St Petersburg, Mariinsky Theatre

Turandot


opera by Giacomo Puccini

Performed in Italian (the performance will have synchronised Russian and English supertitles)
 

Performers

Princess Turandot – Irina Gordei
Timur – Alexei Tanovitski
Calaf – Avgust Amonov
Liù – Irma Gigolaty
Ping – Andrei Spekhov
Pang – Alexander Timchenko
Pong – Oleg Balashov

World premiere: 25 April 1926, Teatro alla Scala, Milan
Premiere at the Mariinsky Theatre and premiere of this production: 25 July 2002


Running time: 2 hours 35 minutes
The performance has one interval

Age category 12+

Credits

Music by Giacomo Puccini
Libretto by Giuseppe Adami and Renato Simoni after motifs from the story of the same name by Carlo Gozzi

Musical Director: Valery Gergiev
Stage Director: Charles Roubaud
Set Designer: Isabelle Partiot-Pieri
Costume Designer: Katia Duflot
Lighting Designer: Vladimir Lukasevich
Lighting Adaptation for the Mariinsky II by Yegor Kartashov
Musical Preparation: Alla Brosterman
Children’s Chorus Master: Irina Yatsemirskaya
Choreographer: Dmitry Korneyev

SYNOPSIS

Act I
A crowd assembled by the walls of the Imperial palace in Peking listens to a Mandarin reading a decree – anyone who wishes to win the hand of Princess Turandot must solve three riddles; whosoever cannot answer must die. The young Prince of Persia is to be executed this night. The excited crowd rushes towards the palace, but the guards keep the people back. An old man falls to the ground. In anguish, a young girl calls for help. A young man rushes out from the crowd, recognising the old man to be his father. Their unexpected meeting is not a joyful occasion – old Timur´s enemies have usurped his throne and banished him from his native land; his son Calaf has been forced to wander foreign parts, hiding his name from everyone. Timur is accompanied everywhere by the faithful slave girl Liù, whose love for Calaf is unrequited. Preparations for the execution are underway on the square. Night descends. As the moon rises, the crowd awaits the appearance of Turandot. A triumphal procession approaches. It is met by a funeral procession – that of the Prince of Persia going to his execution. The people feel pity for him and beg Turandot to have mercy on him. Calaf vengefully curses the hard-hearted Princess. Finally, however, she appears, and Calaf is blinded by her beauty. In vain, his father tries to dissuade him: Calaf knows he must win Turandot´s heart. Suddenly the ministers Ping, Pong and Pang bar his way. They warn the Prince and jeer at him, summoning the spirits of those who have died from their love of Turandot. Liù begs Calaf to leave – neither she nor his father could bear to see him die. Calaf is touched by her entreaties, but cannot relinquish his love for Turandot. At his signal, a servant strikes a huge gong three times, declaring Calaf´s decision to attempt to win the Princess.

Act II
Scene 1
Ping, Pong and Pang are pondering the fate of the unknown Prince who has decided to solve Turandot´s riddles: what will dawn bring – a wedding or an execution? They dream of returning to a peaceful and tranquil life, far, far away from the Imperial palace. But madmen in love continue to try their luck, and their heads continue to roll in honour of the Princess. When will the suitor come who will defeat Turandot, who can transform her by love and put an end to these perpetual executions in the country?
Scene 2
The crowd gathers on the square before the palace. Timur and Liù are also there. At last, Emperor Altoum appears. He tries to dissuade the Prince from the attempt. The Mandarin repeats once again the dreadful conditions of the challenge.
Turandot appears at the head of a triumphal procession. She is consumed with hatred of all men: once, many thousands of years ago, in this very palace, a foreign invader ravaged a Chinese Princess and, centuries later, her cry resounded in Turandot´s heart. She takes vengeance on all strangers for this evil act. No-one may marry her: there will be three riddles followed by one death. But Calaf answers her proudly that there will be three riddles followed by one life...
Turandot announces her first riddle: what bright, alluring vision is created at night and dies at dawn, only to return the next night? The Prince answers that it is the hope that will bring him to Turandot. The wise men confirm that hope is indeed the answer to the first riddle – it is written thus in their scrolls. The second riddle is announced: what is like a flame, yet is not a flame? What runs cold when a man dies, but burns hotter than the sun if he succeeds? In his confusion, Calaf is silent. The Emperor, Liù and the crowd encourage him and he finds the answer – it is the blood that flows in his veins from his love for Turandot. The Princess is struck with rage and fear and she hurries to pose her third riddle: what is like ice but freezes in fire? What makes a man a slave if he wants to be free and makes him a King if he becomes its servant? In triumph, Turandot mocks the Prince. What kind of ice could he burn in? However, Calaf solves the third riddle: it is Turandot , and the ice of her heart will melt in the fire of his love. The crowd praises the victor. In terror, Turandot begs her father not to marry her to the stranger, but the Emperor is unyielding – his word is sacred. Calaf, however, will not accept Turandot´s hand against her will as he desires the Princess´ love. He sets Turandot just one riddle which she must solve by daybreak: in all Peking not one person knows his name. If the Princess can discover it, he will die willingly.

Act III
Scene 1
The sounds of far-off heralds can be heard in the garden of the Imperial palace – Turandot has decreed that none shall sleep this night in Peking on pain of death; the name of the unknown Prince must be discovered by daybreak. Calaf dreams of Turandot´s love: she will only know the answer to his secret when he holds her in his arms. Daybreak will bring his victory.
Ping, Pong and Pang tempt Calaf with the delights of love, wealth and ultimately compassion – thousands will be tortured to death if Turandot does not know his name by dawn. But Calaf firmly resists all their temptations: the entire world may perish, but he will not be denied Turandot. Liù declares that she alone knows the Prince´s name and nothing will make her reveal the secret. Turandot is confounded by the slave girl´s courage. Where does she get her strength? It comes from the power of love for which Liù is ready to die. Turandot will know it herself soon, though Liù will not live to see this – snatching a dagger from Turandot, she stabs herself. Timur and the crowd are broken-hearted at Liù´s death. With ardent words and kisses, Calaf awakens the love in Turandot´s icy heart. The stranger´s courage and passion have defeated her pride – now she is his. And so, the Prince tells Turandot his name. Night passes and the sun begins to rise.
Scene 2
Before the assembled crowd and in the presence of the Emperor, Turandot gives the answer to Calaf´s riddle: his name is... love.
Everyone sings in praise of love, light and life.


Turandot was Giacomo Puccini's final opera, and he left it at the stage when it was almost complete.
His death in 1924 heralded the end of the era of verism, it was a farewell to Italian grand opera. At that time, avant-garde art was already witnessing the collapse of the tonal system, and composers were abandoning established vocalisation – with sweeping cantilena and upper accent notes, and the charm of a melody losing its significance, giving way to the beauty of structure and the complexity of formal rules.
In 1920 Puccini had seen a production by Max Reinhardt based on a tale by Carlo Gozzi and conceived the idea of composing an opera based on its plot. He himself was involved in adapting the work into a libretto, though the finale, the part where love was to be awakened in Turandot's icy heart, was something the composer did not live to complete. Using surviving rough drafts, it was finished by Franco Alfano, its ending adopting the “happy-ever-after” format. This coincided with Puccini's own concept, although as a result the finale entered something of a contradiction with what had already occurred in the opera's two and a half preceding acts. This contradiction emerged from an attempt to combine the fairytale with a verist drama – things that almost diametrically oppose one another, each of them having its own logic of construction. Can one justify Turandot, who because of some psychological trauma avenges herself on the entire male sex? How can Calaf love Turandot after she orders the innocent, devoted and timid Liù be tortured, Liù whom the protagonists entirely forget? Luciano Berio attempted to provide an answer later when he wrote his own tragic finale, though it is still Alfano's version that remains most widely used.
The music of verism demands powerful voices that can convey to the highest degree possible the fervency of emotions and, with their sound, cut through the immense and full brass instruments mass of the orchestra. In this opera two of these voices are required: a lyrical-dramatic or simply a dramatic tenor and a dramatic soprano. When two such voices come together in combat (this happens in the riddle scene), we hear verist opera at its apogee.
French stage director Charles Roubaud trained as a graphic designer and has vast experience of working in advertising. Advertising as a genre requires the maximum of compressed expression, vivid and not overburdened with complexities. Traces of this approach may be seen in his production: the opera has been constructed logically, and it has a simple yet beautiful imagistic system. The characters in their oriental costumes act against a background of specific colour schemes that are closely fitted to reflect the mood of the music. A range of black complements the ominous beginning, the Emperor Altoum appears in the richest gold and the celebratory and vivid finale is rendered in scarlet light. Denis Velikzhanin


Musical materials provided by G. RlCORDl & CO., Bühnen- und Musikverlag GmbH, Berlin (Germany)


Sponsored by the Delzell Foundation (USA) 


Conductor: Mikhail Sinkevich
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