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Tosca, Puccini
D: Robert Carsen
C: Paolo Carignani
Floria Tosca plays the diva in Robert Carsen's Zurich staging

Floria Tosca is an opera singer, a diva, but in Victorien Sardou’s play – and in Puccini’s opera – we mainly see her as a woman in love, tormented by jealousy, whose life is shattered by a powerful, unprincipled man who does not hesitate to sentence her lover to death and blackmail her into submitting to his desires in her desperate attempt to save him. Director Robert Carsen, in his 1990 production, focuses almost entirely on “the diva”. The setting is in a theatre: in the first act Cavaradossi is painting the scenery, and the Te Deum is sung by the audience in the orchestra stalls. The second act is backstage, while Tosca sings on a stage the other side of the backdrop, and the third act takes place on stage, as seen from the back.

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07 October 2021bachtrack.comLaura Servidei
Yoncheva and Calleja star in Zurich Opera’s revival of Carsen’s production of Tosca

Lighting (courtesy of Davy Cunningham) greatly enhances this particular production. Shafts of light come in from all angles, protagonists hide in the shadows, whilst there is a row of very bright stage lights at the end, after Tosca leaps to her death – not into the River Tiber (which, in reality, one probably cannot quite reach from the top of the Castel Sant’ Angelo) but into the pretend orchestra pit at the back of the real stage.

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18 October 2021seenandheard-international.comJohn Rhodes
Salome, Strauss
D: Hans NeuenfelsPhilipp Lossau
C: Zubin MehtaThomas Guggeis
Aseptischer Strauss-Rausch

Neuenfels inszeniert in der extremen Reduktion seine Regie überaus präzise und konzis. Oft hat man seine Arbeit zuletzt altmeisterlich genannt. Das trifft grundsätzlich auch jetzt wieder zu. Viele Figuren profitieren davon: Zumal Marina Prudenskaya als very First Lady-like, mit Monroe-Grandezza ausgestattete Herodias. Aber auch Gerhard Siegel als nie zu schleimiger Operettenfürst Herodes, den er stimmlich großartig zwischen Helden- und Charaktertenor changierend singt. Und das zentrale Paar? Sehr treffend zeichnet Neuenfels den Jochanaan als mit seiner Moral hadernden Mann Gottes, der vor Salome kniend schon die Arme um sie gelegt hat, die er dann aber – wie von sich selbst erschrocken – wieder verkrampft von ihr abspreizt.

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04 March 2018www.concerti.dePeter Krause