PWM

search
Advanced
Ministerstwo Kultury i Dziedzictwa Narodowego
biuletyn informacji publicznej

News

Olimpia z Gdańska, a New Opera by Zygmunt Krauze

2015-11-18

On 20 November, the Baltic Opera will present Zygmunt Krauze's "Olimpia z Gdańska" (Olympe from Gdańsk) opera for the first time. After the success of his last opera ("Pułapka" [The Trap], 2011), the composer reached for the fascinating biography of Stanisława Przybyszewska and told the story about seeking freedom with his music.

 

Stanisława Przybyszewska is the leading character in the opera. An illegitimate daughter of Stanisław Przybyszewski, a famous writer of the Young Poland period, she went down in history as the author of the popular play The Danton Case. Denied and forgotten, she died in Gdańsk in dire poverty at the age of 33, exhausted by illness and morphine.



The successive opera scenes take place in Stanisława's shabby room in Gdańsk, in the early 1930s. Fascinated by Maximilien de Robespierre and his ideas, Stanisława takes an oneiric and initiation journey back in time: to Paris of the end of the 18th century. Przybyszewska is completely immersed in writing a novel about Olympe de Gouges. She participates in the French Revolution and, as the action evolves, undergoes a deep metamorphosis: she takes the side of Olympe, rejecting Robespierre’s ideology.



Marek Weiss, Director of the Baltic Opera in Gdańsk, said that: "This long-awaited opera has been announced under different working titles. The final version, accepted by the composer, offers the best rendering of the complex character of a story about the brilliant writer Stanisława Przybyszewska. She was embroiled both in her tragic life, where she was overshadowed by her cruel father, and in her virtual life where she was dominated by her fascination with the French Revolution and its tyrannical leader, Robespierre. Ending her life in poverty with narcotic nightmares, Przybyszewska died in Gdańsk. She was buried there in an already inexistent graveyard. We remember her as an amazing woman with a distinct and admirable personality that has been preserved in books, yet she had a miserable life that was shrouded by a dark mystery. The authors of the opera, which was commissioned by the Baltic Opera and the City of Gdańsk, present a poetic brief of a lone writer’s torment and attempts to identify herself with the character of her novel, Olympe de Gouges, who was bound to Robespierre to her own destruction. This tragic figure, Olympe de Gouges, is now attaining much popularity in France. Many people are working toward the goal of transferring her ashes to the Panthéon in Paris, where she would be laid next to Maria Curie".



"Olimpia from Gdańsk is an opera that evades the traditional theatre narrative", stresses the director of the performance, Jerzy Lach. "The real world in which Stanisława Przybyszewska lives and works is intertwined with the literary world of the novel written by the main character. The novel is set in the French Revolution or, in fact, in its pathological decline. The mixture of these two worlds creates the new world of theatre magic. Stanisława's room is haunted both by real characters, e.g. her Father and the artistic bohemia of the 1920s, and the figures of the French Revolution, including Robespierre. Sometimes the third world is evoked by drugs, which is an implication of the real and literary worlds and brings something that is surreal or even cosmic. These worlds are inhabited by people who, irrespective of time /present or past/, have the same relations with other people. One could say that we repeat the same stories and situations over time. It is as if we got stopped in the vicious circle of repetitions".



And Zygmunt Krauze commented that: "In “Olympia of Gdańsk” we meet Stanisława Przybyszewska, a writer and drug addict infatuated by physical love to her own father who molested her when she was an adolescent. Stanisława is also possessed by her imaginary love for Maximilien Robespierre. She is seen as trying to finish her new novel about Olympe de Gouges, a heroine of the French Revolution and author of the “Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen,” with whom Stanisława identifies. Real (though not living at the time of Stanisława’s writing) and imagined figures appear in nine opera scenes. Although Stanisława is dreaming, she is also suffering from morphine induced hallucinations. The opera is sung in Polish and French. What I am looking for in the opera is the person, her (or his) character, attitude and emotions. Singing is supposed to magnify the experiences and emotional conflicts of the characters. This is that kind of spectacle where the role of the theatrical element is equivalent to the one of music. “Olympia of Gdańsk” continues this theatrical and dramatic trend, demonstrated in my five earlier operas (Gwiazda [The Star], Baltazar [Balthasar], Iwona księżniczka Burgunda [Yvonne, the Princess of Burgundy], Polieukt [Polyeucte] and Pułapka [The Trap]). ." 

Most popular:

THE TALE OF THE HEART. FAVOLA IN MUSICA: a joint project by Aleksander Nowak and Radek Rak from ANAKLASIS on sale as of 6th October

It is a musical-literary tale about a quest for identity, truth, and for what makes us human. The new stage work by Aleksander Nowak – which is, at the same time, Radek Rak’s operatic debut – explores the sources of good and evil, fusing reality with mythology and steering towards ‘the left-hand side of the world’. The authors spin a tale about the dual human nature. THE TALE OF THE HEART. FAVOLA IN MUSICA – the album that presents their joint project – will go on sale on 6th October.

 

Różycki’s Adventures in Jazzland. The album INSPIRED BY LUDOMIR RÓŻYCKI from ANAKLASIS on sale as of 28th August

Spectacularly successful as Ludomir Różycki’s music was in his lifetime, it is seldom programmed nowadays. All the same, such remarkable art could hardly fall into utter oblivion. It has attracted and fascinated excellent jazz pianist Kuba Stankiewicz, who has translated it into the language of jazz. The effects have been recorded and released on ANAKLASIS label’s most recent album, INSPIRED BY LUDOMIR RÓŻYCKI, which goes on sale as of 28th August.
 

PWM przenosi się na Wiejską

PWM Edition is entering the execution phase of the revitalisation of its Warsaw department. With the commencement of the renovation and the implementation of the assumptions of the architectural design, the Hire Department and the editorial office of “Ruch Muzyczny” are moving to a temporary headquarters at 19 Wiejska Street, Warsaw.

THE QUEEN THAT LOVED A GERMAN. OUR ALBUM WANDA PREMIERES ON 31ST MARCH!

This is by no means a piece about the centuries-long Polish-German conflict. It is, instead, a tale of impossible love, of tragic conflict between personal happiness and the common good.

PWM Edition is the exclusive representative of the Ricordi publishing house in Poland

PWM Edition resumes cooperation with the Italian publishing house Ricordi, as well as with its international partners forming Universal Music Publishing Classics & Screen. This means that rentals of orchestral materials from the catalogues of all publishing houses belonging to Classics & Screen is carried out in Poland by Dział Zbiorów Nutowych (Sheet Music Department) of PWM.

#SHARPENYOUREARS WITH ANAKLASIS: THE LABEL’S THIRD BIRTHDAY

The most fascinating phenomena in contemporary music; a wide range of genres; outstanding works, excellent composers and performers – are the trademarks of the record label ANAKLASIS, launched by PWM Edition. ANAKLASIS is now celebrating its third birthday. It continues to grow at a dizzying pace and maintains the high artistic standards of its releases.

VIRTUOSITY WITH A FLOURISH. ELŻBIETA SIKORA’S CONCERTOS ALBUM PREMIERES ON 2ND DECEMBER!

When asked to attempt a definition of her music, she called it lyrical expressionism. The choice of this term says much about the emotional intensity of Elżbieta Sikora’s music, which may reflect the experience of her two home countries, Poland and France, but is also a consequence of her artistic maturation in an age when two powerful trends – the avant-garde and neo-Classicism – were vying for the palm. Such a label may also result from the artist’s focus on the listener as her target, whom she invariably attempts to surprise, shock, or bewilder.

Polish chamber music of the 19th and 20th centuries in Estonia!

In cooperation with the Estonian Academy of Music and Theater and the Embassy of the Republic of Poland in Tallinn, we invite you to two concerts and lectures presenting the diversity and beauty of Polish music. 

The first “ChopinLand Piano Competition” in Japan goes down in history

Over 300 performances of works by Polish composers, 114 finalists, a total of 36 repertoire pieces in 6 age categories, 20 winners, 17 jurors, 4 competition locations and one day of master classes. The piano competition for children and teenagers, “ChopinLand Piano Competition,” is behind us – an extraordinary project that took several months, which PWM Edition organized in Japan. Thanks to cooperation with local partners, Polish music could reach hundreds of young pianists and their teachers, creating the ambassadors of Polish music in the Land of the Rising Sun.