Il Trittico

GIACOMO PUCCINI

»HELL IS OTHER PEOPLE.«

 JEAN-PAUL SARTRE

Conductor  PHILIPPE JORDAN
Director  TATJANA GÜRBACA
Stage Design  HENRIK AHR
Costume Design  SILKE WILLRETT
Lighting  STEFAN BOLLIGER
Costume collaboration  Carl-Christian Andresen


IL TABARRO Oper in one act
Libretto GIUSEPPE ADAMI based on a work by DIDIER GOLD

Michele  CARLOS ÁLVAREZ
Giorgetta  ANJA KAMPE
Luigi  JOSHUA GUERRERO
Tinca  ANDREA GIOVANNINI
Talpa  DAN PAUL DUMITRESCU
Frugola  MONIKA BOHINEC
Ein Liederverkäufer  KATLEHO MOKHOABANE 
Ein Liebespaar  FLORINA ILIE, TED BLACK

In the second series the role of Giorgetta is sung by ELENA STIKHINA
and the roles of the lovers are sung by MIRIAM KUTROWATZ and AGUSTÍN GÓMEZ.


SUOR ANGELICA Oper in one act
Libretto GIOVACCHINO FORZANO

Schwester Angelica  ELEONORA BURATTO
Fürstin  MICHAELA SCHUSTER 
Äbtissin  MONIKA BOHINEC 
Lehrmeisterin der Novizinnen  PATRICIA NOLZ
Schwester Eiferin  DARIA SUSHKOVA
Schwester Genoveva  FLORINA ILIE
Schwester Pflegerin  ISABEL SIGNORET
Almosensucherin  ANNA BONDARENKO


In the second series the role of Sister Angelica is sung by ELENA STIKHINA
and the roles of the Mistress of the Novices and Infirmary Sister are sung by ALMA NEUHAUS.


GIANNI SCHICCHI Oper in one act
Libretto GIOVACCHINO FORZANO based on the 30TH CANTO OF DANTE’S INFERNO

Gianni Schicchi  CARLOS ÁLVAREZ
Lauretta  SERENA SÁENZ
Zita  MICHAELA SCHUSTER
Rinuccio  BOGDAN VOLKOV
Gherardo  ANDREA GIOVANNINI
Nella  ANNA BONDARENKO
Betto di Signa  CLEMENS UNTERREINER
Simone  DAN PAUL DUMITRESCU
Marco  ATTILA MOKUS
La Ciesca  PATRICIA NOLZ
Maestro Spinelloccio  HANS PETER KAMMERER
Amantio di Nicolao  SIMONAS STRAZDAS


In the second series the role of Lauretta is sung by FLORINA ILIE,
the role of Betto di Signa by MARTIN HÄSSLER, and the role of Ciesca by DARIA SUSHKOVA.


Introductory matinee  24. SEPTEMBER 2023
Premiere  4. OCTOBER 2023
Premieren series  4. / 7. / 13. / 16. / 20. / 23. OCTOBER 2023
2nd series  14. / 17. / 20. / 24. FEBRUARY 2024


TICKETS

Three different stories that form a programme together. The idea of Il trittico is easy to describe, but the underlying thought is all the more complex. Around 1900, Giacomo Puccini was attracted by the idea of developing a triptych from three one-act operas and wanted them to be linked by a complex dramaturgical thread. Rather than the plots themselves, the decisive element was to be the dominant emotional colours. A drama of moods.

Puccini’s idea is closely linked to a technique which he was a master of. So-called »controscene« had already played an important role in earlier works – multi-layered scenic tableaux, like the start of the Quartier Latin scene in Bohème, where different emotions, which Puccini called colours (tinte) were effectively shown as brief highlights. The Trittico, as Puccini conceived it, would ex- pand this principle so that three short pieces, each with their own colour, would result in a finely matched whole. The search was on for a tragic work, a »sentimental« one and a comic piece, very much in the sense of the scene from Bohème, which Puccini specified in a letter as having these three emotional moods.

Puccini had such exact ideas about the character of the three moods that the search for the right material proved extremely difficult. Ultimately, he found the tragic first part that would become Il tabarro in Didier Gold’s drama La Houppelande. This was another instance when a visit to a play led to inspiration for one of Puccini’s successful operas – this was how he had found the sources for Tosca (by Victorien Sardou), Madama Butterfly and La fanciulla del West (both by David Belasco). Il tabarro is a dark marital drama, set in the world of the Seine skippers. The couple, Michele and Giorgetta, are divided by grief for their dead child, and Giorgetta’s affair with the labourer Luigi ends in tragedy.

Puccini composed the first part relatively quickly, but the search for the two tinte which he felt should follow the first took on almost epic dimensions. In the end, it took a full 18 years from the first idea to the New York premiere. Suor Angelica, the »sentimental« story, which Giovacchino Forzano wrote the libretto for, tells of the suffering of the protagonist, a nun who finds  the memory of her son – the result of a »slip« which brought her to the convent – until she is deprived of this support. For the comical third part, Gianni Schicchi, Forzano drew on a brief episode from Dante’s Inferno. To get the inheritance of the wealthy Florentine Buoso Donati, his relatives persuade Gianni Schicchi to pose as the dying Buoso and appear to dictate a will in their favour.

Each of the pieces has its own fascinating musical originality. There is the relentless, flowing river motif in Il tabarro, interrupted by Puccini’s incomparable realisms, ships’ sirens, honking vehicles, little incidental scenes. The deceptive peace of the convent conversation in Suor Angelica, which is continued with incredible dramatic musical precision to the culmination (embodied in »Senza mamma«, one of the best-known and most moving arias in opera history).

The musical joke in Gianni Schicchi runs through its extensive manifestations, from wild hilarity to amusing chaos.Puccini was passionately concerned about the overall structure and effect of his concept. It is a marvellous challenge for a new production, since – like the tinte in the little controscene in Bohème – the three parts of Il trittico are placed in a greater context, indeed the greatest imaginable context: their tinte are the colours of human relationships. Irresistibly simple, and incredibly complex – the innermost core of Il trittico. A Human Comedy for the opera stage.

SPOTIFY PLAYLIST TO GET IN THE MOOD



About the Playlist

Even though Puccini's one-act operas, especially Gianni Schicchi, are ensemble pieces, in the course of performance history individual solo scenes were extracted from the through-composed works, mostly for portrait albums and concerts: The two tenor »solos« from Il Tabarro and Gianni Schicchi, Michele's monologue (also heard in the alternate version on our playlist), Giorgetta's dream of a better life, Angelica's monologue Senza mamma and her suicide scene. The most prominent example, however, is Lauretta's O mio babbino caro - which, unfortunately, is often given in concerts divorced from its context, as a popular encore where one can once again show off one's beautiful voice. The Callas recording, however, leaves no doubt about what is at stake here: a daughter who wants to marry triggers her father with emotional blackmail (»If my love should be in vain, I will go to the Ponte Vecchio and throw myself into the Arno!«).

»How difficult it is to be happy!« Giorgetta’s sigh from Il tabarro is like a title for the three parts of Puccini’s Il trittico. How, driven by our passions and desires, we all create hell on earth in our very different ways is the great human theme developed in Il tabarro, Suor Angelica and Gianni Schicchi. A sentence from Jean-Paul Sartre’s Huis clos would also be a very suitable title: »Hell is other people‹«