Król Roger
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About the Performance
King Roger is one of the great operatic masterpieces of the 20th century and its increasing popularity in the 21st century is bringing it directly into the mainstream repertoire.
Szymanowski's opera has elements of the classical Greek legend of ‘cult' god Dionysus, reflected through Nietzschean philosophy. Set in 12th century Sicily, it explores the cultural crossroads of the time - Byzantine, Arabic, Greek and European.
A mysterious Shepherd is accused of trying to topple the Catholic Church and its authority yet King Roger and his wife Roxana grant him an audience and offer their friendship. Swept up in his heady teachings the entire court joins him as acolytes. Only King Roger holds back from complete devotion to the charismatic herdsman.
In the last act the Shepherd reveals himself as Dionysus, the god of wine, fertility and hedonism. King Roger alone resists temptation and conquers his own hedonistic impulses, reason triumphing over emotion. As Roger sings a hymn of praise to Apollo and the sun, the rationality of classicism becomes balanced at last with the ecstatic abandon of Dionysus's followers.
A deeply philosophical work, the music has a sweeping romanticism and lyricism that encompass a first act immersed in religious atmosphere, through a second act built around oriental and exotic dance and culminating in the idealism and passion of the third act.
Reviews
Szymanowski's Król Roger examines the terrifying liberation of the Dionysian: the titular King is visited by a Shepherd- the disguised Dionysus- who threatens the Apollonian order of his existence. Described as a ‘philosophical opera', Szymanowski's frenetically intense score and this superb production from The Mariinsky Opera Company ensure that this drama never becomes obscure or academic. The music blends the expressionism of Strauss' Salome with moments of disorientating impressionism reminiscent of Debussy‘s Pelleas, yet under Valery Gergiev's charged direction this opera never seems derivative.
A superb cast is lead by Andrzej Dobber as the unhinged Roger and Pavlo Tolstoy as a genuinely disturbing Shepherd. Mariusz Trelinksi's production subtly captures the sense of Roger's mind unravelling, effectively using back-projection to simulate his dislodged consciousness. The superlative lighting design of Marc Heinz supplements this effect.
This is an abrasively disturbing, beautifully sensuous opera that deserves a more central place in the canon, and with a cast of such dramatic strength and an orchestra of such power, is the most memorable, unsettling production I've seen in Edinburgh this year. A true triumph.
Supported by The Edinburgh International Festival Patrons and Muses and the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage of the Republic of Poland
This production is proudly supported by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, in preparation for the Polish Season in the UK 2009-2010
To listen to the audio file featuring an interview with the Consul General of the Republic of Poland in Edinburgh, Alekzander Dietkow, about the popularity of contemporary Polish arts today and two Krol Roger, click here.
Performance Details
Mariinsky Opera Company
Valery Gergiev Conductor
Written by Karol Szymanowski
Staged performance sung in Polish with English supertitles
Roger Andrzej Dobber
Roxana Elzbieta Szmytka
Edrisi Sergei Semishkur
Shepherd Pavlo Tolstoy
Mariusz Treliński Director
Boris Kudlička Designer
Marc Heinz Lighting designer
Wojciech Dziedzic Costume designer
Tomek Wygoda Choreographer
This production was originally staged by Opera Wrocławska.
Booking Information
Performance Dates:
- Mon 25 Aug - 7:15 pm
- Wed 27 Aug - 7:15 pm
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- From £10Tickets:
- Approx 2 hours and 20 minutesDuration:
- Edinburgh Festival TheatreVenue:


