Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
Bartók Marathon
Béla Bartók’s timeless stage works offer inspiration for classical as well as contemporary approaches. The festival takes an active part in the staging of these works. By far the greatest enterprise in the series of intriguing productions has been the Bartók Marathon in 2016, which was Bartók Memorial Year in Hungary. That year we celebrated the 135th anniversary of Béla Bartók’s birth. Bartók Plus Opera Festival wanted to remember him by placing even greater emphasis on the composer’s oeuvre.
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
The trilogy of The Wooden Prince, The Miraculous Mandarin and Duke Bluebeard’s Castle, (although the three works are not originally intended to be unified), were presented to the audience in the form of a tetralogy with two distinct performances of The Wooden Prince opening and closing the sequence. These three works explore different aspects of the same big question: is real relationship possible between man and woman.
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
The problem has puzzled philosophers and artists since times immemorial in every age, while the answer was always given by the age, the location and its spirit; the traditions and moral order inherent in it. In the early twentieth century, after the decline of Romanticism and with the loosening of the strict rules of the social life of previous centuries enormous changes occurred in the way people regarded love. Bartók himself, mainly on the basis of his life experience had an extremely pessimistic view of the issue, as it is well reflected in these stories, of which only that of the Prince has a happy ending.
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
No matter how different the stories in the individual works are, it is obvious that all three focus on the relationship between man and woman, more particularly on the controversial nature of this relationship. In Géza M. Tóth’s directorial concept these works have a deeper and more generalized interpretation. For him these relationships are not reduced to the question how men and women get on; they are universal and meaningful in every context; can we experience life and our relationships fully, in an unconditional way or do we rather see it fragmentary and conditional.
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
In this sense, the Prince, Bluebeard and the Mandarin are characterised by their yearning for totality and completeness, while the Princess, Judith or in The Miraculous Mandarin the Old Rake, the Boy and the Girl, they all lack the experience of this totality.
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
The dual performance of The Wooden Prince created a framework for the works and the different ways the piece was performed created not only a closed structure but opened the possibility for a new interpretation. Thus through Bartók’s works we could follow up ’all the stages’ of a woman’s emotional life: starting from the naïve and innocent expectations through mature passion and the disappointments of adulthood till the aquiescence of old age.
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
Gergely Kesselyák, artistic director’s idea that the four archetypal elements represent significant aspects of the individual works Bluebeard evoking Water, the Mandarin Fire, the Wooden Prince Earth and music itself constituting the quality of Air also appeared in the performance.
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
The four-hour production brought to the stage talented young dance artists (Bence Apáti, Lili Felméry, Andrea Kocsis) as well as doyens of Hungarian dance, (Teodóra Uhrik and Pál Lovas), and world renowned opera singers (Ildikó Komlósi and Bálint Szabó) .
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
THE WOODEN PRINCE, Part I
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
THE MIRACULOUS MANDARIN, Part II
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
THE MIRACULOUS MANDARIN, Part II
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
DUKE BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE, Part III.
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
DUKE BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE, Part III.
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
THE WOODEN PRINCE, IV.part
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
Stage director: Géza M. Tóth | Conductor: Oksana Lyniv | Set and costume designer: Edit Zeke | Choreographer: Attila Kozma | Contributed by: the Pannon Philharmonic
Bartók Marathon (2016)Bartók Plus Opera Festival
Editor in chief: Lenke Frecskó
Photos: Vera Éder, Mihály Samu Gálos, János Vajda
Cameraman: Ferenc Nagy
Text and translation: László Méhes,István Nagy
Also Collaborated: Dániel Gyetvai
Publisher: Miskolc Opera Festival Nonprofit Ltd.
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