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Schedule - Deutsche Oper Berlin

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Opening Night

Ab in den Ring!

Tutti d*amore based on Oscar Straus' DIE LUSTIGEN NIBELUNGEN

28
Friday
February
20:00
€ 25.00 / reduced € 10.00
Buy tickets
Free choice of seats
Information about the work

An operetta festival by and with tutti d*amore based on Oscar Straus' and Rideamus' DIE LUSTIGEN NIBELUNGEN
World premiere on 28 February 2025

approx. 90 minutes / No intermission

In German with German and English surtitles

recommended from 14 years
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Cast
Our thanks to our partners

Presented by taz and Siegessäule

28
Friday
February
20:00
€ 25.00 / reduced € 10.00
Buy tickets
Free choice of seats
Cast
the content

Lurking in the bowels of the Deutsche Oper Berlin is a long-forgotten realm from the dark ages. In this location, a.k.a the set and props depository, the ghosts of King Gunther, Siegfried and Brünhilde are up to no good, ever fighting over who gets to go on stage next. Nothing’s off-limits to Wagner’s offspring when it comes to winning over the audience! And so it goes: murder and mayhem, drama upon drama, day after day. High time for someone to bang some heads together — and do it with humour, too! Wait a sec: humour!? That’s really not something the German crew knows the first thing about. But then Berlin’s underground scene rides to the rescue: a clique of operetta singers will sort it out – but wait: are these hallowed portals really going to host a work of operetta? Whatever would Richard make of it?

AB IN DEN RING! is the Tischlerei’s latest collaboration with an independent company and tutti d*amore’s first premiere to be staged at an opera house. It is based on DIE LUSTIGEN NIBELUNGEN, a burlesque operetta by Oscar Straus and his lyricist Rideamus, first performed in Vienna in 1904. The source material is a witty satire aimed at their idol, Richard Wagner, a parody that, in the imperial era, dared to poke fun at themes such as heroism, patriotism and war fever. The operetta’s catchy couplets and jaunty waltzes and marches gave the Austrian composer his first major triumph.

Tutti d*amore has rewritten the text, extending and transposing Straus’s satirical look at Wilhelminian Germany into present day society. AB IN DEN RING! is a sharp dig at the culture wars raging in the theatre and opera community between supporters of conservatism and tradition on the one hand and woke progressives on the other. The theatrical sphere fuses with the mythological realm of the Nibelungs, triggering a to and fro over which attitudes should hold sway. A slapstick tussle where – as in a classic operetta - no single side comes out on top.

On tutti d*amore
The core mission of tutti d*amore, the Berlin collective for contemporary oper*etta, is to liberate operetta from its reputation as an outdated art form and attract young and diverse audiences to performances at urban venues. Its productions are staged at unconventional locations and in public spaces, with venues including Kater Blau and Sisyphos and appearances at the Fusion Festival and Garbicz Festival. tutti d*amore explores pressing issues of the day in light-hearted fashion. The company’s revival of Mischa Spoliansky’s folk play DAS HAUS DAZWISCHEN addressed the gentrification of small and medium-sized firms in Berlin. MAGNA MATER, based on Franz von Suppè’s DIE SCHÖNE GALATHÉE and Paul Lincke’s LYSISTRATA, tackles the themes of equal rights, roll models and abuse of power. They recently toured the countryside of Brandenburg, performing their operetta TUTTI IN CAMPAGNA in small venues and market squares, also landing an invitation to the DNT Weimar. And no, this is not a ‘90s pizza joint that’s put down roots in Germany. These people do operettas – as theatre for everyman.

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Wagner fresh on the table
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02
DEC

Adventskalender im Foyer: Das 2. Fensterchen

Today in the Rangfoyer on the right: ‘Mozart for violin and piano’
with Maïlis Bonnefous and Maxime Perrin
5:00 p.m. / Rang-Foyer rechts
Duration: approx. 25 minutes / Free admission


This afternoon in the Rangfoyer, you can experience two young French artists, our former violin academy student Maïlis Bonnefous and our solo repetiteur Maxime Perrin at the grand piano, who will play some Christmas carols for you, along with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Sonata for Violin and Piano in F major, K. 376. The piano and violin communicate with each other lightly and gracefully, as equal musical partners in the movement. This is because the composer shifted his aesthetic premises from the accompanied solo movement to a balance of both instruments. This sonata was part of a cycle of six works that Mozart dedicated to his student Josepha Auernhammer. An unknown critic praised the wealth of ‘new ideas and traces of great musical genius (...) In addition, the accompaniment of the violin with the piano part is so skilfully combined that both instruments are maintained in constant attention’. Today, look forward to this musical dialogue between Maïlis Bonnefous and Maxim Perrin.

Born in 1992, the young French violinist Maïlis Bonnefous initially completed her musical training at the Toulouse Conservatory in 2011 before moving on to the Berlin University of the Arts and then to the Leipzig University of Music for her master's degree. Alongside her studies, she was the section leader of the second violins in the French Youth Orchestra from 2009 to 2013, was an academy musician with the Orchestre national du Capitole de Toulouse in 2011, played in the Gustav Mahler Youth Orchestra from 2013 to 2015, and was an academy musician in the orchestra of the Deutsche Oper Berlin between 2015 and 2017. She regularly performs in concerts of the Karajan Academy of the Berliner Philharmoniker and was a scholarship holder of the Balthasar Neumann Ensemble between 2018 and 2020. She is the winner of numerous competitions.

The French pianist Maxime Perrin (1988) has been an accompanist at the Deutsche Oper Berlin since 2020. His piano studies initially took him to the University of Music and Theatre in Leipzig to study with Prof. Markus Tomas (piano) and Prof. Phillip Moll (song interpretation), and then to the University of Music in Hanover. He attended numerous masterclasses, including with Emmanuel Ax, Andrzej Jasinski, Alexandre Tharaud and Philippe Cassard. During the course of his career, he has performed as a soloist, chamber musician and song accompanist in Germany, France, Austria and Switzerland. In 2013, he was awarded a scholarship by the Richard Wagner Association of Hannover and accepted as a pianist into the Junge Deutsche Philharmonie. With this orchestra, he has already performed at the Berlin Philharmonie and the Alte Oper Frankfurt.