Not Only Love (Saint-Petersburg Opera Theatre, opera)
Not Only Love (Saint-Petersburg Opera Theatre, opera)
about theatre
| Ticket price: Tickets available by request Genre: Opera
| Age restriction: 16+ | Length: 3 hour
Artists
Conductor of the performance:Maxim Valkov
Varvara Vasilyevna: Larisa Pominova Volodya Gavrilov :Vladislav Mazankin Natasha:Evgenya Kravchenko Fedot Petrovich:Anton Morozov Ivan Trofimov :Yuri Borshchev Mishka :Leonty Salienski Grishka :Denis Akhmetshin The girl with high voice:Natalya Pleshkova Katerina:Izabella Bazina Kondurushkin:Alexander Koryakov Anyutka:Karolina Shapovalova Young man : Dmitry Udi
Credits
Music: Rodion Shchedrin Libretto: Vasily Katanyan after stories by Sergei Antonov Production: Yuri Alexandrov Conductors: Alexander Goikhman Maxim Valkov Set and Costume Designer: Vyacheslav Okunev Lighting Designer: Irina Vtornikova Directors: Natalia Chernikova Darya Modzalevskaya Tatyana Karpacheva Chorus Master: Maria Gergel Musical Preparation: Olga Mityokina Choreographer: Nadezhda Kalinina Video-art: Viktoria Zlotnikova
Description
The performance is the winner of the highest St. Petersburg theatrical award, Golden spotlights in the 2013-2014 season as the best drama performance at the opera house. The St. Petersburg premiere of "Not Only Love" by the famous composer Rodion Shchedrin was a landmark event. The composer himself described it as the best performance of his opera."Not Only Love" is a bright, sparkling performance that is close to the musical in its genre. The main focus of the performance, as director Yuri Alexandrov sees it, is love, of course. "The theme of love" , the director says, "is eternal and always relevant, no matter in what scenery it takes place."The performance attracts the audience with its free vocal, the "openness" of acting and lots of dancing. It is full of light lyricism and irony, that "juicy" humour typical for this genre and high drama. In its plot some experienced music lovers will recognize parallels with "Eugene Onegin" and even "Carmen." Rodion Shchedrin, who saw the premiere in the St. Petersburg Chamber Opera, recalled the devastating 1961 performance. "Do you know why the show failed then? Because they were afraid of sex. And here today they are not. And it worked out. Personally, I can see on the stage a huge amount of love for those times and those people."