Médée
Marc-Antoine Charpentier
to
Gran Teatre del Liceu La Rambla 51-59, 08002 Barcelona
Image courtesy of Liceu
Tragedie mise en musique in five acts and a prologue from a libretto by Thomas Corneille was the first opera based on this fascinating mythological character: Medea. Lully had the privilege of being the composer of court operas, and Charpentier was therefore devoted to pastoral compositions and religious music. At the age of 50 he was able to write his Médée. The timid public reception in Paris made the composer shun other attempts in this genre, and so it remained his only opera: the composer’s crowning achievement and testament.
First performed at the Théâtre du Palais-Royal in Paris on December 4, 1693, it has a richness of music and dramatic force that is all-consuming. Its plot tells a tale of betrayal, myth, rage and sorcery in which Medea, abandoned by her husband Jason, will use her magic for a terrible revenge, poisoning her rival Créuse and killing her own children in order to destroy her husband’s happiness. He will survive to prolong his suffering. An example of vicarious violence, faced with the impossibility of finding a new path. A pathology born of an infinity of cracks that are impossible to overcome.
The work needs a protagonist who is a character beyond measure. In this case, Magdalena Kožená will be entrusted with the role of Médée; accompanied by the sensitive and extraordinary Sir Simon Rattle conducting the Freiburger Barockorchester.
Possessing a first-rate tragic talent, comfortable in French prosody, the Czech singer will offer a multi-faceted portrait of Médée: from the pain of Jason’s abandonment to humiliation, passing through madness and her murderous fury. Voice, gaze and gesture aligned in an intense performance in Charpentier’s first at the Liceu.
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