(ANSA) - ROME, MAY 26 - The Verona Arena Opera Festival's
2021 summer programme, which will see live performances make a
big come back, is based on a duet between opera and art.
The 98th festival will open on June 19 with Giuseppe Verdi's
Aida, staged in concert form by Riccardo Muti,to celebrate the
150th anniversary of the first performance of the masterpiece in
Cairo.
Each of the shows on the programme will refer to, or be inspired
by, one or more top heritage site or museum in Italy or the
Vatican City.
The Vatican Apostolic Library and the Valley of the Temples
Archaeological Park will collaborate to outline the visual
context of Sicilian folk culture, especially in the religious
sphere, as seen in Cavalleria Rusticana.
Fellini influences, on the other hand, were chosen for
Pagliacci, with a collaboration between the Turin Museum of
Cinema and the Fellini Museum that will open shortly in Rimini .
The Arena Foundation identified Turin's Egyptian Museum as the
ideal partner for Aida - its collections will act as an element
characterizing the dialogue between the Arena's ancient Roman
stones and Egyptian iconography.
A collaboration with the National Museum of Italian Judaism and
of the Shoah (MEIS) of Ferrara will take the field for Nabucco.
The production of Turandot stems from dialogue with Parma's
Museum of Chinese Art and Ethnography (Museo d'Arte Cinese ed
Etnografico), a place not just of discovery of the treasures of
past eras of distant peoples, but also a place of engagement
with far-away, traditional cultures.
The production of La Traviata, a Verdi masterpiece built around
a lead character of unprecedented power that had a dramatic
impact on the society of the day, takes it lead from path of
study on the female figure in all its variations thanks to the
rich collections of the Uffizi Gallery in Florence.
The Arena complex marks the 120th anniversary of the death of
Verdi on the evening of his Requiem, the superlative work of
this scared and human genre, a work that is both theatrical and
intimate at the same time.
The evening offers elements of history and reflection ,
illuminated by the heritage of the Paestum and Pompeii
archaeological sites.
Complementary to this evening is the Beethoven's IX Symphony, a
creation that changed the history of music: the perfect embrace
of the 'millions' quoted in Schiller's Ode to Joy is depicted
with the help of images curated by the Alinari Photography
Foundation (Fondazione Alinari per la Fotografia). (ANSA).
Verona Arena Opera Festival teams up with Italian Museums
Uffizi Gallery, Fellini Museum involved in 2021 summer programme
