Zhang Huan to Direct New Production of Handel’s “Semele”By Jillian Steinhauer
Published: July 17, 2009
Zhang's presentation of the myth of Semele, a classic Greek tale about the complicated relationship between the gods and humans, and jealousy among the gods, promises to be a unique blending of Eastern and Western cultures, of contemporary art and classical music. (Christophe Rousset, a leading Baroque music specialist in Europe, will conduct.) For his backdrop, Zhang will use an original Ming dynasty ancestral temple that he discovered in Quzhou. "I am very excited to have the luck and opportunity to be able to take an ancestral family temple with over 450 years of history and use it on the stage of a 300-year-old European opera house," the artist writes in the opera's program notes. "The fact that the roots of pain introduced thousands of years ago in a Western opera reappear in the East in the fate of a single peasant family in the countryside of China can make us continually ponder the redemptive qualities of humanity." Debuting September 8, Semele will open the 2009–10 season at la Monnaie, for which Zhang has also been selected as the featured artist — his Three Legged Buddha will be on display in the public square in front of the opera house from the end of August through September. The opera then travels to China in 2010, marking the first time a full-length Baroque opera will be performed there. |
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