Abstract
From Eros to death: the ruthless, driven debauchee Don Giovanni pursues his path through the night, seduction, murder, escape, masquerade and orgy until Hell finally receives him. Ever since the première of 1787 in Prague, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s and Lorenzo da Ponte’s Don Giovanni has remained timelessly current and is considered an unparalleled pinnacle of the operatic genre, in which comic and tragic elements are ideally combined.
In his controversial production, director Sebastian Baumgarten focused on the objectionable and morally reprehensible aspects of Don Giovanni as perceived in the liberal 21st century. He set the piece in the sanctuary of a sect-like community that is invaded by Don Giovanni with his excesses and whose values he undermines.
For this year’s revival production, we were able to engage Luca Pisaroni – most recently heard in Zurich in Donizetti’s Anna Bolena – as Don Giovanni. The women at his side are Jane Archibald as Donna Anna and, for the first time in Zurich, the Danish soprano Sine Bundgaard as Donna Elvira. The German bass-baritone Andreas Wolf will introduce himself as Leporello, while the Swiss tenor Mauro Peter will again sing Don Ottavio. We can also look forward to the musical direction of the Italian conductor Riccardo Minasi, a specialist in historical performance practice, who has already offered many a great Mozartian moment in Zurich.