login | register
EN  |  DE

PROGRAMME DETAIL

Giacomo Puccini Manon Lescaut

Opera in four acts by Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924)
Text by Ruggero Leoncavallo (1857–1919), Marco Praga (1862–1929), Domenico Oliva (1860–1917), Luigi Illica (1857–1919), Giuseppe Giacosa (1847–1906), Giulio Ricordi (1840–1912) and Giuseppe Adami (1878–1946) after the novel Histoire du chevalier des Grieux et de Manon Lescaut by the Abbé Prévost (1697–1763)

Concert performance

With German and English surtitles

After the performance on August 7 there will be a gala soirée in honour of Anna Netrebko in Salzburg’s Residenz. The net income will be donated to the Salzburg Festival education programmes.

Duration of the opera approx. 2 hours and 50 minutes.

DATE

  • 01 August 2016, 19:30
  • 04 August 2016, 19:30
  • 07 August 2016, 16:30

Print programme (PDF)

CREATIVE TEAM

Marco Armiliato, Conductor
Ernst Raffelsberger, Chorus Master

CAST

Anna Netrebko, Manon Lescaut
Yusif Eyvazov, Renato Des Grieux
Armando Piña, Lescaut
Carlos Chausson, Geronte di Ravoir
Benjamin Bernheim, Edmondo
Erik Anstine, Oste / Sergente
Patrick Vogel, Maestro di ballo / Lampionaio
Szilvia Vörös*, Musico
Simon Shibambu*, Commandante

Concert Association of the Vienna State Opera Chorus
Münchner Rundfunkorchester
*Member of the Young Singers Project

ABOUT THE PRODUCTION

‘My faults will be forgotten, but my love will never die.’ These words mark the end of Manon’s life in Puccini’s opera, whose premier in 1893 had been preceded by a long struggle with this Rococo character, brought to literary life by the Abbé Prévost in 1731. The Histoire du chevalier des Grieux et de Manon Lescaut soon achieved success as the most widely read novel of love, one whose sensibility would find continuation in Goethe’s Werther and Rousseau’s Héloïse – no matter that Prévost’s novel was vilified as ‘an abominable book that deserved being consigned to the flames along with its author’. When Puccini discovered Manon, he was about as old as Prévost had been in his own day, and the composer likewise found new methods of expression on the basis of this character. What he presents on stage is not a continuous plot that follows Prévost’s narration but a station drama, a succession of episodes, instead. Puccini takes up four moments from the life of Manon; their logical sequence in the libretto can be easily traced by those familiar with the source, to be sure, but in the end it is inessential. Each of the four moments shows the couple, Manon and Des Grieux, fleeing. Des Grieux’s flight with Manon in Act One, undertaken to escape her seduction by Geronte, has a good outcome, but it is foiled as early as the second act. Manon’s inability to break away from a life of luxury, which had drawn her to Geronte’s house in the first place, leads to her arrest and the decree of banishment. In Act Three, the attempt to set her free fails, but the way nonetheless appears open for their happy future together, since Des Grieux can join her in her exile. Once more, then, they are in flight; for Manon’s sake, Des Grieux has become a murderer, but we find out nothing about the background. The only consideration is a love drama between two people in a space constituted only by the music, and it is music that speaks of deep despair but at the same time allows us to sense the happiness denied to the lovers.

Ronny Dietrich
(Translation: Vincent Kling)



search