Lighting: Annette ter Meulen Lighting Dramaturgy: Rita Thiele
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Ruslan und Ljudmila

Sun, Nov 9, 2025, 18:00
Ben Glassberg (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorleitung), Gabriela Legun (Ljudmila), Ilia Kazakov (Ruslan), Giorgi Manoshvili (Farlaf), Nicky Spence (Bajan), Nicky Spence (Finn), Artem Krutko (Ratmir), Kristina Stanek (Naina), Natalia Tanasii (Gorislawa), Alexander Roslavets (Swetosar), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
A REDISCOVERY - NATIONAL EPIC OR FAIRYTALE OPERA ABOUT THE FIGHT AGAINST EVIL? Who is good and who is evil in this fairytale opera - and why? The nucleus of Pushkin's setting of Ruslan and Lyudmila by Mikhail Glinka is the abduction of the princess's daughter Lyudmila from Kiev, the center of both the Russian and Ukrainian founding myths. For Ruslan, the warrior promised to her, this marks the beginning of an adventurous journey through the magical realm of a powerful dwarf. The rescue operation escalates into a showdown between the men fighting for Lyudmila. But she herself increasingly becomes a distant vision of love - the longed-for prize for heroism. In 1842, in the midst of the awakening Russian national sentiment, Glinka conceived the idea of a culturally united tsarist empire, in which he merged Slavic, Finnish and Arabic melos with the bel canto fashion of his time. Hungarian directors Alexandra Szemerédy and Magdolna Parditka look behind the magical façade of the legendary world and approach the characters with great curiosity for their most primal human fears, their emotional abrasions and abysses. They also follow trails that lead into authoritarian systems of yesterday and today - and ultimately end in a wedding. Or is the happy ending of this fairy tale pure utopia? Musical direction: Ben Glassberg Production, stage and costumes: Alexandra Szemerédy, Magdolna Parditka Chorus: Alice Meregaglia Dramaturgy: Judith Wiemers Grand magic opera in five acts (1842) Libretto: Konstantin Bakturin, Valeriyan Shirkov, Nestor Kukolnik, Mikhail Godenov, Nikolai Markevich and Mikhail Glinka based on the poem of the same name by Alexander Pushkin
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Ruslan und Ljudmila

Wed, Nov 12, 2025, 19:00
Ben Glassberg (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorleitung), Gabriela Legun (Ljudmila), Ilia Kazakov (Ruslan), Giorgi Manoshvili (Farlaf), Nicky Spence (Bajan), Nicky Spence (Finn), Artem Krutko (Ratmir), Kristina Stanek (Naina), Natalia Tanasii (Gorislawa), Alexander Roslavets (Swetosar), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
A REDISCOVERY - NATIONAL EPIC OR FAIRYTALE OPERA ABOUT THE FIGHT AGAINST EVIL? Who is good and who is evil in this fairytale opera - and why? The nucleus of Pushkin's setting of Ruslan and Lyudmila by Mikhail Glinka is the abduction of the princess's daughter Lyudmila from Kiev, the center of both the Russian and Ukrainian founding myths. For Ruslan, the warrior promised to her, this marks the beginning of an adventurous journey through the magical realm of a powerful dwarf. The rescue operation escalates into a showdown between the men fighting for Lyudmila. But she herself increasingly becomes a distant vision of love - the longed-for prize for heroism. In 1842, in the midst of the awakening Russian national sentiment, Glinka conceived the idea of a culturally united tsarist empire, in which he merged Slavic, Finnish and Arabic melos with the bel canto fashion of his time. Hungarian directors Alexandra Szemerédy and Magdolna Parditka look behind the magical façade of the legendary world and approach the characters with great curiosity for their most primal human fears, their emotional abrasions and abysses. They also follow trails that lead into authoritarian systems of yesterday and today - and ultimately end in a wedding. Or is the happy ending of this fairy tale pure utopia? Musical direction: Ben Glassberg Production, stage and costumes: Alexandra Szemerédy, Magdolna Parditka Chorus: Alice Meregaglia Dramaturgy: Judith Wiemers Grand magic opera in five acts (1842) Libretto: Konstantin Bakturin, Valeriyan Shirkov, Nestor Kukolnik, Mikhail Godenov, Nikolai Markevich and Mikhail Glinka based on the poem of the same name by Alexander Pushkin
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Ruslan und Ljudmila

Sat, Nov 22, 2025, 19:30
Ben Glassberg (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorleitung), Gabriela Legun (Ljudmila), Ilia Kazakov (Ruslan), Giorgi Manoshvili (Farlaf), Nicky Spence (Bajan), Nicky Spence (Finn), Artem Krutko (Ratmir), Kristina Stanek (Naina), Natalia Tanasii (Gorislawa), Alexander Roslavets (Swetosar), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
A REDISCOVERY - NATIONAL EPIC OR FAIRYTALE OPERA ABOUT THE FIGHT AGAINST EVIL? Who is good and who is evil in this fairytale opera - and why? The nucleus of Pushkin's setting of Ruslan and Lyudmila by Mikhail Glinka is the abduction of the princess's daughter Lyudmila from Kiev, the center of both the Russian and Ukrainian founding myths. For Ruslan, the warrior promised to her, this marks the beginning of an adventurous journey through the magical realm of a powerful dwarf. The rescue operation escalates into a showdown between the men fighting for Lyudmila. But she herself increasingly becomes a distant vision of love - the longed-for prize for heroism. In 1842, in the midst of the awakening Russian national sentiment, Glinka conceived the idea of a culturally united tsarist empire, in which he merged Slavic, Finnish and Arabic melos with the bel canto fashion of his time. Hungarian directors Alexandra Szemerédy and Magdolna Parditka look behind the magical façade of the legendary world and approach the characters with great curiosity for their most primal human fears, their emotional abrasions and abysses. They also follow trails that lead into authoritarian systems of yesterday and today - and ultimately end in a wedding. Or is the happy ending of this fairy tale pure utopia? Musical direction: Ben Glassberg Production, stage and costumes: Alexandra Szemerédy, Magdolna Parditka Chorus: Alice Meregaglia Dramaturgy: Judith Wiemers Grand magic opera in five acts (1842) Libretto: Konstantin Bakturin, Valeriyan Shirkov, Nestor Kukolnik, Mikhail Godenov, Nikolai Markevich and Mikhail Glinka based on the poem of the same name by Alexander Pushkin
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Ruslan und Ljudmila

Thu, Nov 27, 2025, 19:00
Ben Glassberg (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorleitung), Gabriela Legun (Ljudmila), Ilia Kazakov (Ruslan), Giorgi Manoshvili (Farlaf), Nicky Spence (Bajan), Nicky Spence (Finn), Artem Krutko (Ratmir), Kristina Stanek (Naina), Natalia Tanasii (Gorislawa), Alexander Roslavets (Swetosar), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
A REDISCOVERY - NATIONAL EPIC OR FAIRYTALE OPERA ABOUT THE FIGHT AGAINST EVIL? Who is good and who is evil in this fairytale opera - and why? The nucleus of Pushkin's setting of Ruslan and Lyudmila by Mikhail Glinka is the abduction of the princess's daughter Lyudmila from Kiev, the center of both the Russian and Ukrainian founding myths. For Ruslan, the warrior promised to her, this marks the beginning of an adventurous journey through the magical realm of a powerful dwarf. The rescue operation escalates into a showdown between the men fighting for Lyudmila. But she herself increasingly becomes a distant vision of love - the longed-for prize for heroism. In 1842, in the midst of the awakening Russian national sentiment, Glinka conceived the idea of a culturally united tsarist empire, in which he merged Slavic, Finnish and Arabic melos with the bel canto fashion of his time. Hungarian directors Alexandra Szemerédy and Magdolna Parditka look behind the magical façade of the legendary world and approach the characters with great curiosity for their most primal human fears, their emotional abrasions and abysses. They also follow trails that lead into authoritarian systems of yesterday and today - and ultimately end in a wedding. Or is the happy ending of this fairy tale pure utopia? Musical direction: Ben Glassberg Production, stage and costumes: Alexandra Szemerédy, Magdolna Parditka Chorus: Alice Meregaglia Dramaturgy: Judith Wiemers Grand magic opera in five acts (1842) Libretto: Konstantin Bakturin, Valeriyan Shirkov, Nestor Kukolnik, Mikhail Godenov, Nikolai Markevich and Mikhail Glinka based on the poem of the same name by Alexander Pushkin
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Ruslan und Ljudmila

Tue, Dec 2, 2025, 19:00
Ben Glassberg (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorleitung), Gabriela Legun (Ljudmila), Ilia Kazakov (Ruslan), Giorgi Manoshvili (Farlaf), Nicky Spence (Bajan), Nicky Spence (Finn), Artem Krutko (Ratmir), Kristina Stanek (Naina), Natalia Tanasii (Gorislawa), Alexander Roslavets (Swetosar), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
A REDISCOVERY - NATIONAL EPIC OR FAIRYTALE OPERA ABOUT THE FIGHT AGAINST EVIL? Who is good and who is evil in this fairytale opera - and why? The nucleus of Pushkin's setting of Ruslan and Lyudmila by Mikhail Glinka is the abduction of the princess's daughter Lyudmila from Kiev, the center of both the Russian and Ukrainian founding myths. For Ruslan, the warrior promised to her, this marks the beginning of an adventurous journey through the magical realm of a powerful dwarf. The rescue operation escalates into a showdown between the men fighting for Lyudmila. But she herself increasingly becomes a distant vision of love - the longed-for prize for heroism. In 1842, in the midst of the awakening Russian national sentiment, Glinka conceived the idea of a culturally united tsarist empire, in which he merged Slavic, Finnish and Arabic melos with the bel canto fashion of his time. Hungarian directors Alexandra Szemerédy and Magdolna Parditka look behind the magical façade of the legendary world and approach the characters with great curiosity for their most primal human fears, their emotional abrasions and abysses. They also follow trails that lead into authoritarian systems of yesterday and today - and ultimately end in a wedding. Or is the happy ending of this fairy tale pure utopia? Musical direction: Ben Glassberg Production, stage and costumes: Alexandra Szemerédy, Magdolna Parditka Chorus: Alice Meregaglia Dramaturgy: Judith Wiemers Grand magic opera in five acts (1842) Libretto: Konstantin Bakturin, Valeriyan Shirkov, Nestor Kukolnik, Mikhail Godenov, Nikolai Markevich and Mikhail Glinka based on the poem of the same name by Alexander Pushkin
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Il trovatore

Wed, Mar 18, 2026, 19:00
Matteo Beltrami (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Boris Pinkhasovich (Luna), Enea Scala (Manrico), Eleonora Buratto (Leonora), Clementine Margaine (Azucena), Alexander Roslavets (Ferrando), Elizaveta Kulagina (Inez), Colin Aikins (Ruiz), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
For Leonora, the song of the troubadour Manrico holds the promise and glow of love; Manrico's rival Count Luna perceives in it threat and danger. Verdi's opera is a celebration of Italian opera singing at its best - so it is no coincidence that the title character is a singer himself. And yet for the composer, Azucena, Manrico's mother, was the real protagonist. Il trovatore is rich in dramatic intricacies and intense emotions, which Verdi abruptly juxtaposes in images and scenes. Tragedy relentlessly unfolds before our eyes and ears until the truth is revealed in the opera's final seconds. Stage: Alex Eales Costumes: Herbert Murauer Lighting: James Farncombe Video: Philipp Contag-Lada Dramaturgy: Ralf Waldschmidt Chorus: Christian Günther
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Il trovatore

Fri, Mar 20, 2026, 19:00
Matteo Beltrami (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Boris Pinkhasovich (Luna), Enea Scala (Manrico), Eleonora Buratto (Leonora), Clementine Margaine (Azucena), Alexander Roslavets (Ferrando), Elizaveta Kulagina (Inez), Colin Aikins (Ruiz), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
For Leonora, the song of the troubadour Manrico holds the promise and glow of love; Manrico's rival Count Luna perceives in it threat and danger. Verdi's opera is a celebration of Italian opera singing at its best - so it is no coincidence that the title character is a singer himself. And yet for the composer, Azucena, Manrico's mother, was the real protagonist. Il trovatore is rich in dramatic intricacies and intense emotions, which Verdi abruptly juxtaposes in images and scenes. Tragedy relentlessly unfolds before our eyes and ears until the truth is revealed in the opera's final seconds. Stage: Alex Eales Costumes: Herbert Murauer Lighting: James Farncombe Video: Philipp Contag-Lada Dramaturgy: Ralf Waldschmidt Chorus: Christian Günther
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Il trovatore

Wed, Mar 25, 2026, 19:00
Matteo Beltrami (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Boris Pinkhasovich (Luna), Enea Scala (Manrico), Eleonora Buratto (Leonora), Clementine Margaine (Azucena), Alexander Roslavets (Ferrando), Elizaveta Kulagina (Inez), Colin Aikins (Ruiz), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
For Leonora, the song of the troubadour Manrico holds the promise and glow of love; Manrico's rival Count Luna perceives in it threat and danger. Verdi's opera is a celebration of Italian opera singing at its best - so it is no coincidence that the title character is a singer himself. And yet for the composer, Azucena, Manrico's mother, was the real protagonist. Il trovatore is rich in dramatic intricacies and intense emotions, which Verdi abruptly juxtaposes in images and scenes. Tragedy relentlessly unfolds before our eyes and ears until the truth is revealed in the opera's final seconds. Stage: Alex Eales Costumes: Herbert Murauer Lighting: James Farncombe Video: Philipp Contag-Lada Dramaturgy: Ralf Waldschmidt Chorus: Christian Günther
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Il trovatore

Fri, Mar 27, 2026, 19:00
Matteo Beltrami (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Boris Pinkhasovich (Luna), Enea Scala (Manrico), Eleonora Buratto (Leonora), Clementine Margaine (Azucena), Alexander Roslavets (Ferrando), Elizaveta Kulagina (Inez), Colin Aikins (Ruiz), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
For Leonora, the song of the troubadour Manrico holds the promise and glow of love; Manrico's rival Count Luna perceives in it threat and danger. Verdi's opera is a celebration of Italian opera singing at its best - so it is no coincidence that the title character is a singer himself. And yet for the composer, Azucena, Manrico's mother, was the real protagonist. Il trovatore is rich in dramatic intricacies and intense emotions, which Verdi abruptly juxtaposes in images and scenes. Tragedy relentlessly unfolds before our eyes and ears until the truth is revealed in the opera's final seconds. Stage: Alex Eales Costumes: Herbert Murauer Lighting: James Farncombe Video: Philipp Contag-Lada Dramaturgy: Ralf Waldschmidt Chorus: Christian Günther
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Il trovatore

Sat, Apr 4, 2026, 19:00
Matteo Beltrami (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Boris Pinkhasovich (Luna), Enea Scala (Manrico), Eleonora Buratto (Leonora), Clementine Margaine (Azucena), Alexander Roslavets (Ferrando), Elizaveta Kulagina (Inez), Colin Aikins (Ruiz), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
For Leonora, the song of the troubadour Manrico holds the promise and glow of love; Manrico's rival Count Luna perceives in it threat and danger. Verdi's opera is a celebration of Italian opera singing at its best - so it is no coincidence that the title character is a singer himself. And yet for the composer, Azucena, Manrico's mother, was the real protagonist. Il trovatore is rich in dramatic intricacies and intense emotions, which Verdi abruptly juxtaposes in images and scenes. Tragedy relentlessly unfolds before our eyes and ears until the truth is revealed in the opera's final seconds. Stage: Alex Eales Costumes: Herbert Murauer Lighting: James Farncombe Video: Philipp Contag-Lada Dramaturgy: Ralf Waldschmidt Chorus: Christian Günther
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Il trovatore

Wed, Apr 8, 2026, 19:00
Matteo Beltrami (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Boris Pinkhasovich (Luna), Enea Scala (Manrico), Eleonora Buratto (Leonora), Clementine Margaine (Azucena), Alexander Roslavets (Ferrando), Elizaveta Kulagina (Inez), Colin Aikins (Ruiz), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
For Leonora, the song of the troubadour Manrico holds the promise and glow of love; Manrico's rival Count Luna perceives in it threat and danger. Verdi's opera is a celebration of Italian opera singing at its best - so it is no coincidence that the title character is a singer himself. And yet for the composer, Azucena, Manrico's mother, was the real protagonist. Il trovatore is rich in dramatic intricacies and intense emotions, which Verdi abruptly juxtaposes in images and scenes. Tragedy relentlessly unfolds before our eyes and ears until the truth is revealed in the opera's final seconds. Stage: Alex Eales Costumes: Herbert Murauer Lighting: James Farncombe Video: Philipp Contag-Lada Dramaturgy: Ralf Waldschmidt Chorus: Christian Günther
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Der Freischütz

Thu, Apr 23, 2026, 19:30
Yoel Gamzou (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Andrew Hamilton (Ottokar), Narea Son (Ännchen), Alexander Roslavets (Caspar), Dovlet Nurgeldiyev (Max), Clemes Sienknecht (Samiel), Hubert Kowalczyk (Ein Eremit), William Desbiens (Kilian), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
"The success was tremendous and unprecedented! Critics, artists, amateurs and music lovers were intoxicated ... The auditorium roared apart, loudly proclaiming the new miracle." Thus a report on the premiere in 1821 at the Berlin Schauspielhaus. Der Freischütz struck a chord with the times, every barrel organ played the "Jungfernkranz", every street singer performed it, as Heine reports. Weber had discovered the material in an old ghost book. The story of the hunter Max, who devotes himself to the devil in order to win his bride, touches on people's primal fears. The forest, the epitome of the "German soul", becomes a battleground between good and evil. Weber's music depicts the plight and despair of the people with gripping emotionality; the hope of a happy ending is evoked with fervor. Romantic drama and folk play in one, Der Freischütz is set somewhere between dream and nightmare, fascinating to this day. Musikalische Leitung: Yoel Gamzou Production: Andreas Kriegenburg Stage: Harald B. Thor Costumes: Andrea Schraad Lighting: Andreas Grüter Dramaturgy: Angela Beuerle Choreography: Volker Michl
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Der Freischütz

Sun, Apr 26, 2026, 17:00
Yoel Gamzou (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Andrew Hamilton (Ottokar), Narea Son (Ännchen), Alexander Roslavets (Caspar), Dovlet Nurgeldiyev (Max), Clemes Sienknecht (Samiel), Hubert Kowalczyk (Ein Eremit), William Desbiens (Kilian), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
"The success was tremendous and unprecedented! Critics, artists, amateurs and music lovers were intoxicated ... The auditorium roared apart, loudly proclaiming the new miracle." Thus a report on the premiere in 1821 at the Berlin Schauspielhaus. Der Freischütz struck a chord with the times, every barrel organ played the "Jungfernkranz", every street singer performed it, as Heine reports. Weber had discovered the material in an old ghost book. The story of the hunter Max, who devotes himself to the devil in order to win his bride, touches on people's primal fears. The forest, the epitome of the "German soul", becomes a battleground between good and evil. Weber's music depicts the plight and despair of the people with gripping emotionality; the hope of a happy ending is evoked with fervor. Romantic drama and folk play in one, Der Freischütz is set somewhere between dream and nightmare, fascinating to this day. Musikalische Leitung: Yoel Gamzou Production: Andreas Kriegenburg Stage: Harald B. Thor Costumes: Andrea Schraad Lighting: Andreas Grüter Dramaturgy: Angela Beuerle Choreography: Volker Michl
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Der Freischütz

Tue, Apr 28, 2026, 19:30
Yoel Gamzou (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Andrew Hamilton (Ottokar), Narea Son (Ännchen), Alexander Roslavets (Caspar), Dovlet Nurgeldiyev (Max), Clemes Sienknecht (Samiel), Hubert Kowalczyk (Ein Eremit), William Desbiens (Kilian), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
"The success was tremendous and unprecedented! Critics, artists, amateurs and music lovers were intoxicated ... The auditorium roared apart, loudly proclaiming the new miracle." Thus a report on the premiere in 1821 at the Berlin Schauspielhaus. Der Freischütz struck a chord with the times, every barrel organ played the "Jungfernkranz", every street singer performed it, as Heine reports. Weber had discovered the material in an old ghost book. The story of the hunter Max, who devotes himself to the devil in order to win his bride, touches on people's primal fears. The forest, the epitome of the "German soul", becomes a battleground between good and evil. Weber's music depicts the plight and despair of the people with gripping emotionality; the hope of a happy ending is evoked with fervor. Romantic drama and folk play in one, Der Freischütz is set somewhere between dream and nightmare, fascinating to this day. Musikalische Leitung: Yoel Gamzou Production: Andreas Kriegenburg Stage: Harald B. Thor Costumes: Andrea Schraad Lighting: Andreas Grüter Dramaturgy: Angela Beuerle Choreography: Volker Michl
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Der Freischütz

Sun, May 3, 2026, 19:00
Yoel Gamzou (Musical Director), Christian Günther (Chorleitung), Andrew Hamilton (Ottokar), Narea Son (Ännchen), Alexander Roslavets (Caspar), Dovlet Nurgeldiyev (Max), Clemes Sienknecht (Samiel), Hubert Kowalczyk (Ein Eremit), William Desbiens (Kilian), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra)
"The success was tremendous and unprecedented! Critics, artists, amateurs and music lovers were intoxicated ... The auditorium roared apart, loudly proclaiming the new miracle." Thus a report on the premiere in 1821 at the Berlin Schauspielhaus. Der Freischütz struck a chord with the times, every barrel organ played the "Jungfernkranz", every street singer performed it, as Heine reports. Weber had discovered the material in an old ghost book. The story of the hunter Max, who devotes himself to the devil in order to win his bride, touches on people's primal fears. The forest, the epitome of the "German soul", becomes a battleground between good and evil. Weber's music depicts the plight and despair of the people with gripping emotionality; the hope of a happy ending is evoked with fervor. Romantic drama and folk play in one, Der Freischütz is set somewhere between dream and nightmare, fascinating to this day. Musikalische Leitung: Yoel Gamzou Production: Andreas Kriegenburg Stage: Harald B. Thor Costumes: Andrea Schraad Lighting: Andreas Grüter Dramaturgy: Angela Beuerle Choreography: Volker Michl
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Luisa Miller

Sun, May 24, 2026, 18:00
Henrik Nánási (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorus), Gábor Bretz (Il Conte di Walter), Pavol Breslik (Rodolfo), George Petean (Miller), Elbenita Kajtazi (Luisa), Alexander Roslavets (Wurm), Kristina Stanek (Federica), Elizaveta Kulagina (Laura), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus)
"Luisa Miller" is Giuseppe Verdi’s third setting of a play by Friedrich Schiller. “It is a great drama, full of passion and very effective in theatrical terms,” the composer wrote to the librettist Salvadore Cammarano about Kabale und Liebe. In order to conform to the expectations of the censors and audience, Verdi first had to reduce the play to a libretto suitable for opera, moving the focus from Schiller’s political tale to the family drama. In his opera, first performed in Naples in 1849, Verdi produced outstanding character studies of all his protagonists. In this work he laid the foundation for many “Verdi types” of later years, e.g. Iago, Giorgio Germont, Aida or Desdemona. Luisa Miller was first performed in Hamburg at the Hamburg State Opera in 1981 in a new production conducted by Giuseppe Sinopoli and directed by Luciano Damiani, who also designed the sets and costumes at the time. Director: Andreas Homoki Set Designer: Paul Zoller Costume Designer: Gideon Davey Lighting Designer: Franck Evin Premiere: 16.11.2014
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Luisa Miller

Thu, May 28, 2026, 19:30
Henrik Nánási (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorus), Gábor Bretz (Il Conte di Walter), Pavol Breslik (Rodolfo), George Petean (Miller), Elbenita Kajtazi (Luisa), Alexander Roslavets (Wurm), Kristina Stanek (Federica), Elizaveta Kulagina (Laura), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus)
"Luisa Miller" is Giuseppe Verdi’s third setting of a play by Friedrich Schiller. “It is a great drama, full of passion and very effective in theatrical terms,” the composer wrote to the librettist Salvadore Cammarano about Kabale und Liebe. In order to conform to the expectations of the censors and audience, Verdi first had to reduce the play to a libretto suitable for opera, moving the focus from Schiller’s political tale to the family drama. In his opera, first performed in Naples in 1849, Verdi produced outstanding character studies of all his protagonists. In this work he laid the foundation for many “Verdi types” of later years, e.g. Iago, Giorgio Germont, Aida or Desdemona. Luisa Miller was first performed in Hamburg at the Hamburg State Opera in 1981 in a new production conducted by Giuseppe Sinopoli and directed by Luciano Damiani, who also designed the sets and costumes at the time. Director: Andreas Homoki Set Designer: Paul Zoller Costume Designer: Gideon Davey Lighting Designer: Franck Evin Premiere: 16.11.2014
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Luisa Miller

Sat, May 30, 2026, 19:30
Henrik Nánási (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorus), Gábor Bretz (Il Conte di Walter), Pavol Breslik (Rodolfo), George Petean (Miller), Elbenita Kajtazi (Luisa), Alexander Roslavets (Wurm), Kristina Stanek (Federica), Elizaveta Kulagina (Laura), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus)
"Luisa Miller" is Giuseppe Verdi’s third setting of a play by Friedrich Schiller. “It is a great drama, full of passion and very effective in theatrical terms,” the composer wrote to the librettist Salvadore Cammarano about Kabale und Liebe. In order to conform to the expectations of the censors and audience, Verdi first had to reduce the play to a libretto suitable for opera, moving the focus from Schiller’s political tale to the family drama. In his opera, first performed in Naples in 1849, Verdi produced outstanding character studies of all his protagonists. In this work he laid the foundation for many “Verdi types” of later years, e.g. Iago, Giorgio Germont, Aida or Desdemona. Luisa Miller was first performed in Hamburg at the Hamburg State Opera in 1981 in a new production conducted by Giuseppe Sinopoli and directed by Luciano Damiani, who also designed the sets and costumes at the time. Director: Andreas Homoki Set Designer: Paul Zoller Costume Designer: Gideon Davey Lighting Designer: Franck Evin Premiere: 16.11.2014
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Luisa Miller

Wed, Jun 3, 2026, 19:30
Henrik Nánási (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorus), Gábor Bretz (Il Conte di Walter), Pavol Breslik (Rodolfo), George Petean (Miller), Elbenita Kajtazi (Luisa), Alexander Roslavets (Wurm), Kristina Stanek (Federica), Elizaveta Kulagina (Laura), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus)
"Luisa Miller" is Giuseppe Verdi’s third setting of a play by Friedrich Schiller. “It is a great drama, full of passion and very effective in theatrical terms,” the composer wrote to the librettist Salvadore Cammarano about Kabale und Liebe. In order to conform to the expectations of the censors and audience, Verdi first had to reduce the play to a libretto suitable for opera, moving the focus from Schiller’s political tale to the family drama. In his opera, first performed in Naples in 1849, Verdi produced outstanding character studies of all his protagonists. In this work he laid the foundation for many “Verdi types” of later years, e.g. Iago, Giorgio Germont, Aida or Desdemona. Luisa Miller was first performed in Hamburg at the Hamburg State Opera in 1981 in a new production conducted by Giuseppe Sinopoli and directed by Luciano Damiani, who also designed the sets and costumes at the time. Director: Andreas Homoki Set Designer: Paul Zoller Costume Designer: Gideon Davey Lighting Designer: Franck Evin Premiere: 16.11.2014
Artistic depiction of the event
This season
In Hamburg

Luisa Miller

Fri, Jun 5, 2026, 19:00
Henrik Nánási (Musical Director), Alice Meregaglia (Chorus), Gábor Bretz (Il Conte di Walter), Pavol Breslik (Rodolfo), George Petean (Miller), Elbenita Kajtazi (Luisa), Alexander Roslavets (Wurm), Kristina Stanek (Federica), Elizaveta Kulagina (Laura), Philharmonisches Staatsorchester Hamburg (Orchestra), Chor der Hamburgischen Staatsoper (Chorus)
"Luisa Miller" is Giuseppe Verdi’s third setting of a play by Friedrich Schiller. “It is a great drama, full of passion and very effective in theatrical terms,” the composer wrote to the librettist Salvadore Cammarano about Kabale und Liebe. In order to conform to the expectations of the censors and audience, Verdi first had to reduce the play to a libretto suitable for opera, moving the focus from Schiller’s political tale to the family drama. In his opera, first performed in Naples in 1849, Verdi produced outstanding character studies of all his protagonists. In this work he laid the foundation for many “Verdi types” of later years, e.g. Iago, Giorgio Germont, Aida or Desdemona. Luisa Miller was first performed in Hamburg at the Hamburg State Opera in 1981 in a new production conducted by Giuseppe Sinopoli and directed by Luciano Damiani, who also designed the sets and costumes at the time. Director: Andreas Homoki Set Designer: Paul Zoller Costume Designer: Gideon Davey Lighting Designer: Franck Evin Premiere: 16.11.2014