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If only one had ...!

Eugene Onegin

Pyotr Tchaikovsky
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With stunning natural imagery and attention to every detail, Barrie Kosky presents Tchaikovsky’s soulful drama about the hopes, longings, and failures of four young people who come to realize in the end that happiness was almost within reach. When the poet Lensky visits his fiancée Olga and brings along his mysterious friend Eugene Onegin, Olga’s introverted sister Tatyana is immediately hooked. But Onegin rejects her advances. Years later, he meets her again, but now it is she who doesn’t want to hear his sudden pleas for love…

It was with Eugene Onegin that Tchaikovsky achieved his breakthrough as an opera composer, making an unparalleled contribution to modern music theatre. Here, with its opulent stage design, Barrie Kosky’s production captures the poetry of the characters and their tragedy, set in the vastness of a natural space. Supported by Tchaikovsky’s unforgettable music, Eugene Onegin is a ‘delicate psychogram of young people who are just learning for the first time what irreversible decisions truly mean’ [BR KLASSIK].
Act 1

An idyllic summer’s day in the depths of the Russian countryside; people are doing the kind of things people do on such days. Among country folk on an outing, the estate owner Larina is chatting with her long-serving domestic Filipyevna, the nurse of her daughters Olga and Tatyana. The two elderly women are making jam and reminiscing about past hopes of love and getting used to disappointment. Larina’s daughters sing a song full of yearning.
Lyrical scenes in three acts [1879]
Libretto by Pyotr Tchaikovsky and Konstantin Shilovsky based on the verse novel of the same name by Alexander Pushkin
In the repertoire since January 31, 2016
A co-production with the Zurich Opera House
Recommended from grade 9
Russian
2hr 50min incl. intermission