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Baltic State Opera : ウィキペディア英語版
Baltic State Opera

Baltic Opera (formerly Baltic State Opera) is an opera company located in Gdańsk, Poland. It began in February 1949 as the Music and Drama Studio (in Polish: Studio Muzyczno-Dramatyczne) set up by Iwo Gall. In autumn 1949, the Opera Studio (in Polish: Studio Operowe) of the Baltic Philharmonic was founded. In 1953, they were united under the name of Baltic State Opera and Philharmonic. In 1993, after the institution had been divided, the Baltic Opera emerged.
In 2008, Marek Weiss became the director and steered the institution in a new direction. Such ambitious operas as Britten's ''Rape of Lucretia'' or Richard Strauss' ''Ariadne auf Naxos'' directed by Weiss appeared in its repertoire. The première of Strauss's ''Salome'' in 2011 caused a sensation and was acclaimed of three most important Polish productions of the season.
As an effect of the changes introduced by the company, in 2010 the BBC named the Baltic Opera (as the first opera theatre in Poland) one of ten best opera theatres in Europe; among the others were the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, the Teatro del Liceu in Barcelona, La Monnaie in Brussels and the Netherlands Opera in Amsterdam.
Contrary to most theatres in this part of Europe, the Baltic Opera presents its productions not in the repertory system, but using the stagione system which gives the company the highest quality of performances and allows them to invite world class soloists. Annually the Baltic Opera present around 120 opera, dance theatre and concert performances. The best producers prepare from five to six premieres a year. Each season includes such world classics as the major operas by Mozart, Tchaikovsky, Verdi, and Bizet as well as more unusual repertoire.
The company takes part in international cultural projects on a regular basis. It has twice participated in the International Opera Festival and Competition under the aegis of the Mezzo TV. In the 2011/2012 season, it organized the first edition of the Baltic Dance Theatres’ Encounters (in September 2011) and prepared the world premiere of Elżbieta Sikora’s opera ''Madame Curie''. This work was commissioned by the Baltic Opera, although its first performance took place in Paris in November 2011, within the framework of the Cultural Programme of the Polish Presidency of the EU Council. ''Madame Curie'' was also the first production in the Opera Gedanensis series, a project which is being realised by the Baltic Opera.
Outside of the major operatic repertoire, Polish premieres which took place in the Baltic Opera include:
* ''Cherevichki'' by Tchaikovsky (1952)
* ''Peter Grimes'' by Benjamin Britten (1958)
* ''The Miraculous Mandarin'' by Béla Bartók (1960)
* ''Rita'' by Donizetti (1961)
* ''The Rake's Progress'' by Igor Stravinsky (1965)
* ''Iolanta'' by Tchaikovsky (1977)
* ''The Little Hump-backed Horse'', ballet by Rodion Shchedrin (1978)
* ''Luisa Miller'' by Verdi (concert version, 2001)
* ''I Lombardi alla prima crociata'' by Verdi (concert version, 2004)
* ''Anna Bolena'' by Donizetti (2004)
* ''I masnadieri'' by Verdi (concert version, 2005)
* ''Madame Curie'' by Sikora (2011)
* ''Rothschild's Violin'' by Veniamin Fleishman (2013)
* ''The Gamblers'' by Shostakovich (unfinished) and Polish composer Krzysztof Meyer (2013)
〔(The two operas on operabaltycka.pl (In English) )〕〔Note on ''The Gamblers'' by Marek Weiss: "Many years later, another of Shostakovich’s pupils decided to complete his master’s work, and wrote the missing bars, or rather two thirds of ''The Gamblers''. It was Krzysztof Meyer, a Pole, who continued the work of the ingenious Russian."〕
==See also==

*List of opera houses

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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