Berlin & Dresden
Camilly Nylund, Vittorio Grigolo and Erwin Schrott
From 14 June to 17 June 2024
Price

From €1,020 per person

Madama Butterfly & Tosca

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    In summer, Berlin is the most pleasant of cities. After the cold of winter, the German capital explodes with joie de vivre and vitality. Strolling through the tree-lined streets of Prenzlauer is enchanting and why not take a bike ride through the Tiergarten park or enjoy a beer in a beer garden in the bohemian district of Kreuzberg? There is always something to visit in this city steeped in history: the remains of the Berlin Wall, the Dahlem Botanical Garden, or the sublime collections of Museum Island, a collection of five exceptional museums nestled on the banks of the Spree…

     

    For this stay, we invite you to enjoy two operas by Puccini. Presented in Pier Luigi Samaritani‘s illustrious staging, Madama Butterfly will be performed by the moving Lithuanian soprano Asmik Grigorian. The next day, an exceptional vocal trio (Camilly Nylund as Tosca, Vittorio Grigolo as Mario and Erwin Schrott as Scarpia) will set the great Italian composer’s Tosca on fire.

     

    For those who would like to precede these two beautiful Berlin operatic moments, it will be possible to arrive in Dresden, the marvelous “Florence of the Elbe”, baroque, elegant and superb, and to attend a ballet.

     

    Dresden is still too little known to European visitors. And yet, so many splendors in this city with its incomparable heritage! Just to mention the baroque Zwinger palace, the Semperoper, or the impressive Frauenkirche (which, rebuilt identically, has regained all its majesty). It is a pleasure to (re)discover the treasures of this city of supreme elegance. A huge city of music, Dresden is simply a huge city of art, as you will have the pleasure of seeing when you attend a ballet, which we have in store for you.

    Summer in Berlin
    The program
    Ballet Plot Point (optional pre-arrival)
    June 14, 2024
    Madama Butterfly, by G. Puccini
    June 15, 2024
    Tosca, by G. PUCCINI
    June 16, 2024
    FRIDAY, 14 JUNE, 2024 – DRESDEN (OPTIONAL PRE-ARRIVAL)

    At 7:00 p.m., at the Semperoper:

     

    PLOT POINT – BALLET

     

    Tom Seligman: Conductor

     

    Serenade

    George Balanchine:  Choreographer

    Pjotr I.Tschaikowsky: Music

    Nanette Glushak: Director

     

    Plot Point

    Crystal Pite: Choreographer

    Bernard Herrmann: Music

    Erik Beauchesne: Director

    Sandra Marín García: Director

    Jiři Pokorný: Director

     

    In the Upper Room

    Twyla Tharp: Choreographer

    Philip Glass: Music

     

    Plot Point is a unique and innovative creation by the Semperoper, with the ambition of transcribing the three acts of a cinematic plot through three works associated to create a coherent artistic whole. This creation presents three choreographies, all linked by the neoclassical aesthetic of 20th century symphonic ballets. The show opens with George Balanchine‘s memorable Serenade, choreographed to a composition by Tchaikovsky. Through his creation, Balanchine opens up new horizons for bodily expression and offers a moving and striking choreography. The work continues with the ballet Plot Point, conceived by the talented Canadian choreographer Crystal Pite and set to music to compositions by Bernard Hermann. Crystal Pite’s unique style allows her to create a true story through body expression, challenging body movements and playing with the shimmering colors of costumes. The final act of this show comes from dancer Twyla Tharp, an icon of 20th century dance who choreographed The Upper Room in 1986. Set to music by composer Philip Glass, the work unfolds in nine vibrant and poetic scenes, mixing ballet, yoga, tap dancing and boxing, to close a truly singular and abundant work.

    SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2024 - BERLIN

    At 7:30 p.m., at the Deutsche Oper Berlin:

     

    Madama Butterfly, by G. Puccini

     

    Orchestra and Choir of the Deutsche Oper Berlin

    Yi-Chen Lin: Conductor

    Pier Luigi Samaritani: Director

    Asmik Grigorian: Cio-Cio-San

    Irene Roberts: Suzuki

    N.N.: Kate Pinkerton

    Joshua Guerrero: Benjamin Franklin Pinkerton

    Dong -Hwan: Lee Sharpless

    Gideon Poppe: Goro

    Patrick Cook: Prince Yamadori

    Byung Gil Kim: Le Bonze

    Christian Simmons: The Imperial Commissioner

    Youngkwang Oh: The Registrar

    Seungeun Oh: Cio-Cio-San’s Mother

    Sin-Ae Choi: Cio-Cio-San’s Cousin

    Asahi Wada: Cio-Cio-San’s Aunt

     

    Puccini literally fell in love with the story of this fifteen-year-old Japanese girl, the victim of a cheap marriage with an American lieutenant, to the point of enthusiastically studying the customs and language of the Land of the Rising Sun. The first performance took place on 17 February 1904 at La Scala in Milan: a resounding failure, the opera being immediately withdrawn from the bill, before a drastic reworking carried out by the composer himself, which was performed a year later in Brescia. The world then discovered a relentless peak of dramatic tension, a shattering opera that would become one of the most popular pillars of the entire operatic repertoire. The figure of Cio-Cio-San – an overwhelming role on stage, for most of the duration of the opera – will be interpreted here by the great Lithuanian soprano Asmik Grigorian, with a voice of sumptuous bronze. As for Pier Luigi Samaritani‘s staging, it has been delighting the eyes (and ears!) of Deutsche Oper audiences for many years, thanks to its visual splendor and respect for the libretto.

     

    SUNDAY, JUNE 16, 2024 - BERLIN

    At 7:30 p.m., at the Deutsche Oper Berlin:

     

    TOSCA, by G. PUCCINI

     

    Orchestra and Choir of the Deutsche Oper Berlin

    Andrea Battistoni: Conductor

    Boleslaw Barlog: Director

    Camilla Nylund: Floria Tosca

    Vittorio Grigolo: Mario Cavaradossi

    Erwin Schrott: Baron Scarpia

    Samuel Dale Johnson: Cesare Angelotti

    Padraic Rowan: The Sacristan

    Andrew Dickinson: Spoletta

    Christian Simmons: Sciarrone

    Byung Gil Kim: A Jailer

     

     

    Premiered on 14 January 1900, Tosca was greeted with a mixture of fear and incomprehension. This adaptation of a drama by Victorien Sardou was perhaps too brutal and violent for a Roman audience, still accustomed to Verdi’s operas. With its action condensed into 3 characters, Tosca, Scarpia and Cavaradossi, its unleashing of passions, and its abrupt end, Puccini composed the first modern opera, which can be seen as a cinema film. The composer’s concern for realism was such that he strolled through the various churches of Rome, for the magnificent prelude of the third act, or used language of incredible audacity from the first vehement bars, earning the admiration of a composer like Schönberg. And then there are the sublime freeze frames, where Puccini suspends time with magical arias like “Vissi d’arte, vissi d’amore” (“I have lived by art, I have lived by love”) or “E lucevan le stelle”, Mario’s final farewell to Tosca while the sky glows with stars. This absolute masterpiece of the operatic repertoire will be performed here in Boleslaw Barlog’s mythical staging. To interpret the three roles of the score, the Deutsche Oper in Berlin offers an exceptional trio: Camilla Nylund as Tosca, Vittorio Grigolo as Mario and the charismatic bass-baritone Erwin Schrott in the role of the diabolical Scarpia.

     

    Your accomodation
    DRESDEN - KEMPINSKI TASCHENBERG PALACE *****

    In the historic heart of Dresden, in the immediate vicinity of the Zwinger, the Opera House and the Castle, this luxurious hotel reopens its doors this year after more than a year of renovation work. It offers high-level services. Its spacious rooms offer modern comforts and its service is impeccable.

     

    REGENT BERLIN *****

    Just a short walk from the Staatsoper Unter den Linden and the beautiful Gendarmenmarkt, the Regent Berlin is undoubtedly one of the most beautiful hotels in the city. Antiques, objets d’art, sumptuous furniture give it a classic elegance.

    Price per person
    Package with the Hotel Kempinski Palais Taschenberg ***** and Hotel Regent Berlin *****

    Stay from 15 to 17 June 2024

     

    Classic double room package: €1,020

    Classic single room package: €1,500

     

    Premium Double Room Package: €1,070

    Premium single room package: €1,600

     

    Optional pre-arrival in Dresden from 14 to 15 June 2024

    Extra night in a double room Palais: 280 €

    Extra night in a single room Palais: 440 €

    Extra night in a double room Palais with a view: 320 €

    Extra night in a single room Palais with a view: 525 €

     

     

    The price of this trip includes: accommodation in a double room with breakfast for 2 nights • tourist tax • tickets for shows in the first category • repatriation assistance.

     

    The price of this trip does not include: extras • transportation • airport transfers.

     

    Individual stay.

     

    Transportation and airport transfers on request

     

     

    Program and prices are subject to change by the Deutsche Oper Berlin and the Semperoper Dresden, or by government decision, due to possible health constraints.

    Information about this trip
    In charge of the destination
    Pauline Heckly
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