Nabucco
Giuseppe Verdi
Opera in four acts
Libretto: Temistocle Solera after Auguste Anicet-Bourgeois and Francis Cornue
World premiere: 9 March 1842, Regio Teatro alla Scala, Milan
Warsaw premiere: 25 February 1854, Teatr Wielki
Premiere of this production: 26 June 1992
In the original Italian with Polish surtitles
Coincidence, serendipity, or perhaps fate? It is the year 1842. Verdi, a widower, is working on Nabucco, following the failure of his opera Un giorno di regno. The soprano Giuseppina Strepponi agrees to sing the part of Abigaille. The opera is a success. The composer gains fame and… a second wife – Giuseppina gives up the career of a singer for him. The chorus from act three, Va, pensiero, becomes the unofficial anthem of Italy. Verdi goes on to compose several other famous operas, but it is Va, pensiero – a sublime song of Jewish slaves performed by the nine-hundred strong chorus of La Scala – that resounds a month after his and his wife’s death as they are interred in the Casa di Riposo per Musicisti chapel, sent off by three hundred thousand inhabitants of Milan. In Warsaw the famous tune is performed by the excellent chorus prepared by Bogdan Gola and sounds out against the background of the monumental steps of the Temple in Jerusalem erected by the outstanding set designer Andrzej Kreutz Majewski. Since 1992 it has invariably evoked a sense of nostalgia in the audience. The Israeli-Babylonian conflict plays out in Marek Weiss’ beautiful staging on a big and variegated scale in both the political and family dimension. Nabucco captivates, moves and impresses with its musical execution. It gives the audience an opportunity to experience classical opera at its best.
Cast
Credits
Synopsis
Sponsors
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Mecenas Teatru Wielkiego - Opery Narodowej
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Partnerzy Teatru Wielkiego - Opery Narodowej
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Partner spektaklu
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Patroni medialni
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Patron of Teatr Wielki – Polish National Opera
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Partners of Teatr Wielki – Polish National Opera
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Partner of the production
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Media patrons