Pappano to kick off new Ring  as he leaves Covent Garden

Pappano to kick off new Ring as he leaves Covent Garden

Opera

norman lebrecht

April 26, 2023

The  Royal Opera House  has  just published  its 2023-24  season, Antonio Pappano’s  last as music director.

He will open the season with Barrie Kosky’s reconception of Das Rheingold, featuring Christopher Maltman as Wotan and Christopher Purves as Alberich. Pappano’s other new production will be Christoph Loy’s adaptation of Strauss’s Elektra, starring Nina Stemme and Karita Mattila.

In all, there will be eight new productions across the main stage and the Linbury Theatre.

Press release follows.

The Royal Opera opens its Season with two landmark works on both of our stages. On the Main Stage, Antonio Pappano partners with Barrie Kosky for the first time to conduct a bold new imagining of Wagner’s first chapter of the Ring cycle, Das Rheingold – a massive undertaking for any opera house with an outstanding cast including Christopher Maltman as Wotan and Christopher Purves as Alberich.

In the Linbury Theatre, George Benjamin and Martin Crimp bring us Picture a day like this – a major new work which receives its UK premiere following the world premiere this summer at the Festival d’Aix-en-Provence. After the historic success of Lessons in Love and Violence and Written on Skin, Benjamin and Crimp return alongside stage directors Daniel Jeanneteau and Marie-Christine Soma.

Antonio Pappano, whose first new production at the Royal Opera House was Christof Loy’s production of Strauss’ Ariadne auf Naxos in 2002, conducts his last new production at the Royal Opera House in Loy’s eagerly anticipated adaptation of Strauss’s Elektra – uniting two of today’s leading dramatic sopranos: Nina Stemme in the title role, and Karita Mattila as the haunted queen Klytämnestra.

In May, a Farewell Gala Concert for Antonio Pappano will see a stellar cast of soloists perform alongside the Chorus and Orchestra in celebration of his 23-year tenure. Maestro Pappano will then lead a cast that includes his longtime collaborator Jonas Kaufmann, and Sondra Radvanovsky and Carlos Álvarez in a revival of David McVicar’s lavish production of Giordano’s Andrea Chénier.

In June 2024, The Royal Opera is delighted to be returning to Japan on tour for the first time since 2019 with performances at Bunka Kaikan Theatre and NHK Hall in Tokyo, and Kanagawa Kenmin Hall in Yokohama. Antonio Pappano will be conducting spectacular casts in Oliver Mears’s darkly elegant production of Verdi’s Rigoletto and Andrei Șerban’s classic staging of Puccini’s Turandot.

The Royal Opera’s exploration into Handel’s Covent Garden operas and oratorios continues with his final masterpiece, Jephtha, which premiered on this site in 1752. This epic new production is staged by Director of The Royal Opera Oliver Mears and is conducted by Handel specialist Laurence Cummings. Extraordinary tenor Allan Clayton performs the title role, joined by an outstanding, largely British cast including Jennifer France, Alice Coote and Brindley Sherratt.

Aigul Akhmetshina and Vasilisa Berzhanskaya share the role of Carmen in Damiano Michieletto’s poetic, contemporary new staging of Bizet’s beloved Carmen. Antonello Manacorda and Emmanuel Villaume conduct two accomplished casts in this sultry new production which evokes the passion and heat of Bizet’s score.

Next Season, the Royal Opera collaborate with Fuel for the first time, presenting the world premiere of Woman & Machine – a ground-breaking binaural opera experience from Mercury-nominated songwriter ESKA, directed by Kirsty Housley. Incorporating the sonic worlds of the neonatal unit and the womb, with influences of contemporary, electronic and Zimbabwean Shona Music, this new work connects themes of life, survival and womanhood.

This Christmas, a range of family favourites return to our stages. Little Bulb’s Oliver award-winning Wolf Witch Giant Fairy will excite children and families in the Linbury Theatre with the original troupe of travelling players returning as the energetic ensemble cast, bringing this endearing folk opera to new audiences, young and old. On the main stage, music lovers of all ages can enjoy Antony McDonald’s mischievous production of Humperdinck’s Hansel and Gretel, newly translated into English by Kelley Rourke. Mark Wigglesworth conducts two stellar casts including Anna Stéphany, Hanna Hipp, Anna Devin and Lauren Fagan.

Following the Irish National Opera’s (INO) Olivier award-winning Bajazet and Least Like The Other, INO and The Royal Opera present their third collaboration: a brand-new staging of Vivaldi’s 1734 opera, L’Olimpiade. The production is directed by Daisy Evans, with conductor Peter Wheelan leading the Irish Baroque Orchestra.

In April, the Jette Parker Artists present a thrilling double-bill. Eleanor Burke directs Martinů’s surreal one-act opera Larmes de couteau and Harriet Taylor directs John Harbison’s adaptation of text from W.B. Yeats’ Full Moon in March. Both works are conducted by Edward Reeve, who will lead the Britten Sinfonia.

The 2023/24 Season also features a raft of beloved revivals including Christof Loy’s La Forza del Destino, Laurent Pelly’s L’elisir d’amore, Oliver Mears’s Rigoletto, Damiano Michieletto’s heat-soaked double-bill Cavalleria rusticana/Pagliacci, Richard Jones’ production of La bohème, Jonathan Kent’s Tosca, Tim Albery’s production of Wagner’s The Flying Dutchman, Moshe Leiser’s and Patrice Caurier’s Madama Butterfly, Katie Mitchell’s production of Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor, and Jan Philipp Gloger’s production of Così fan tutte.

Director of The Royal Opera, Oliver Mears, said:

“Despite opera in the UK being under pressure as never before, The Royal Opera is determined to mark Antonio Pappano’s final season as Music Director with ambition and style across our diverse output. We embark on the mammoth task of a new Ring cycle directed by Barrie Kosky, produce eight thrilling new productions across both our stages, continue our Covent Garden Handel odyssey, and – as we have for three hundred years – present the very finest singers and conductors working in the world today. This will be a season our audiences will love – and a fitting final bow for one of our most treasured ever colleagues.”

Comments

  • Ernest says:

    Hmmm, am waiting for the cast lists for Rigoletto and Turandot in Tokyo in June 2024 … perhaps Oropesa, Pirozzi et al?

  • Alexander Jacoby says:

    I know times are tough for opera, but this feels like the least enterprising season I can remember. Chock full of revivals and the only rarities are in the Linbury. Come back Kasper Holten, all is forgiven!

  • Elizabeth Owen says:

    Sounds wonderful, can’t wait and I’m going to be broke!

    • Alexander Jacoby says:

      I suppose I’m going to be broke too – with all the trips I’ll have to make to France, Germany, Austria and Czechia to immerse myself in more enterprising repertoire!

  • Paul Dawson says:

    Two Rings being developed almost side-by-side in London. As a fanatical Wagnerian, I would welcome this, were I living in London. However, I feel this might serve as grist to ACE’s mill.

    I am reminded of the ROH’s attempt to block the Goodall Ring, on the grounds that this was ‘their’ territory. Mercifully, they lost that battle, but whether or not the ROH Ring outshines the joint ENO/Met version, one could understand ACE arguing that the overlap strengthens the case for ENO being regarded as redundant in London.

  • KEVAN STUART WIGHTMAN says:

    It is not ENO that should lose its funding it should the ROH on the basis of this, a total disgrace. Tosca, Butterfly, La Boheme, Carmen all on top of each other. If the Benjamin premiere is such a big deal then why is it not staged in the main house? Woeful!

  • Tik Tovak says:

    Great news about Pappano but alas Barrie Kosky and his usual rubbish. The current management will blame poverty for the lacklustre season when in truth they are artisticially bankrupt.

  • Hugh Kerr Edinburgh Music Review says:

    After my visit to the Berlin Ring last October (see my review in the Edinburgh Music Review) I’m a bit wary of Barry Kosky’s new production, however I think the programme overall looks very interesting. Also I’ve been going to Covent Garden since the 1960s and I think Tony Pappano has been the best music director of all.

    • Robin Worth says:

      One has to agree with you about Pappano, but it is a shame that his last season is so weak

      Mr Lebrecht, quite reasonably, reprints the ROH blurb without much comment. But I wonder if he is as dismayed as I am to see such a slab of dreary revivals, including Mitchell’s dismal Lucia.

    • Player says:

      Well, I am Editor of the ‘Hugh Kerr Edinburgh Music Review’ Review, and I say boo to you, poo poo to you! [Gilbert & Sullivan]

      Once again, you make assertions without adducing any evidence, musical or otherwise..

    • Don Ciccio says:

      “Also I’ve been going to Covent Garden since the 1960s and I think Tony Pappano has been the best music director of all.”

      That’s quite of a statement, if one keeps in mind that the music directors from the 60s on were Georg Soliti, Colin Davis, and Bernard Haitink.

  • Anthony Sayer says:

    Why are we subjected to ‘thrilling’, ‘beloved’, ‘delighted’, ‘eagerly anticipated’ etc etc ad nauseam? It makes the ROH sound like a provincial American company trying to drum up interest in an art form on the fringes of local public interest.

    Honestly, just take pride in offering something highbrow and stop apologising for catering to the curious.

  • Maestra says:

    I doubt Chris Maltman will be heard over a wagnerian orchestra. Wrong voice, wrong role.

  • Warrick Snowball says:

    Purely as an observer who is unlikely to be present at ROH, I deplore the fact that opera facts often present themselves in the sequence; producer artists then almost as an afterthought, composer. Particularly in the case of Wagner and the ring. The composer left reams of stage
    directions which are often ignored in favour of the latest Joe Soap’s visions. Change the text? Never. Revise the score? Not likely. Ignore the stage directions? What stage directions?

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