Dnipro Opera and Ballet Theatre: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 48°28′12″N 35°02′17″E / 48.4701°N 35.0381°E / 48.4701; 35.0381
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{{Short description |Modern opera house in Dnipropetrovsk , Ukraine}}
{{Short description |Modern opera house in Dnipropetrovsk , Ukraine}}
[[File:Theatre of Opera and Ballet in Dnipropetrovsk.jpg|thumb|280px|Dnipropetrovsk Theatre of Opera and Ballet]]
[[File:Theatre of Opera and Ballet in Dnipropetrovsk.jpg|thumb|280px|Dnipropetrovsk Theatre of Opera and Ballet]]
'''Dnipro Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre''' ({{lang-uk|Дніпр овський академічний театр опери та балету}}) is an [[opera house]] in [[Dnipro]].
'''Dnipro Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre''' ({{lang-uk|Дніпровський академічний театр опери та балету}}) is an [[opera house]] in [[Dnipro]].


The first opera house in Dnipropetrovsk was opened in 1931 as the Dnipropetrovsk Workers' Opera House.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://musicinukrainian.files.wordpress.com/2020/11/ukrainska_muzychna_entsyklopediia_tom_1.pdf |title=Українська музична енциклопедія |publisher=ІМФЕ НАНУ |year=2006 |pages=628–629 |language=uk}}</ref> In 1934{{ndash}}1937, Arsenko Arsen Dionysovych performed there. With the beginning of the [[World War II|Second World War]], the company was evacuated to Krasnoyarsk, where the Dnieper Opera was merged with the Odesa troupe. The opera house was revived three decades later, on August 31, 1973, when the Council of Ministers of the [[Ukrainian SSR]] approved the idea of creating the Dnipropetrovsk Opera and Ballet Theatre.
The first opera house in Dnipropetrovsk was opened in 1931 as the Dnipropetrovsk Workers' Opera House.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://musicinukrainian.files.wordpress.com/2020/11/ukrainska_muzychna_entsyklopediia_tom_1.pdf |title=Українська музична енциклопедія |publisher=ІМФЕ НАНУ |year=2006 |pages=628–629 |language=uk}}</ref> In 1934{{ndash}}1937, Arsenko Arsen Dionysovych performed there. With the beginning of the [[World War II|Second World War]], the company was evacuated to Krasnoyarsk, where the Dnieper Opera was merged with the Odesa troupe. The opera house was revived three decades later, on August 31, 1973, when the Council of Ministers of the [[Ukrainian SSR]] approved the idea of creating the Dnipropetrovsk Opera and Ballet Theatre.

Revision as of 17:11, 29 July 2023

Dnipropetrovsk Theatre of Opera and Ballet

Dnipro Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre (Ukrainian: Дніпровський академічний театр опери та балету) is an opera house in Dnipro.

The first opera house in Dnipropetrovsk was opened in 1931 as the Dnipropetrovsk Workers' Opera House.[1] In 1934–1937, Arsenko Arsen Dionysovych performed there. With the beginning of the Second World War, the company was evacuated to Krasnoyarsk, where the Dnieper Opera was merged with the Odesa troupe. The opera house was revived three decades later, on August 31, 1973, when the Council of Ministers of the Ukrainian SSR approved the idea of creating the Dnipropetrovsk Opera and Ballet Theatre.

The modern building was built on the site of a park. The architects based their design on the Zhytomyr Music and Drama Theatre, built in 1966, but both the exterior and interior design has Dnieper Opera has unique features. A feature of the theatre's square, designed by architect Pavel Nirinberg, was the light and music fountain 'Muse' by the sculptor Yuri Pavlov.[2] The opera house was opened on 26 December 1974, with a performance of Tchaikovsky 's ballet Swan Lake.

Petro Varivoda was the conductor at the opera house from 1974 to 1994. Among the outstanding soloists who have performed there are the bass Yuri Sabin-Gus, mezzo-soprano Nonna Surzhina, tenor Alexander Vostryakov, baritone Mykola Poludenny. From 1974 to 1988, most of the choreography was directed by L.V. Voskresenskaya.

Recognition of the troupe of the Dnipropetrovsk Opera and Ballet Theater within the USSR was a tour on the stage of the Bolshoi Theater in 1988. With the beginning of Perestroika, the theater also begins active international touring activities, in particular, Dnipropetrovsk artists perform on the stages of France, Italy, China and the United States.

During the 1990s, the ballet dancers Anna Dorosh and Maxim Chepyk performed at the theatre as well as the opera singers Victor Lutsyuk, Eduard Sribnytsky, and Valentina Kovalenko.

In 2017, ballet dancer and choreographer Dmytro Omelchenko won the AF Shekera Prize for staging the modern ballet Carmen & Jose.[3]

As of the beginning of 2020, the theater's repertoire included 18 operas,[4] 18 ballets, 8 operettas and other musicals.

References

  1. ^ Українська музична енциклопедія (PDF) (in Ukrainian). ІМФЕ НАНУ. 2006. pp. 628–629.
  2. ^ "История Днепра (Днепропетровска) и Приднепровья". 2017-10-15. Archived from the original on 15 October 2017. Retrieved 2022-04-23.
  3. ^ "Артисту балету Дніпропетровського театру вручили премію імені А. Ф. Шекери | Music-Review Ukraine". m-r.co.ua. Retrieved 2022-04-23.
  4. ^ "Чи буває опера сучасною? | Український інтерес". 2020-10-22. Archived from the original on 2020-10-22. Retrieved 2022-04-23.

External links

48°28′12″N 35°02′17″E / 48.4701°N 35.0381°E / 48.4701; 35.0381