La Divina Comedia
- 01/17/2026, from 19.30 to 21.30
- 01/22/2026, from 19.30 to 21.30
- 01/23/2026, from 19.30 to 21.30
- 01/25/2026, from 15.00 to 17.00
- 01/28/2026, from 19.30 to 21.30
- 02/06/2026, from 19.30 to 21.30
- 02/08/2026, from 15.00 to 17.00
- 02/25/2026, from 19.30 to 21.30
- 03/01/2026, from 18.00 to 20.00
- 03/07/2026, from 19.30 to 21.30
- Tickets für La Divina Comedia

Details
The Graz Opera House becomes a giant human body whose ‘entrails’, guided by Dante and the music of Philip Glass and Arvo Pärt, are explored by the dancers of Ballett Graz. On her journey through hell and purgatory to paradise, Chilean-born choreographer Estefania Miranda performs not only on the stage but also in all the foyers of the opera house.
The Divine Comedy, Divina Commedia, is the main work of the Italian poet Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) and is considered the most important poem in Italian literature and the basis for the modern Italian language. In it, Dante describes the stages of a journey through an otherworldly world. The Roman poet Virgil leads the author, who is also his own main character, through hell and purgatory. On their way, Dante and Virgil encounter the countless souls of the deceased, who tell of their respective fates. In paradise, Dante finally meets his childhood sweetheart Beatrice. In his reunion with her, the poet discovers the power of love and finds inner peace and tranquillity.
Choreographer Estefania Miranda uses the literary model for an ‘expansive’ choreography. She asks about people's greatest fears and longings and what might await our souls after death. She transfers the biblical deadly sins into a contemporary context. In the first part of the evening, we experience various choreographic installations on a journey of discovery through the opera house, which translate torments and sins into a contemporary dance language. In the second part of this sensual Gesamtkunstwerk, the audience follows Dante's path to paradise from the auditorium as usual.
Public accessibility: Tram 1, 7 I Stop: Kaiser-Josef Platz/Oper