La bohème

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Composer Giacomo Puccini. Libretto by Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica Scène de la vie de bohème.
Opera in four pictures (1896)
recommended for 10 years and older

In Italian with English and German surtitles.

 

Heartache, heartbreak, the whole nine yards – four starving artists – love in a shabby attic loft – the swank boulevards where people live life with a capital "L", but Mimi is destined to die. Her tiny hand: ice cold! Otto Schenk's incredibly opulent, eternally valid production continues to fascinate audiences. All of Paris is magically transported onto the stage here.  So beautiful you could cry!

 

Synopsis

Act I
Poet Rodolfo and painter Marcello are sitting in their cold garret on Christmas Eve, freezing, hungry and flat broke as usual. To warm up the room just a little, Rodolfo burns a play script he had been working on. Downtrodden, Colline the philosopher returns home after finding the pawnshop closed for the holidays. Musician Schaunard, the final member of this quartet of friends, has been a bit more successful. He brings along food, wine and some money. The initially glum mood rapidly turns into one of great exuberance.

This, however, is rapidly interrupted by the arrival of the landlord Benoit, who demands his back rent. The friends give him some wine, causing the old man to forget the rent in his alcoholic haze and begin recounting tales of his romantic adventures. In a spasm of feigned outrage over the old man's "immorality" the four friends throw him out. Now they decide to continue partying at the Café "Momus". Only Rodolfo remains behind to complete a magazine article he is writing. At this point Mimí, their neighbor, appears and asks if she might relight her candle, which the wind had blown out. As Mimí is about to go, she loses the key to her room. Rodolfo, who has fallen in love with her, finds the key but doesn't tell Mimí. They tell one another the story of their lives and confess their love for one another.

Act II
In the Quartier Latin, outside the Café "Momus", colorful activity dominates the scene. Musetta, Marcello's former lover, show up with an elderly new admirer by the name of Alcindoro. When Musetta and Marcello lay eyes on one another again, their former love reawakens. Claiming to need a new pair of shoes that very minute, Musetta gets rid of her companion. The arrival of guard draws a huge crowd to the square. The friends take advantage of the confusion to disappear with the girl. When Alcindoro returns he has no alternative but to pick up the bill for everybody.

Act III
On a cold winter morning, Mimí comes to an inn on the edge of Paris to talk to Marcello, who is painting there. She is tortured by a terrible fit of coughing. She asks Marcello to help her, because Rodolfo has walked out on her, claiming jealousy. Rodolfo, however, tells his friend the real reason for what he did. He has left Mimí because he knows she is incurably ill, and he is too poor to look after her properly. Mimí, who has been listening in to this conversation steps out of her hiding place. Now she knows that she is doomed to die, and sadly bids him farewell. Marcello has meanwhile gotten into an argument with Musetta, who finally goes running off in a fury.

Act IV
Back in the garret, Rodolfo and Marcello are together again. They try to work, struggling to conceal their longing for Mimí and Musetta. Schaunard and Colline serve up a sparse meal, which nevertheless turns into some fairly merry pranks. Then Musetta appears with the terminally ill Mimí. All attempts to save her are in vain. While Rodolfo gathers new hope as they wait for the doctor, the friends notice that Mimí has already passed away. As it becomes clear to Rodolfo, he hurls himself despondently on the corpse of his beloved.

Program and cast

Duration est. 2 hours 40 minutes

Conductor: Nicola Luisotti

Director: Otto Schenk

Stage Designer: Rudolf Heinrich

Chorus: Franz Obermair

Mimì: Sonya Yoncheva

Musetta: Juliana Grigoryan

Rodolfo: Benjamin Bernheim

Marcello: Andrzej Filończyk

Schaunard: German Olvera

Colline: Roberto Tagliavini

Parpignol: Michael Butler

Benoît: Christian Rieger

Alcindoro: Martin Snell

Ein Zöllner: Armand Rabot

Sergeant der Zollwache: Zhe Liu

Bayerisches Staatsorchester

Chorus of the Bayerische Staatsoper

Children's chorus of the Bayerische Staatsoper

National Theatre Munich

The National Theatre Munich (German: Nationaltheater München) is an opera house in Max-Joseph-Platz in Munich, Germany. It is the home of the Bavarian State Opera and the Bayerisches Staatsballett(Bavarian State Ballet).

 

The Bavarian State Opera also performs in the Prinzregententheater, which opened in 1901 and, like the Bayreuth Festspielhaus, is built to Richard Wagner's specifications, and in the Cuvilliés Theatre at the Residenz, constructed in 1751–1753 and described by Thierry Beauvert as "a Rococo gem".

 

The Nationaltheater is very easy to get to both by car and by MVV public transportation. 



By MVV public transportation

S-Bahn: S 1 - 8 Marienplatz
U-Bahn: U 3, 6 Marienplatz, U 3 - 6 Odeonsplatz
Bus: 52, 131 Marienplatz, 100 Odeonsplatz
Straßenbahn: 19 Nationaltheater

On the day of the performance, holders of regular tickets are entitled to use public transport provided by the Münchner Verkehrsverbund (MVV). This service starts at 3 pm respectively three hours before the performance commences and ends with the closing hour of the MVV.



By Car

Take the Altstadt-Ring to Maximilianstraße.

Parking garage Max-Joseph-Platz: open Monday to Sunday from 6:00 A.M. to 2:00 A.M.

You can take advantage of the special theatre parking fee of Euro 10,- from 6:00 P.M. to 8:00 A.M. by presenting your admission tickets.

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