Programme Note | Il Farnace

Programme Note

 
Il Farnace
Music: Antonio Vivaldi (1678–1741)
Lyrics: Antonio Maria Lucchini (1690–1730)
(Pavian version of the libretto from 1731)

Opera in its original version with Czech subtitles. One break performance.
 
Musica Florea
Marek Štryncl, conductor & music production
Andrea Miltnerová, directing & choreography

Farnace (tenor): Zoltán Megyesi
Tamiri (mezzosoprano): Marta Infante
Berenice (soprano): Michaela Šrůmová
Selinda (mezzosoprano): Sylva Čmugrová
Gilade (soprano): Zuzana Kopřivová
Pompeo (mezzosoprano): Kamila Mazalová
Aquilio (tenor): Martin Javorský
Dancers: Lenka Breeding, Romana Konrádová, Klára Suldovská
Farnace’s and Tamiris’ Son: Victoria Novák Infante

Christopher Vinz, costumes
Vojtěch Koutek, Eliška Šebestová & Jana Doubnerová, costume production
Tomáš Osovský, wardrobe & masks
Eva Nyklíčková, masks
Václav Krajc & Jiří Bláha, scene
Katarína Morávek Ďuricová, light design
Eduardo García Salas, directing assistant & stage management
Eduardo García Salas & Marek Štryncl, preparation of the music materials
Štěpánka García, subtitles
 

History of the Opera

 
Antonio Vivaldi’s opera Farnace RV 711 to a libretto by Antonio Maria Lucchini was undoubtedly one of the composer’s most popular operas. This is evidenced not only by the high number of performances in various parts of Italy and other European countries, but also by the fact that Vivaldi reworked this opera into six different versions. The premiere took place during Carnival on 10 February 1727 at the Teatro di Sant’Angelo in Venice. In the following years, Farnace was staged several times. In addition to its return to the Teatro Sant’Angelo in the autumn of 1727, it was also performed in Prague at the theatre of František Antonín Špork (1730), in Pavia (1731), Mantua (1732) and Treviso (1737), and in 1739 Vivaldi also planned to stage it in Ferrara. The original Venetian version has been lost, but two scores have survived – the Ferrara one from 1738 and the Pavia one from 1731, to a libretto that bears the dedication to Joseph Johann Adam of Liechtenstein (1690-1732), one of Antonio Vivaldi’s Czech patrons. It is the only one of all versions to feature the now widely performed aria Gelido in ogni vena, in which the composer used the main theme of the first movement of the Violin Concerto in F minor RV 297 ‘Winter’ from the cycle The Four Seasons. In it, the King of Pontus Farnace stands over the tomb in which he is convinced his only son lies, and communicates his agony over the glassy timbre of the strings. The Festival is presenting this complex but beautiful work two hundred and ninety years after its premiere in Pavia.
 

Synopsis

 
Act 1
Farnace, King of Pontus, was defeated by the Romans and expelled from the city of Heraclea. He thinks of revenge but does not hope for its success. To prevent the Roman captivity of his family, he orders his wife Tamiri to kill their son and himself. Queen Berenice, Tamiri’s mother, enters the scene. He hates Farnace and therefore associates with Pompeo, a general of Roman troops. He wants the defeated king killed. At the same time, Selinda, Farnace’s sister, who has been captured and imprisoned by the Romans, manages to seduce the Roman prefect Aquilio and the captain of Queen Berenice’s army Gilade, and angers one another to help her brother. Tamiri decides to save her son and hides him in the mausoleum of the King of Pontus. The moment he wants to kill himself, Berenice comes in and prevents her from committing suicide. As they quarrel, Pompeo enters the Temple with his army to further increase the atmosphere of tension and hatred.Selinda continues her plan, pretending to choose between Gilade and Aquilio. At the same moment, Berenice issues an order to find Farnace and his son. Farnace is so desperate that he tries to kill himself, but his wife Tamiri saves him. Frightened to see her alive, he accuses her of cowardice for not taking her life even though she killed their child. At that moment, Berenice arrives and issues an order to destroy the mausoleum.
 
Act 2
The parish hides as the desperate Tamiri shows the queen her grandson and begs for his mercy. But the queen rejects her and takes her son. In the royal room, the child is placed in the care of Aquilio. Selinda begs for her nephew’s life and eventually manages to gain the support of both Aquilio and Gilade. He offers Farnace, who suddenly enters the palace, their help, but he refuses. Roman troops and the army of Queen Berenice celebrate their triumph on the plain of Heraclea. The queen offers Pompeo half her fortune if she kills her grandson, the heir to the kingdom, because Farnace has not yet been captured. But he refuses. Selinda manages to persuade Gilade to kill Berenice, while Berenice persuades Aquilio to kill Pompeo. The parish appears when Gilade and Aquilio try to escort Pompeo out of the world. However, they fail, Farnace’s identity is revealed and he is imprisoned. Gilade and Aquilio help him escape and are ready to kill Berenice. However, Pompeo, who has meanwhile switched to the Pontic side, will save the queen’s life, and forgives her. At the same time, however, he asks her to stop Farnace’s persecution. They both reconcile and Berenice hugs her son-in-law and son.
 

Andrea Miltnerová

directing & choreography
 
British dancer, choreographer and director with Czech roots Andrea Miltnerová was born in London. She settled permanently in Prague thanks to cooperation with the National Theatre. As a choreographer and performer, she has created several internationally successful performances such as Tanec magnetické balerínky (“Dance of the Magnetic Ballerina”) which was included in the selection of the Aerowaves International Center and was presented throughout Europe, one-man show Fractured (performed in Poland, Germany and the Netherlands) or Tranzmutace (“Transmutation”) directed by Jan Komárek, receiving the prestigious Move-Award Quality Label. The project Light Underground was created in cooperation with Prague City Gallery in Romanesque and Gothic cellars of Dům U Kamenného zvonu (“Stone Bell House”). One of her last works is her own music and dance performance called Celestial Odyssey in collaboration with harpsichordist Monika Knoblochová and light designer Jan Komárek, which was performed for example at the Prague Dance International Festival. Andrea Miltnerová’s interest in Baroque aesthetics and close collaboration with the French choreographer Françoise Denieau, in whose productions she acted as a dancer in France (Opéra Comique in Paris, Royal Opera in Versailles), Luxembourg, Switzerland, the UK (Barbican Center), Russia (Bolshoi Theater), South Korea and the USA, led to the reconstruction of Baroque operas and her own projects based on historical research and movement analysis. Her own works include choreography for the movie Orfeo ed Euridice with countertenor Bejun Mehta and Collegium 1704 as well as the choreography for the internationally acclaimed production of the opera Arsilda by Antonio Vivaldi, directed by David Radok. As a director, she participated in the production of the Gluck’s opera Le Cinesi and in 2019 she collaborated with the ensemble Musica Florea on a narrative performance of pasticcio Praga nascente da Libussa e Primislao (The Prague Foundation by Libuše and Přemysl) from 1734 on libretto by Antonio Denzio, who was responsible for the performance of Vivaldi’s operas in Prague.
 

Eduardo García Salas

directing assistant & artistic programmer
 
He became more interested in the personality of Antonio Vivaldi at the Amsterdam Conservatory, where he studied baroque violin and as part of his research activities discovered in the State Regional Archive in Zámrsk Antonio Vivaldi’s receipt from 1719 addressed to the Czech Count Václav of Morzin, to whom Vivaldi dedicated the cycle Le Quattro Stagioni. “I listened to Vivaldi’s music from morning till night as a little boy,” Salas describes his connection to “Il Prete Rosso”: “At that time, I had no idea that one day I would marry a girl from Vrchlabí, the town where Václav of Morzin is buried and where my two daughters Francesca and Chiara were also born Francesca on July 29 (the day after Vivaldi’s death) and Chiara on March 3 (the day before Vivaldi’s birth).” This Spanish violinist and baroque violin player is a true prototype of the European. He studied in Spain, the Czech Republic, Germany and the Netherlands. He has also worked or still works as a violinist in all these countries. In the Czech Republic he has collaborated with the Czech Philharmonic, Janáček Philharmonic in Ostrava, the baroque ensembles Musica Florea, Collegium 1704 and is currently the concertmaster of the Karlín Musical Theatre. Since 2020, he has been the chairman of the Brtnice Chateau association, which is connected with the music of Antonio Vivaldi thanks to the personality of Tommaso Vinciguerra VI to which, on June 28, 1741, a month before Vivaldi’s death, the last surviving receipt written by the composer’s hand was addressed, in which he sold fifteen violin concertos to him. Working on Farnace is not his first “musicological” encounter with Vivaldi’s opera. In 2019, he participated in the creation of the production Praga nascente da Libussa e Primislao in cooperation with Musica Florea. Only the libretto has been preserved of this pasticcio, into which its author Antonio Denzio borrowed three arias from Vivaldi’s operas. Eduardo García Salas adds: “The work on their musical reconstruction was very interesting. I spent two weeks in Venice searching in twenty Vivaldi operas. The music had to fit exactly into the lyrics from Praga nascente, both in character and tempo, rhythm, affect… At that time, I was assisted by personalities such as John Hill and Daniel Evan Freeman from the USA, Francesco Fanna from Italy or my Prague colleague Robert Hugo. In the case of Farnace, however, it is not a reconstruction of a musical component. The original score of the Pavian version has been preserved, which I transcribed from the manuscript with respect to the original Pavian libretto. Therefore, it is more of a revision. In Valtice, you hear Farnace in the form that most likely actually sounded in Pavia in 1731.”
 

Marek Štryncl

music production & conductor
 
A complex artistic personality of interest from many nooks and crannies, this is how the conductor, choirmaster, baroque cello player, composer and music researcher Marek Štryncl can be characterized. He studied conducting at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague and baroque cello at the Dresdner Akademie für alte Musik. At the same time, he deepened his interest in early music and interpretation at many master classes focused on historically informed performance, which led him to found the ensemble Musica Florea in 1992. As a conductor, cellist and choirmaster, he collaborates with prominent chamber and symphony orchestras, choirs, ensembles and soloists such as Magdalena Kožená, Phillippe Jaroussky, The New Israeli Vocal Ensemble, Boni Pueri, Orlando Consort, Les Musiciens du Paradis, PKF – Prague Philharmonia and others. His repertoire includes works from the early Baroque to Romanticism and contemporary compositions, and he does not shy away from experimental projects, such as collaboration with singer Iva Bittová. He has been the artistic director of the International Summer School of Early Music in Valtice for ten years. He teaches conducting and choral conducting at Charles University and baroque cello at Janáček Academy of Performing Arts in Brno. Enchantment by the “transcendent” principles of contemporary theatres in 2014 led him to create the unique mobile baroque theatre Florea Theatrum.

 

Musica Florea

 
Musica Florea was founded in 1992 by cellist and conductor Marek Štryncl as one of the first significant acts in the field of historically informed performance in the Czech Republic. A characteristic feature of this ensemble is the usage of the period instruments, based on the study of period sources and aesthetics, and the creative revival of forgotten works. The ensemble’s repertoire includes chamber music, concerts and monumental symphonic, oratorio and opera works from the Baroque to the 20th century. Since the beginning of its existence, Musica Florea has regularly appeared at major world festivals and collaborated with prominent soloists and ensembles (Magdalena Kožená, Phillippe Jaroussky, Nancy Argenta, Véronique Gens, Susanne Rydén, Peter Kooij, Martina Janková, Orlando Consort, Les Pages et les Chantres du Center de baroque musique de Versailles, Le poème harmonique and others). It holds many prestigious awards – 5 Diapasons, Zlatá Harmonie or Cannes Classical Award for Sub olea pacis et palma virtutis by Jan Dismas Zelenka. The ensemble is also behind several contemporary productions of operas and ballets, especially from the Baroque period. Among many, it is possible to mention at least the contemporary world premiere of the opera Armida by Giuseppe Scarlatti or the Muzio Scevola by Filippo Amadei, which was performed at the Händel-Festspiele. In recent years, Musica Florea has also systematically devoted the artistic course to Antonín Dvořák’s symphonies according to the principles of romantic interpretation on period romantic instruments and has made a set of their recordings. Extensive oratorio compositions or masses are performed in collaboration with his own choir Collegium Floreum, which was found and conducted as a choirmaster by Marek Štryncl. In 2014, the ensemble opened a new mobile stage based on the principles of Baroque theatre called Florea Theatrum.
 

Zoltán Megyesi

Farnace (tenor)
 
His repertoire ranges from Baroque masters to 21st century music with works by Haydn, Rossini, Gluck, Monteverdi, Händel, Schubert, Schumann or Britten. However, he specializes mainly in the work of W. A. Mozart and one of his key parts is the character of the Evangelist in St Matthew Passion by J. S. Bach. He has collaborated with well-known conductors such as Ádam Fischer, Helmuth Rilling, Iván Fischer, and performed in the leading concert halls in Europe (Konzerthaus in Vienna, Kölner Philharmonie, Concertgebouw Brugge), the USA, Japan and South Korea. In 2018, he made his debut at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées in Paris and at the Opéra de Nice. He is the absolute winner of the Concorso Internazionale Musica Sacra in Rome in 2011 and the International Singing Competition in Verona in 2007. He graduated from the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Szeged. Furthermore, he is not only an excellent singer, but also has a doctor’s degree in mathematics.
 

Marta Infante

Tamiri (mezzosoprano)
 
The Catalan mezzo Marta Infante is one of the most sought-after performers of early music both in Europe and especially in Latin America. She has also performed in Egypt, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and Japan. In the world of early music, she has collaborated with conductors such as Ottavio Dantone, Federico Maria Sardelli, Enrico Onoffri and Václav Luks. In her native country, she sang at the Teatro Real in Madrid, the Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona and on the opera stages in Bilbao, Pamplona and Santiago de Compostela. Her voice can be heard on many recordings, the most interesting of which is certainly Juditha Triumphans under Ottavio Dantone. She has recorded for the French channel Mezzo, Czech Radio and Corporación de Radio y Televisión Española (RTVE). She studied singing in Madrid and at the Faculty of Arts of the University of Ostrava with Drahomíra Míčková.
 

Zuzana Kopřivová

Gilade (soprano)
 
Zuzana Kopřivová has made successful debuts at the Opera of the National Theater in Prague (2018), J. K. Tyl Theatre in Pilsen (2017) and at the Moravian-Silesian National Theatre in Ostrava, where as a member of Dětská opera Praha (The Children’s Opera Prague) she won the role of Anette in the world premiere of Michel Legrand’s musical Marguerite in 2010. She is the holder of the 3rd prize and the Beno Blachut Prize at the Antonín Dvořák International Singing Competition in Karlovy Vary 2017. Her repertoire is in the field of “coloratura soprano” and performed roles from the operas by Mozart, Smetana, Offenbach, Janáček and others. She is also engaged in concert activities – music from the early Gothic period to contemporary compositions of the 21st century. Her favourite genre includes a French song. She graduated from the Prague Conservatory and since 2018 she has been a student at Academy of Performing Arts in Prague in the class of Yvona Škvárová-Votavová. She further develops her singing at the master classes led by famous names such as Helen Donath, Brigitte Fassbaender, Angelika Kirchschlager or Marjan Lipovšek.
 

Michaela Šrůmová

Berenice (soprano)
 
She has given concerts in Germany, France, Sweden, Japan, Egypt, conducted by Helmuth Rilling, Oliver Dohnányi, Tomáš Netopil, Václav Luks, Marek Štryncl and others. For several years, she was a member of the Opera of the National Theatre in Prague and also performed in several productions of the J. K. Tyl Theatre in Pilsen. Her repertoire ranges from baroque music through operetta to 21st century works. She performed in the Czech premiere of Gluck’s opera Ezio with the Prague Symphony Orchestra or King Arthur by Henry Purcell, but also in a minimalist composition Tehillim by Steve Reich as part of the Maraton soudobé hudby (“Marathon of Contemporary Music”). Together with the Film Symphony Orchestra and the Barrandov Film Studio, she has collaborated on many Czech and foreign productions of film and computer music. She studied solo singing at the Prague Conservatory in the class of Olga Jiráková and further expanded her singing education at master classes led by James Griffis (early music) and tenor José Cura.
 

Sylva Čmugrová

Selinda (mezzosoprano)
 
You can hear her in the Czech, Russian, Italian or German repertoire from W. A. Mozart to Leoš Janáček. Her career has taken her to concert stages in Canada, Japan, Italy, Germany, Spain, the Baltic republics, Poland and Switzerland. In addition to the State Opera, she collaborates with the J. K. Tyl Theatre in Pilsen, F. X. Šalda Theatre in Liberec and the Karlín Musical Theatre. She graduated from the Prague Conservatory and Academy of Performing Arts in Prague. Furthermore, she deepened her singing qualities at master classes in Siena and Vaduz. She is a laureate of the Antonín Dvořák International Singing Competition in Karlovy Vary, the Emma Destinn International Singing Competition in České Budějovice and a finalist in competitions in Geneva and Milan. Since 1996, she has been a soloist at the State Opera.
 

Kamila Mazalová

Pompeo (mezzosoprano)
 
She has collaborated with the National Theatre in Prague, Brno and Ostrava, but currently works in the ensemble Collegium Vocale 1704 by Václav Luks and in the Tiburtina Ensemble, which specializes in the interpretation of medieval music. That being said, the early music feels like a home for her, which is highlighted by her further collaboration with Collegium Marianum, Capella Mariana, Ensemble Phoenix Munich or Musica Aeterna in Bratislava. She also focuses on song literature, especially the Classicist and early Romantic periods – the works of Leopold Koželuh, V. J. Tomášek and Joseph Haydn – and English and French songwriting of the 17th century. She graduated from the Janáček Conservatory in Ostrava and Faculty of Arts of the University of Ostrava in the class of Drahomíra Míčková. She records for Czech Radio and has participated in several CDs.
 

Martin Javorský

Aquilio (tenor)
 
In addition to the music of old masters, Martin Javorský’s domain also includes Mozart’s repertoire and contemporary music. Since 2017, he collaborates with Brno-based company of professional musicians, singers and performers Ensemble Opera Diversa, with which he performed the opera Jsem kněžna bláznů (“I am the Princess of the Fools”) by composer Lenka Nota and librettist Olga Sommerová. At the “Opera Nova” festival of the National Theatre in Prague, he performed in works Johannes Doctor Faust and Eufrides před branami Tymén (“Euphrides in front of the Tymeny Gates”) by Josef Berg. He also regularly collaborates with the Brno Contemporary Orchestra. However, he feels just as naturally in the environment of early music, performing with Czech Ensemble Baroque, Ensemble Inègal, Capella Regia and Musica Florea. He originally studied trumpet at the Brno Conservatory and Janáček Academy of Performing Arts in Brno. From 2003 to 2006, he was a member of the Junges Klangforum Mitte Europa orchestra. He began singing at Academy of Performing Arts in Prague under the direction of Ivan Kusnjer. He is a member of the Czech Vocal Quintet.
 

Romana Konrádová

Dancer
 
She discovered the world of Baroque dance thanks to her collaboration with the French choreographer Marc Leclercq during the reconstruction of Rameau’s opera Castor et Pollux in 1999 at the National Theatre. Since then, she has gained valuable experience in this field under the guidance of teachers and choreographers such as Béatrice Massin, Laurent Charoy, Jean-Marc Piquemal, Sigrid T’Hooft and especially Françoise Denieau. The hobby, which gradually became a passion, led her to collaborate with the early music ensembles Collegium 1704, Les Arts Florissants, Collegium Marianum or Musica Florea. In the last decade, she has been intensively focusing on the projects of choreographer, dancer and director Andrea Miltnerová, who combines baroque dance with contemporary dance techniques. Romana Konrádová studied sinology at the Faculty of Arts at Charles University in Prague and also works as a yoga and qigong teacher.
 

Klára Suldovská

Dancer
 
She has been actively involved in historical dance since he was eleven years old. She regularly participates in master classes, for example with Deda Cristina Collona or Andrea Miltnerová. Earlier, she collaborated with choreographer, dancer and teacher Hana Slačálková on the filming of dance scenes in the film Interlude in Prague – a fictional story about Mozart – and in the movie called Genius. She also focuses on historical dance as she devoted her diploma thesis at the Faculty of Arts of Charles University in Prague to the translation of Feuillet’s Choreographie, ou l’art de décrire la dance, which laid the basics of the graphic recording of the Baroque dance.
 

Lenka Breeding

Dancer
 
She graduated from the Jaroslav Ježek Conservatory in the field of stage dance. After sixteen years spent in the USA, she returned to the Czech Republic in 2017, where she has been mainly focusing on acting. Her domain is step, which she also taught at Academy of Performing Arts in Prague. She collaborates with several Prague and non-Prague theatres, has acted in the TV series Modrý kód (“Blue Code”) and the laugh on her face can also be seen in several successful TV commercials and video clips.
 

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