Rigoletto
- 11/15/2025, from 19.30 to 22.00
- 11/20/2025, from 19.30 to 22.00
- 11/26/2025, from 19.30 to 22.00
- 12/05/2025, from 19.30 to 22.00
- 12/07/2025, from 18.00 to 20.30
- 12/10/2025, from 19.30 to 22.00
- 12/12/2025, from 19.30 to 22.00
- 12/17/2025, from 19.30 to 22.00
- 01/07/2026, from 19.30 to 22.00
- 01/10/2026, from 19.30 to 22.00
- 01/14/2026, from 19.30 to 22.00
- 01/18/2026, from 15.00 to 17.30
- 02/27/2026, from 19.30 to 22.00
- 03/08/2026, from 18.00 to 20.30
- 03/21/2026, from 19.30 to 22.00
- Opera/Operetta, Musical Events
- Tickets

Details
Giuseppe Verdi sends his protagonist Rigoletto on an emotional rollercoaster ride between feigned cheerfulness, honest fatherly love and human abysses. Director Ute M. Engelhardt looks behind the facade of the joker and into the maw of the brutalised society in which the title hero moves. On the podium: chief conductor Vassilis Christopoulos, who is once again devoting himself to a Verdi opera after his gripping interpretation of Macbeth.
In order to satisfy his lust, the Duke of Mantua has his servants repeatedly bring him new women. Rigoletto, the court jester, is also part of this misogynistic system. After the loss of his wife, he reacts to the world with biting derision.
the world with biting derision. He lives solely for his daughter Gilda, whom he hides from society in order to protect her from the Duke's grasp. In vain!
Gilda falls in love with the Duke, and Rigoletto contributes to Gilda's abduction without realising that it is his own daughter. When he realises what has happened, the wounded father has only one thing on his mind: revenge!
With Rigoletto, Giuseppe Verdi opened his triad of successes, which also included Il trovatore and La traviata, and which established his international fame on the world's opera stages, which continues to this day.
The politically-minded composer chose Victor Hugo's drama Le Roi s'amuse (The King Amuses Himself) as the basis for his melodrama,
which is entirely dedicated to the connections between hierarchy and the abuse of power. In his search for emotional truthfulness in music, Verdi contrasted the tender love of Gilda with the traumas and abysses of Rigoletto - a man on the margins of society. Verdi and his librettist Piave tell the story of their title hero against the backdrop of the cheerfully cynical world of the Duke, in whose mouth the composer places one of his most famous melodies, a mocking expression of a ruthless womaniser:
‘La donna è mobile.’