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The Lefthander (Mariinsky II New Theatre, opera)

The Lefthander (Mariinsky II New Theatre, opera)

Genre: Opera Language: Russian (English supertitles) Age restriction: 12+ Length: 2 hours 45 minutes Intermissions: 1

 

Credits


Music and libretto by Rodion Shchedrin
Musical Director and Conductor: Valery Gergiev
Stage Director: Alexei Stepanyuk
Conductor: Pavel Petrenko
Set Designer: Alexander Orlov
Costume Designer: Irina Cherednikova
Musical Preparation: Irina Soboleva
Principal Chorus Master: Andrei Petrenko
Choreographer: Ilya Ustyantsev
Lighting Designer: Alexander Sivaev

Artists


Conductor: Valery Gergiev
The Lefthander: Andrei Popov
Ataman Platov: Edward Tsanga
Alexander I, Nicholas I: Vladimir Moroz
Princess Charlotte: Maria Maksakova
The Flea: Kristina Alieva
An English Under-Skipper: Edem Umerov
Count Kiselvrode: Alexander Timchenko
First Speaking Woman: Yekaterina Goncharova
Second Speaking Woman: Yulia Matochkina

Commissioned by the Mariinsky Theatre 
To Valery Gergiev for his 60th birthday 

Lefthander is the most famous story by Nikolai Leskov. In Russia everyone, but everyone knows it. Leskov’s tale is an incredibly rich literary source for an opera plot. The plot of the tale itself is a grotesque exaggeration. What is it? 
Is it a Biblical parable, a farcical fairground myth or an epic tale? 
The characters are vivid, luscious and contrasting. The Russian Tsars Alexander I and Nicholas I, the Winter Palace, the British Court. A buffonade and a tragedy. Laughter through tears... But if you look a little deeper then you can clearly see the artistic contradistinctions of two kinds of life – the rational British and the irrational Russian. 
And, finally, there is the protagonist. The cross-eyed illiterate artisan with “golden hands” from Tula. He is a condensed representation, I believe, of the most important and the most typical features of the Russian national character – innate talent, wit, self irony, indifference to human life and a pernicious love of alcohol. And the eternal Russian theme of power and the common man. The lack of need for genius in one’s own country... 
This full-length two-act opera was composed for the opening of the new stage of the Mariinsky Theatre in St Petersburg (Mariinsky-II). Valery Gergiev, who turned sixty this year, is the Musical Director and Conductor. 

 

Mariinsky II (New) Theatre playbill


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