Die Zauberflöte

Runtime
2hrs 53mins
Directed by
Peter Stein
Featuring
Till Von Orlowsky
Body

Presented by Teatro alla Scala.

This production represents the first leg of a collaboration project between the La Scala Theatre, the Singing Academy and one of the most prestigious directors of our times, Peter Stein, to present the finest young international singers every year in a setting of the highest order at the end of a unique artistic process in terms of the quality and level of preparation. Stein has committed to beginning the training and teaching of the young artists one year prior to the debut.

CREATIVE TEAM

Conductor | Ádám Fischer

Director | Peter Stein

Set Designer | Ferdinand Wögerbauer

Costumes | Anna Maria Heinreich

Lighting Designer | Joachim Barth

Chorus Master | Johannes Stecher

Chorus & Orchestra | Chorus of Teatro alla Scala & Orchestra of Teatro alla Scala  

ARTISTIC TEAM

Papageno | Till Von Orlowsky

Tamino | Martin Piskorski

Pamina | Fatma Said

Queen of the Night | Yasmin Özkan

Sarastro | Martin Summer

Monostatos | Sascha Emanuel Kramer

First Lady | Elissa Huber

Second Lady | Kristin Sveinsdottír

Third Lady | Mareike Jankowski

Papagena | Theresa Zisser

First Priest | Philipp Jekal

Second Priest | Thomas Huber

Armored men | Francesco Castoro, Victor Sporyshev

Three slaves | Marcel Herrnsdorf, Tenzin Chonev Kolsch, Thomas Prenn


SYNOPSIS

ACT I

Enter Tamino, dressed as a hunter, followed by a large snake. Overcome with shock, he faints. Out of the temple doors come three ladies-in-waiting. After killing the serpent, they admire the noble youth’s face and hurry away to warn the Queen of Night. Tamino regains his senses and is astonished to find the snake dead; he believes he owes his salvation to a strange-looking character, Papageno, a bird-catcher, who has just appeared dressed in feathers and playing a pipe. Papageno does not deny, but is at once punished for his lie by the three ladies-in-waiting who reappear and close his mouth with a golden padlock. Meanwhile the young ladies show Tamino a portrait of the Queen of Night’s daughter, whose beauty inflames his heart. The maiden, however, has been kidnapped by the magician Sarastro.

Conquered by such loveliness, Tamino offers to rescue her. The ladies-in-waiting hand him a golden flute with magic powers and, removing the padlock from Papageno’s mouth, enjoin him to follow Tamino to Sarastro’s castle; he too receives a magic instrument, a set of chimes.

Pamina has attempted to escape from the insistences of Monostatos, but the brutal moor has recaptured her and is leading her back by force to his palace. Frightened by the sight of Papageno, Monostatos flees. Papageno is thus able to approach Pamina and reveals to her that he has been sent by her mother, with a young prince, to set her free. Pamina and Papageno make their escape.

Enter Tamino led by three child-spirits. The temple of Isis can be seen. Two of its doors – that of Reason and that of Nature – are closed. But one, that of Wisdom, opens and a priest comes forward to explain to Tamino that Sarastro is not a cruel sorcerer, but has been induced by just motives to protect Pamina from the influence of her mother. The priest reassures the noble youth that the maiden is alive. Tamino and Papageno, who escorts Pamina, look for one another in the wood, using their instruments to make themselves heard. The chimes prove very useful in frightening away Monostatos and his men who are about to capture Papageno and Pamina. Sarastro appears. Pamina asks him to forgive her for running away and explains her reasons for doing so. Sarastro declares himself ready to grant her hand in marriage to a knight worthy of her, however he can never allow her to return to her mother. Tamino is dragged on stage by Monostatos. The youth and the maiden, who now set eyes on one another for the first time, throw themselves into each other’s arms while Monostatos, who has asked for a reward for his services, is punished instead.

ACT II

Sarastro directs his priests to take charge of Tamino, who is ready to undergo the ordeals that will enable him to join the rank of the initiates and to marry Pamina.

Tamino and Papageno, wearing hoods, prepare themselves, the former resolute, the latter seized with sudden terror. Their first trial is one of silence. Left alone, they are approached by the three ladies-in-waiting of the Queen of Night who contrive to dissuade them from their undertaking, but in vain.

Monostatos furtively creeps up to the sleeping Pamina and tries to kiss her. The Queen of Night bursts in to protect her daughter who flings herself into her mother’s arms for consolation, thinking she has been deserted by Tamino, engrossed in his initiation trials. The Queen of Night gives her daughter a dagger with which to kill Sarastro. But Monostatos, who has heard all, wrenches the weapon from the girl’s hand and threatens to reveal their intrigue. Sarastro comes upon them and chases Monostatos away. He reassures the maiden by telling her that not vendetta, but love will bring her happiness.

Tamino and Papageno continue their trials. A hag appears, saying she is Papagena; after talking to Papageno, she vanishes with a loud clap of thunder. In the sky appears a table spread with food and drink from which the two initiates can take refreshment before continuing their trial. Drawn by the sound of Tamino’s flute, Pamina enters, but her beloved is forbidden to speak to her. She is so deeply hurt that she tries to kill herself, but the three child-spirits save her and reassure her of her beloved’s true sentiments. Now Tamino has to go through further ordeals by fire and water. Pamina follows him and advises him to play the magic flute. The tests are thus passed.

Papageno despairs because Papagena, who has become young and beautiful, appears before him for an instant, only to vanish at once. The sound of the chimes causes her to reappear.

The Queen of Night, followed by Monostatos and her three ladies-in-waiting, attempts to enter the temple by stealth in order to kill Sarastro. But the ground, shaken by an earthquake, opens to swallow them up.

Sarastro, enthroned and surrounded by his priests, with Tamino and Pamina celebrates the victory of the Sun over Darkness. 


Recorded 2016

Presented by:

This Week

  • Nominated for Best International Feature Film at the 96th Academy Awards, from director Wim Wenders. 

    Showtimes
  • From Director Rose Glass comes an electric new love story.

    Showtimes
  • Denis Villeneuve's sequel to his Oscar winning adaptation of Frank Herbert’s seminal bestseller, screening in 70mm!

    Showtimes
  • From writer/director Julio Torres comes a surreal adventure through the equally treacherous worlds of New York City and the U.S. Immigration system.

    Showtimes
  • Join Kyle Stevens and see how Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? asks us what a happy marriage really looks—and sounds—like. 

    Showtimes
  • You are cordially invited to George and Martha's for an evening of fun and games.

    Showtimes
  • Powell and Pressburger’s richly humanistic film traverses time and space to make a case for the transcendent value of love.

    Showtimes
  • Sam Mendes directs Mark Gatiss as John Gielgud and Johnny Flynn as Richard Burton in this fierce and funny new play.

    Showtimes
  • An Ozark Mountain girl hacks through dangerous social terrain as she hunts down her drug-dealing father while trying to keep her family intact.

    Showtimes
  • Denis Villeneuve's sequel to his Oscar winning adaptation of Frank Herbert’s seminal bestseller.

    Showtimes
  • You Will Be Unprepared.

    Showtimes
  • Prepare to get weird, cause the world depends on it.

    Showtimes
  • An epic of epic epicness.

    Showtimes
  • Peter Jackson brings J.R.R Tolkien's Lord of the Rings from page to screen in this epic, Academy-Award winning trilogy, in 35mm!

    Showtimes
  • Discover how Sofia Coppola uses visual strategies in this introduction with Lesley professor, author, & filmmaker Ingrid Stobbe.

    Showtimes
  • With this debut feature, Sofia Coppola announced her singular vision, exploring the aesthetics of femininity while illuminating the interior lives of young women. 

    Showtimes