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140 min
Rarely has a theatrical world premiere been so warmly received as Dutch National Opera’s production of Arnold Schönberg’s late-Romantic Gurre-Lieder in 2014. The production fulfilled a fervent wish of principal conductor Marc Albrecht. The music of Gurre-Lieder is timeless, and so is its subject: a passionate, yet forbidden love. The story harks back to a Scandinavian saga, situated in Gurre. King Waldemar loves the girl Tove, who is a mysterious character, connected to both the world of people and the world of birds. The queen is jealous and has Tove killed. The Wood Dove tells of this in a moving song and the king accuses God of cruelty. A nightmarish scene follows, of a fierce army killed in battle, which rampages like a horde of ghosts. The radiant dawn at the end of Gurre-Lieder shows the insignificance of human destiny compared to the power of nature.
Name | Character | Team | |
---|---|---|---|
Burkhard Fritz | Waldemar | Unowned | |
Emily Magee | Tove | Unowned | |
Anna Larsson | Waldtaube | Unowned | |
Markus Marquardt | Bauer | Unowned | |
Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke | Klaus Narr | Unowned | |
Sunnyi Melles | Narrator | Unowned |