Anna Kiknadze (The Beautiful Dulcinée), Ferruccio Furlanetto (Don Quichotte), Andrei Serov (Sancho Pança)
Ensemble of soloists of the Mariinsky Academy of Young Singers
Musical Preparation: Larisa Gergieva
Chorus Master: Pavel Teplov
French language coach: Ksenia Klimenko
Mariinsky Theatre Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Valery Gergiev
The opera Don Quichotte – lively and light, rich in humour and the varied natures of its characters – is devoid of that sense of tragedy and doom that the public expect from a stage version of the classical Don Quichotte. Massenet looked at this story with entirely different eyes and wrote a work that is, essentially, in the style of old comic operas. Not by chance is the genre of the opera defined as a comédie-héroïque, where love is intertwined with love games, irony with tragic suffering, hopes with disappointment, and the scene of the protagonist’s death is laconic yet at the same time amazingly poetic. The opera is superbly orchestrated, the simplicity of its language shaded by the refinement of the instrumentation. Massenet’s decision to tackle the subject was to a large extent influenced by Fyodor Chaliapin, who had long held a dream of creating such an image on the operatic stage. Chaliapin sang at the opera’s premiere in Monte Carlo and in its first production in Russia at the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow.
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