Werther

Jules Massenet

Lyrical drama in four acts and five scenes
Libretto by Edoudard Blau, Paul Milliet, and Georges
Hartmann after Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

From 10. May 2018 until 29. May 2018

  • Duration :
    2 H. 45 Min. Inkl. Pause after 1st part after approx. 1 H. 15 Min.
  • Language:
    In French with German and English surtitles.
  • More information:
    Introduction 45 min before the performance.

Music Direction:
Lorenzo Viotti

Lorenzo Viotti

Lorenzo Viotti, geboren in Lausanne, studierte Klavier, Gesang und Schlagzeug in Lyon sowie Dirigieren in Wien und Weimar. Von 2018 bis 2021 war er Generalmusikdirektor des Gulbekian-Orchesters in Lissabon und seit der Spielzeit 2021/22 ist er Chefdirigent des Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra. Internationale Aufmerksamkeit erlangte er als Gewinner des Internationalen Dirigierwettbewerbs in Cadaqués 2013 sowie des Young Conductors Award der Salzburger Festspiele 2015. 2017 wurde er beim International Opera Award zum Newcomer des Jahres gekürt. Lorenzo Viotti hat bereits zahlreiche bedeutende Orchester dirigiert, darunter das BBC Philharmonic Orchestra in Manchester, das Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, das Tokyo Symphony Orchestra , das Concertgebouw-Orchester Amsterdam, die Wiener Symphoniker, das Gewandhaus-Orchester Leipzig, das ORF Radio-Symphonieorchester Wien, das Mahler Chamber Orchestra, das Danish National Radio Symphony Orchestra, das Orchestre de Chambre de Lausanne, die Camerata Salzburg, die Staatskapelle Dresden und die Münchner Philharmoniker. Als Operndirigent leitete er «Carmen» an der Staatsoper Hamburg und an der Opéra Bastille in Paris, Rossinis «La cambiale di matrimonio» am Teatro La Fenice in Venedig, «Werther» und «Die Csárdásfürstin» am Opernhaus Zürich, «Rigoletto» an der Oper Stuttgart und der Semperoper Dresden, Tosca in Frankfurt und am New National Theater Tokyo, «Cavalleria rusticana», «Pagliacci» und «Turandot» an De Nationale Opera Amsterdam, «Roméo et Juliette» an der Mailänder Scala sowie «La bohème» am Théâtre des Champs-Elysées in Paris. Am Opernhaus Zürich dirigierte er zuletzt Erich Wolfgang Korngolds «Die tote Stadt».

Die Fledermaus7 / 10 / 12 / 14 / 18 / 26 / 28 / 31 Dec 2025 / 2 / 4 / 6 / 10 Jan 2026
Director:
Tatjana Gürbaca

Tatjana Gürbaca

Tatjana Gürbaca studied directing at the Hanns Eisler School of Music in her hometown of Berlin and complemented her training with masterclasses, especially with Ruth Berghaus. At the international Ring Award Graz she was one of the finalists. The spectrum of her productions ranges from the Baroque (Purcell’s "Dido and Aeneas" in Baden-Baden) to contemporary music theatre such as Dallapiccola’s "Il prigioniero" (Volksoper Vienna) or Philippe Hersant’s "Le moine noir" (world premiere at Oper Leipzig). She also directed a Tchaikovsky cycle at the Vlaamse Opera Antwerp. Further engagements have taken her to the Staatsoper Unter den Linden and the Deutsche Oper Berlin, Oper Graz, Stadttheater Bern, the opera houses of Novosibirsk and Oslo, as well as the Lucerne Festival. From 2011 to 2014 she was Opera Director at Staatstheater Mainz, where she staged, among others, "Die verkaufte Braut", Salvatore Sciarrino’s "Macbeth", "Un ballo in maschera" and Alessandro Scarlatti’s "Il primo omicidio". In 2013 she was named "Director of the Year" by the magazine Opernwelt for her "Parsifal" at the Vlaamse Opera Antwerp. She created a three-part "Ring" project and "Alcina" at Theater an der Wien, "Lohengrin" and "Der Freischütz" in Essen, Korngold’s "Die tote Stadt" at Oper Cologne, "Das schlaue Füchslein" at Theater Bremen, "Così fan tutte" at the National Theatre in Prague, "Káťa Kabanová" at the Deutsche Oper am Rhein, "Jenůfa" at the Grand Théâtre de Genève and "Ulisse" at Oper Frankfurt. In Zurich she has directed, among others, "Rigoletto", "Die Zauberflöte", "Werther", "Le Grand Macabre", "Lucia di Lammermoor" and in 2025 the world premiere of Beat Furrer’s "Das grosse Feuer".

Rigoletto20 / 23 / 27 Dec 2025 / 1 / 4 Jan 2026 Werther14 / 19 Jun / 1 / 4 / 10 Jul 2026
Stage and lighting designer:
Klaus Grünberg

Klaus Grünberg

Klaus Grünberg, a native of Hamburg, studied stage design under Erich Wonder in Vienna and has since worked as a freelance stage and lighting designer at theatres and opera houses across Europe, as well as in Kuwait and Buenos Aires. For many years, he has collaborated with composer and director Heiner Goebbels, as well as with Tatjana Gürbaca and Barrie Kosky. His recent works include "The Magic Flute," "Macbeth," "Werther," "Lucia di Lammermoor," and "The Merry Widow" at the Zurich Opera House; "The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny" and the Berlin-themed evening "…und morgen könnt ihr mich!" at the Komische Oper Berlin; "Ulisse" and "La Juive" at the Frankfurt Opera; "Simon Boccanegra" at the Aalto Music Theatre Essen; "Rusalka" at the Hanover State Opera; "L’incoronazione di Poppea" at the Theater Bremen; and Gogol’s "The Government Inspector" at the Burgtheater Vienna. In 1999, Klaus Grünberg opened MOMOLMA (Museum of More or Less Modern Art) in Hamburg.

Rigoletto20 / 23 / 27 Dec 2025 / 1 / 4 Jan 2026 Werther14 / 19 Jun / 1 / 4 / 10 Jul 2026 Macbeth8 / 11 / 14 / 19 / 22 / 30 Nov 2025
Associate set designer:
Anne Kuhn

Anne Kuhn

Anne Kuhn, born in Chemnitz, studied Applied Theatre Studies in Giessen. After numerous stage and set design assistantships, including with Beatrice Schultz, Klaus Grünberg, and Wolfgang Gussmann, she has been collaborating regularly with stage and lighting designer Klaus Grünberg since 2008. In addition, she realizes her own independent projects. Anne Kuhn lives and works as a stage designer and illustrator in Berlin and Hamburg. She has worked on productions such as "The Nose" (Royal Opera House Covent Garden), "Don Giovanni" and "Simplicius Simplicissimus" (Theater Bremen), "Rusalka" (Hanover State Opera), "Der Freischütz" (Aalto Music Theatre Essen), as well as at the Komische Oper Berlin on "Frühlingsstürme," "Pelléas et Mélisande," and "Akhnaten." At the Zurich Opera House, she collaborated with Klaus Grünberg on the stage designs for "Macbeth" and "The Merry Widow" (directed by Barrie Kosky), as well as for "Aida," "The Magic Flute," "Werther," and "Lucia di Lammermoor" (directed by Tatjana Gürbaca).

Werther14 / 19 Jun / 1 / 4 / 10 Jul 2026 Macbeth8 / 11 / 14 / 19 / 22 / 30 Nov 2025
Costumes:
Silke Willrett

Silke Willrett

Silke Willrett studied stage and costume design with Jürgen Rose and art history in Stuttgart. In 1999 she completed her state examination in art history. In 2003 she founded the independent theatre group "Fliegen ab Stuttgart" together with Tanja Richter and Marc Weeger, which received the Baden-Württemberg Theatre Prize in the same year. Together with Marc Weeger, she was nominated several times by Die Deutsche Bühne and Opernwelt as "Best Stage and Costume Designer". Silke Willrett also works as a set and costume designer for film productions. The film "Das Mass der Dinge" was nominated for the "First Steps Award" in 2005 and by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 2006. Her artistic partners include Andrea Breth, Christof Nel as well as Monique Wagemakers and Jan Essinger. Together with Tatjana Gürbaca she created, among others, "Le Grand Macabre", "Don Giovanni" and "L’incoronazione di Poppea" (Theater Bremen), "Werther" and "Manon" (Staatstheater Mainz), "Der fliegende Holländer" (Deutsche Oper Berlin), "Mazeppa", "Eugene Onegin" and "The Enchantress" (Vlaamse Opera Antwerp), "Salome" (Deutsche Oper am Rhein), "Rigoletto", "Aida", "Die Zauberflöte", "Werther" and "Lucia di Lammermoor" (Opernhaus Zürich), "Ulisse" and "La Juive" (Oper Frankfurt) as well as "Il primo omicidio" (Teatro Arriaga Bilbao). She has served on several juries for scholarships and awards, including from 2021 to 2024 for the FAUST Prize. She is a member of the scenography association and of the German Academy of the Performing Arts. As a visual artist, she is a member of the group "Linienscharen", which presents annual exhibitions throughout the region.

Rigoletto20 / 23 / 27 Dec 2025 / 1 / 4 Jan 2026 Werther14 / 19 Jun / 1 / 4 / 10 Jul 2026
Associate costume designer:
Carl-Christian Andresen

Carl-Christian Andresen

Carl-Christian Andresen studied textile and fashion design at the University of Applied Sciences in Hamburg and then moved to Paris for four years. There he worked, among others, for Chloé, Jean-Charles de Castelbajac and John Galliano. In 2006 he returned to Germany and shifted to theatre and opera as an artistic costume assistant. He has had a long-standing collaboration with Silke Willrett since 2008. Carl-Christian Andresen has worked on productions at, among others, the Thalia Theater Hamburg, the Hamburg State Opera, the Komische Oper Berlin, the Deutsche Oper Berlin, the Staatsoper Unter den Linden, Dutch National Opera, Opernhaus Zürich, the Vienna State Opera, Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, La Monnaie in Brussels, the Deutsche Oper am Rhein, the Aalto Theater in Essen and the Teatro Mayor in Bogotá. He created his own costume designs for, among others, "Le nozze di Figaro" at the Landestheater Detmold, "Le journal de Nijinsky" at the Grand Théâtre Bordeaux, "Dangerous Liaisons" at the Lübeck University of Music, "Der Vetter aus Dingsda" at Theater Ulm and "Dinorah" at Theater Görlitz. For Thierry Tidrow’s opera "Persona" at the Staatstheater Darmstadt he created both the stage and costume design in 2023. He also designs for various short films, feature films and commercials, including "My Circumcision" (awarded the Max Ophüls Prize 2013 for "Best Short Film") and the music video "Fräulein Sommer", which received the UNICATO Award for "Best Music Video" in 2014. In 2024 he designed, together with Silke Willrett, the costumes for the German premiere of Louise Bertin’s opera "Fausto" at the Aalto Musiktheater Essen (directed by Tatjana Gürbaca).

Rigoletto20 / 23 / 27 Dec 2025 / 1 / 4 Jan 2026 Werther14 / 19 Jun / 1 / 4 / 10 Jul 2026
Chorus Master:
Ernst Raffelsberger

Ernst Raffelsberger

Ernst Raffelsberger comes from Gmunden, Upper Austria. He studied music education and church music at the University of Music and Performing Arts in Vienna, as well as choral conducting at the Salzburg Mozarteum. From 1983 to 1986, he was Kapellmeister of the Vienna Boys’ Choir. During this time, he led the ensemble in Vienna and on tours throughout Europe, South Africa, Canada, and the USA. Starting in 1986, Ernst Raffelsberger served as Chorus Director and Kapellmeister at the Landestheater Salzburg (participating in the Salzburg Mozart Week and the Salzburg Festival). In 1989, he moved to the theater in Freiburg im Breisgau as Chorus Director and Kapellmeister. Since autumn 1993, Ernst Raffelsberger has been engaged as Chorus Director at the Zurich Opera House. By now, he has overseen around 150 premieres and countless revivals, collaborating with many renowned conductors such as Marco Armiliato, Riccardo Chailly, Teodor Currentzis, Christoph von Dohnányi, Sir John Eliot Gardiner, Daniele Gatti, Bernard Haitink, Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Zubin Mehta, Gianandrea Noseda, and Franz Welser-Möst. Guest performances with the Zurich Opera House have taken him to Vienna, London, Paris, and Tokyo. Beginning in the summer of 2012, he additionally started a 10-year tenure as Chorus Director of the Concert Association of the Vienna State Opera Chorus at the Salzburg Festival. Here, he successfully collaborated with, among others, Riccardo Muti, Mariss Jansons, and Sir Simon Rattle. After concluding this work with the 2021 festival summer, he has once again been responsible—since 2025 and at the request of Maestro Muti—for the choral preparation for his festival concerts in Salzburg.

Numerous CD and DVD recordings document his work in both Zurich and Salzburg.

Manon24 / 27 Sept / 3 / 7 / 10 Oct 2025 Tosca28 Sept / 2 / 8 / 11 / 15 / 19 Oct 2025 La clemenza di Tito26 / 29 Apr / 3 / 8 / 15 / 17 / 20 / 25 May 2026 Madama Butterfly30 Dec 2025 / 3 / 9 / 11 / 13 / 16 Jan 2026 Le nozze di Figaro24 / 29 Jan / 1 / 5 / 7 / 10 / 14 Feb 2026 Die Fledermaus7 / 10 / 12 / 14 / 18 / 26 / 28 / 31 Dec 2025 / 2 / 4 / 6 / 10 Jan 2026 Messa da Requiem20 / 22 / 28 Feb / 1 / 5 / 7 Mar / 6 Apr 2026 Arabella14 / 18 / 22 / 25 / 28 Apr 2026
Dramaturgy:
Claus Spahn

Claus Spahn

Claus Spahn was chief dramaturge at the Zurich Opera House during Andreas Homoki’s tenure as artistic director. There, he supervised music theater projects by Wolfgang Rihm, Helmut Lachenmann, George Benjamin, Roman Haubenstock-Ramati, and world premieres by Heinz Holliger, Christian Jost, and Stefan Wirth. As a production dramaturge, he worked with directors such as Sebastian Baumgarten, Herbert Fritsch, Jan Philipp Gloger, Tatjana Gürbaca, Andreas Homoki, Barrie Kosky, Nadja Loschky, David Marton, and Evgeni Titov. He also shares a close artistic partnership with the choreographer and former director of Zurich Ballet, Christian Spuck. For him, Spahn was involved in the development of the productions “Anna Karenina,” “Nussknacker und Mausekönig,” and “Monteverdi” in Zurich, he also wrote libretti for the ballets “Orlando” based on Virginia Woolf (world premiere in 2021 at the Moscow Bolshoi Ballet) and “Bovary” based on Gustave Flaubert (world premiere in 2023 at the Berlin State Ballet). Additionally, he is the librettist of the chamber opera “The Dream of You” by Swiss composer Xavier Dayer, which premiered in 2017 at the Zurich Opera House. Before joining the Zurich Opera House, Claus Spahn was the arts editor for 14 years at the German weekly newspaper DIE ZEIT, where he was responsible for the music section. From 1990 to 1997, he worked as a freelance music journalist mainly for the Süddeutsche Zeitung and Bavarian Broadcasting. Claus Spahn was born in Germany, studied classical guitar in Freiburg im Breisgau, and completed training at the German School of Journalism in Munich.

Rigoletto20 / 23 / 27 Dec 2025 / 1 / 4 Jan 2026 Le nozze di Figaro24 / 29 Jan / 1 / 5 / 7 / 10 / 14 Feb 2026 Werther14 / 19 Jun / 1 / 4 / 10 Jul 2026 Macbeth8 / 11 / 14 / 19 / 22 / 30 Nov 2025 Messa da Requiem20 / 22 / 28 Feb / 1 / 5 / 7 Mar / 6 Apr 2026

Cast


Werther Piotr Beczała

Werther Attilio Glaser 13 May


Charlotte Anaïk Morel


Sophie Mélissa Petit


Albert Andrei Bondarenko


Le Bailli Cheyne Davidson


Schmidt Martin Zysset


Johann Yuriy Tsiple


Brühlmann Stanislav Vorobyov


Käthchen Soyoung Lee

Piotr Beczała

Piotr Beczała zählt zu den gefragtesten Tenören unserer Zeit. Seit seinem Debüt an der Met als Duca (Rigoletto) 2006, sang er dort ausserdem Lenski (Jewgeni Onegin), den Prinzen (Rusalka), Edgardo, Rodolfo, Vaudémont (Iolanta), Riccardo, Gounods Roméo, Faust, Maurizio (Adriana Lecouvreur) und Werther sowie Des Grieux (Manon). Seine Interpretation des Duca brachte ihm 2014 den Echo Klassik als Sänger des Jahres ein. An der Scala in Mailand sang er Duca, Rodolfo und Alfredo (La traviata). Bei den Salzburger Festspielen, wo er 1997 als Tamino debütierte, feierte er als Roméo, Prinz, Rodolfo und als Faust sowie in konzertanten Aufführungen von Iolanta und Werther Erfolge. Auch als Konzert- und Liedsänger ist er weltweit gefragt. Piotr Beczała, der aus Polen stammt und seit 2012 Schweizer ist, studierte an der Musikakademie in Katowice. Er war langjähriges Ensemblemitglied am Opernhaus Zürich. Neben einer Reihe von DVDs u. a. aus dem Opernhaus Zürich umfasst seine Diskografie Soloalben wie Mein ganzes Herz, The French Collection, Salut, Verdi und Slavic. Bei den International Opera Awards 2018 wurde er zum Sänger des Jahres ausgezeichnet. 2016 debütierte er mit Lohengrin an der Seite von Anna Netrebko an der Semperoper Dresden und sang die Rolle erneut 2017 in Zürich, im Sommer 2018 bei den Bayreuther Festspielen sowie 2020 an der Wiener Staatsoper. Im Sommer 2022 gab er sein Debüt als Radamès in Aida bei den Salzburger Festspielen. In Zürich war er zuletzt als Prinz Sou-Chong in Das Land des Lächelns, als Werther, als Chevalier des Grieux in Manon, mit einem Liederabend, bei einer Operettengala und als Calàf in Turandot zu erleben.

Liederabend Piotr Beczała31 May 2026

Anaïk Morel

Anaïk Morel, Mezzosopran, wurde in Lyon geboren und studierte am Conservatoire national supérieur musique et danse in Lyon. Sie ist Preisträgerin des Pierre-Bernac-Gesangswettbewerbes in Saint-Jean-de-Luz, des Internationalen Wettbewerbes für Kammermusik in Lyon und des Concours Reine Elisabeth in Brüssel. Ihre internationale Karriere begann 2006 im Opernstudio der Bayerischen Staatsoper. Als Ensemblemitglied der Bayerischen Staatsoper von 2008 bis 2010 trat sie in Carmen (Mercédès), Nabucco (Fenena), Luisa Miller (Federica), Falstaff (Meg Page), Hänsel und Gretel (Hänsel), Dialogues des Carmélites (Sœur Mathilde), Palestrina (Silla) und Die schweigsame Frau (Carlotta) auf. Seither war sie an der Staatsoper Berlin und am Teatro alla Scala zu erleben(Die Walküre), sang Lazuli in Chabriers L’Étoile und Boulotte in Offenbachs Barbe-Bleue an der Opéra national de Lorraine, gastierte als Mère Marie (Dialogues des Carmélites) in Lyon und Bari, als Siébel (Faust) an der Pariser Opéra und als Marguerite (La Damnation de Faust) am Staatstehater Saarbrücken und an der Staatsoper Stuttgart. Zudem war sie 2014 bei den Salzburger Sommerfestspielen in der Uraufführung von Marc-André Dalbavies Charlotte Salomon zu erleben. In jüngster Zeit gab Anaïk Morel ihr Rollendebüt als Carmen an der Staatsoper Stuttgart und sang diese Partie anschliessend in Zürich und Montpellier. Sie gastierte als Preziosilla (La forza del destino) am Theater Basel, sang Fenena (Nabucco) an der Bayerischen Staatsoper und Charlotte (Werther) am Stadttheater Klagenfurt und an der Opéra du Rhin.

Mélissa Petit

Mélissa Petit wurde in Saint-Raphaël (Südfrankreich) geboren und studierte am Konservatorium in Saint-Raphaël. 2009 gewann sie den 2. Preis des «Concorso Musica Sacra di Roma», später den 1. Preis beim Nationalen Wettbewerb in Béziers. 2013 gewann sie den 3. Preis der «Queen Sonja Competition» in Oslo. 2010-2013 war sie Mitglied des Internationalen Opernstudios in Hamburg. 2014 sang sie die Edilia in Händels Almira in einer Koproduktion der Hamburgischen Staatsoper mit dem Festival für Alte Musik in Innsbruck. Während der Spielzeit 2014/15 war sie u.a. an der Hamburgischen Staatsoper als Schwester Constance in Dialo­gues des Carmélites von Poulenc zu erleben. Ausserdem sang sie dort Barbarina in Le nozze di Figaro, Papagena in der Zauberflöte, Najade in Ariadne auf Naxos, Clorinda in La Cenerentola und die Titelrolle in Die unglückselige Cleopatra von Mattheson. Ab der Spielzeit 2015/16 gehörte Mélissa Petit zum Ensemble des Zürcher Opernhauses und war hier u.a. als Madame Silberklang (Der Schauspieldirektor), Philidel (King Arthur), Servilia (La clemenza di Tito), Ännchen (Der Freischütz), Sophie (Werther), Créuse (Médée), Eurilla (Haydns Orlando paladino), Marzelline (Fidelio), Johanna Barker (Sweeney Todd) und Aricie (Hippolyte et Aricie) zu erleben. In der Saison 2015/16 debütierte sie ausserdem an der Opéra Bastille in Paris als Giannetta (L’elisir d’amore), 2017 als Micaëla (Carmen) bei den Bregenzer Festspielen und 2018 als Juliette in Roméo et Juliette am National Center of Performing Arts in Peking. Im Sommer 2019 sang sie auf der Seebühne der Bregenzer Festspiele zudem Gilda in Rigoletto.

Andrei Bondarenko

Andrei Bondarenko stammt aus der Ukraine und studierte in Kiew. Acht Jahre lang war er Solist der Akademie des Mariinski-Theaters. Er ist Preisträger mehrerer Gesangswettbewerbe, u.a. des BBC Cardiff Singer of the World Competition Song Prize 2011. Am Mikhailovsky Theater in St. Petersburg gab er sein Debüt in der Titelrolle von Brittens Billy Budd, am Minsker Bolschoi-Theater in der Titelrolle von Jewgeni Onegin. Er war u.a. in der Carnegie Hall, der Wigmore Hall, beim Glyndebourne Festival, an der Sydney Opera und der Perm State Opera zu erleben. 2010 debütierte er bei den Salzburger Festspielen in Gounods Roméo et Juliette. Er arbeitete mit Dirigenten wie Valery Gergiev, Ivor Bolton, Yannik Nézet-Séguin und Vladimir Ashkenazy. Zu seinen jüngsten Erfolgen zählen Jewgeni Onegin in Köln, Berlin, Stuttgart, São Paulo, Dallas sowie am Mariinski-Theater und beim Glyndebourne Festival, Conte (Le nozze di Figaro) in Madrid, an der Opera Australia und am Bolschoi, Belcore (L’elisir d’amore) an der Bayerischen Staatsoper München, Robert (Iolanta) in Dallas, Marcello (La bohème) an der Bayerischen Staatsoper München und in Köln sowie Pelléas (Pelléas et Mélisande) an der Scottish Opera. Zu seinen Aufnahmen zählen u.a. Conte (Le nozze di Figaro) und die Titelrolle in Don Giovanni unter Teodor Currentzis. 2017/18 debütiert er als Marcello am Londoner Covent Garden und sang erneut Belcore in München. Am Opernhaus Zürich war er bisher als Marcello, als Malatesta (Don Pasquale), als Ramiro (L‘Heure espagnole) und als Albert (Werther) zu hören. Im Sommer 2018 gastierte er zudem als Belcore in L’elisir d’amore bei den Münchner Opernfestspielen.

Cheyne Davidson

Cheyne Davidson erhielt seine musikalische Ausbildung an der Case Western Reserve University, dem Cleveland Institute of Music und der Manhattan School of Music. Unmittelbar nach seinem Studium wurde er eingeladen, als Escamillo mit Peter Brooks Tragédie de Carmen auf Europa-, Japan- und Israel-Tournee zu gehen. Nach Auftritten in den USA und Europa war er ein Jahr lang Mitglied des IOS. Seit 1992/93 gehört er zum Ensemble des Opernhauses Zürich, wo er u.a. als Marcello, Schaunard und Benoît (La bohème), Escamillo (Carmen), Silvio (Pagliacci), Amfortas (Parsifal), Paolo Albiani (Simon Boccanegra), Donner und Gunther (Der Ring des Nibelungen), Alfio (Cavalleria rusticana), Faninal (Rosenkavalier), Lescaut (Manon Lescaut), Marco (Gianni Schicchi), Barone Douphol (La traviata), Enrico (Lucia di Lammermoor), Werschinski (Drei Schwestern), Eisenhardt (Die Soldaten), Chang (Das Land des Lächelns), als Le Bailli in Massenets Werther, Bill (Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny), Jonas Fogg (Sweeney Todd), Eurylochos (Die Odyssee) und als Benoît (La bohème) auftrat. Gastverträge führten ihn u.a. an die Opernhäuser Stuttgart, Köln und Hamburg, nach Basel und Luzern, an das Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris, die Oper Nancy, zur Hamburger Opernwoche, nach Belgrad und Budapest, zu den Bregenzer Festspielen und zum Classic Open Air Solothurn. Bei der ZKO Opera Box war er in Die schöne Galathée, in Il campanello di notte sowie in Il signor Bruschino zu erleben. Sein Salzburger Festspieldebüt gab er zu Pfingsten 2016 als Doc in der West Side Story; im Sommer 2016 war er ebenfalls in Salzburg in der Uraufführung von Thomas Adès’ Oper The Exterminating Angel zu erleben.

Martin Zysset

Martin Zysset was born and raised in Solothurn. He trained as a clarinetist while simultaneously studying voice, complementing his education with master classes with Ernst Haefliger and Edith Mathis. In 1990/91, he was a member of the International Opera Studio at Zurich Opera House and, at the same time, a scholarship holder of the Migros Culture Percentage and a prizewinner of the Pro Arte Lyrica Competition in Lausanne. Since 1992, he has been a regular guest at the Selzach Summer Festival. He has been a permanent member of the Zurich Opera House ensemble since the 1991/92 season, where he has built up a wide-ranging repertoire encompassing both comic and dramatic roles, including Pedrillo, Monostatos, Spoletta, Incredibile (“Andrea Chénier”), Jaquino, Kudrjasch (“Káťa Kabanová”), Alfred (“Die Fledermaus”), Tamino, Tybalt, Dancaïro, Arturo, the Witch, Brighella, and the male lead in Udo Zimmermann’s “Weiße Rose.” He achieved great success as Simplicius in Johann Strauss’s operetta of the same name, which was also released on CD and DVD. Guest performances have taken him throughout Europe, to Shanghai, and to San Diego with “The Magic Flute,” “Le nozze di Figaro,” “Fidelio,” and “Tannhäuser.” For Bavarian Radio, he recorded Lehár’s operetta “Paganini.” Most recently at Zurich Opera House, he has appeared as Don Basilio (“Le nozze di Figaro”), Tschekalinski (“The Queen of Spades”), Triquet (“Eugene Onegin”), the Chief Eunuch (“The Land of Smiles”), Goro (“Madama Butterfly”), Spoletta (“Tosca”), Dormont (“La scala di seta”), the White Minister (“Le Grand Macabre”), the Devil/Narrator (“The Soldier’s Tale”), the Third Jew (“Salome”), Schmidt (“Werther”), and Feri (“The Csárdás Princess”).

La scala di seta25 / 28 Sept / 19 / 24 Oct 2025 Madama Butterfly30 Dec 2025 / 3 / 9 / 11 / 13 / 16 Jan 2026 Un ballo in Maschera22 / 28 / 31 May / 7 / 13 Jun 2026 Le nozze di Figaro24 / 29 Jan / 1 / 5 / 7 / 10 / 14 Feb 2026 Werther14 / 19 Jun / 1 / 4 / 10 Jul 2026 Arabella14 / 18 / 22 / 25 / 28 Apr 2026

Yuriy Tsiple

Yuriy Tsiple wurde in der Ukraine geboren und studierte Gesang an der Universität für Musik in Bukarest bei Ionel Voineag. Bereits während seines Studiums wurde er vom Staatlichen Rumänischen Rundfunk und Fernsehen für Aufnahmen und Konzerte mit dem Rundfunkorchester und dem Kammerorchester des Staatlichen Rundfunks engagiert. Er gewann erste Preise bei renommierten rumänischen Wettbewerben wie 2007 beim Ionel-Perlea-Wettbewerb in Slobozia und beim Mihail-Jora-Wettbewerb in Bukarest. 2009/10 debütierte er an der Oper Frankfurt als Mitglied des Opernstudios. Er sang u.a. Roberto/Nardo in Mozarts La finta giardiniera, Alcindoro in La bohème und die Titelpartie in Telemanns Pimpinone. Er war Mitglied des Internationalen Opernstudios an der Opéra National du Rhin in Strassburg, wo er als Ali Baba in Cherubinis Ali Baba und als Malatesta in Donizettis Don Pasquale zu erleben war. 2011/12 sang er an der Opéra National du Rhin Schaunard in La bohème, Le Roi in Le Chat botté und debütierte als Don Parmenione in Rossinis L’occasione fa il ladro. Gastspiele führten ihn als Ali Baba an das Théâtre de l’Athénée in Paris, als Ramiro (L’Heure espagnole) zum Rumänischen Rundfunk nach Bukarest und als Conte (Le nozze di Figaro) an die Nationaloper Bukarest. Unlängst sang er Don Parmenione mit dem Orchestre National de l’Île de France. Seit 2012 ist er Ensemblemitglied der Oper Zürich, wo er u.a. als Moralès (Carmen), Schaunard, Gespenst von Canterville, Jake Wallace (La fanciulla del West), Il Barone di Trombonok (Il viaggio a Reims), Sheriff von Nottingham (Robin Hood), Kilian (Der Freischütz) und Cristiano (Un ballo in maschera) zu erleben war.

Stanislav Vorobyov

Stanislav Vorobyov is a native of Russia and studied at the Moscow Conservatory. He was a member of the International Opera Studio and has been part of the ensemble at Zurich Opera House since the 2018/19 season. In Zurich, he has appeared in roles such as Colline (“La bohème”), Alidoro (“La Cenerentola”), High Priest (“Nabucco”), Notary (“Der Rosenkavalier”), Reinmar von Zweter (“Tannhäuser”), Faust (“The Fiery Angel”), Zaretsky (“Eugene Onegin”), Cesare Angelotti (“Tosca”), Fifth Jew and First Nazarene (“Salome”), Lord Rochefort (“Anna Bolena”), Doctor Grenvil (“La traviata”), Crébillon (“La rondine”), and Zuniga (“Carmen”), as well as Roberto (“I vespri siciliani”), Roucher (“Andrea Chénier”), and the Police Commissioner (“Der Rosenkavalier”). He also sang Don Basilio (“Il barbiere di Siviglia”) at the Bregenz Festival, Nourabad (“Les Pêcheurs de perles”) at Opera Vlaanderen and in Luxembourg, and Ombra di Nino (“Semiramide”) at the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam. At the Bregenz Festival, he also appeared as Uncle Bonzo in “Madama Butterfly” and as Il capitano/L’ispettore in Umberto Giordano’s “Siberia.” In 2024, he was additionally heard as Colline (“La bohème”) at the Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre and ROHM Theatre Kyoto.

Cardillac15 / 18 / 21 / 25 Feb / 1 / 6 / 10 Mar 2026 La Damnation de Faust10 / 14 / 17 May 2026 Carmen18 / 21 / 23 / 27 / 31 Jan 2026 Madama Butterfly30 Dec 2025 / 3 / 9 / 11 / 13 / 16 Jan 2026 Un ballo in Maschera22 / 28 / 31 May / 7 / 13 Jun 2026 La forza del destino2 / 7 / 12 / 15 / 18 / 21 / 26 / 29 Nov / 17 / 21 Dec 2025 Der Rosenkavalier21 / 26 Sept / 1 / 5 / 14 / 17 / 21 / 26 Oct 2025

Soyoung Lee

Soyoung (Sarah) Lee stammt aus Südkorea. Sie studierte an der Chugye University of Arts in Seoul und an der Hochschule für Musik Karlsruhe bei Donald Litaker und nahm an Meisterkursen von Hartmut Höll und Raina Kabaivanska teil. Sie gewann den 1. Preis beim Internationalen Anneliese Rothenberger-Wettbewerb und war Finalistin beim Internationalen Gesangswettbewerb Francisco Viñas in Spanien. In Korea debütierte sie konzertant als Pamina (Die Zauberflöte) und sang Carmina Burana mit dem Gyeonggi Philharmonic Orchestra. In Deutschland ist sie u.a. beim Festival für zeitgenössische Musik Karlsruhe und mit der Südwestdeutschen Philharmonie Konstanz aufgetreten. Ab der Spielzeit 2016/17 war sie Mitglied des Internationalen Opernstudios in Zürich und war hier u.a. als Tebaldo (Don Carlo), Käthchen (Werther), 1. Nonne (Der feurige Engel) sowie in Trojahns Orest zu hören. Ausserdem sang sie u.a. in Le Comte Ory, Luisa Miller, Der Traum von Dir und Parsifal. Am Staatstheater Kassel trat sie als Zweite Ermittlerin in Einbruch mehrerer Dunkelheiten auf. Mittlerweile ist Soyoung Lee Mitglied des Chors der Oper Zürich.

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Photos «Werther»


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Synopsis

Discover the heart of every story: Our synopses provide guidance on the plot and the conflicts that drive its characters.

Act One
Christmas songs are being rehearsed at the bailiff’s house in the middle of summer. The widowed master of the house himself is practising with his children, for his eldest daughter Charlotte, who has been running the household with great care since her mother’s death, is dressing for the festive village ball, which she will attend with young Werther. Friends of the family, Johann and Schmidt, drop by. They poke fun at the curious singing lesson and want to take the bailiff out with them to the inn.
Werther comes to fetch Charlotte for the ball. He is enraptured by her and the world in which she is at home. Charlotte gives the children their supper and asks her younger sister Sophie to take care of the little ones while she is out. Charlotte and Werther set out for the ball.
Charlotte’s fiancé Albert returns from an extended business trip and finds only Sophie at home. Albert is happy with his love for Charlotte and looking forward to seeing her again. He wants to surprise his bride with his return the next day.
Late in the night, by the light of the moon, Charlotte and Werther return from the ball. He emphatically confesses his love for her. She remembers her mother’s death and the oath that she swore on her deathbed – that she would take care of the family and her younger siblings like a mother.
The intimate conversation ends abruptly when the bailiff reminds Charlotte of her fiancé by calling from a distance that Albert has returned. Werther falls into despair over the fact that his beloved Charlotte is promised to another.

Act Two
It is Sunday, and a golden wedding is being celebrated. Johann and Schmidt comment on the festivities. Charlotte and Albert, who are now married, are also present. Werther appears, sees Charlotte at Albert’s side and dreams of what it would be like if he himself could spend his life with Charlotte.
Albert understands Werther’s feelings, speaks comfortingly to him and draws his attention to Sophie, who herself attempts to cheer up the unhappy man and arouse his interest in her.
Werther, however, is entirely wrapped up in his heartache. He undertakes to renounce Charlotte and go away from her, but during another, private encounter he is once again overwhelmed by his feelings. He reminds her of the tender moments they shared at the ball.
Charlotte remains aloof and vigorously rejects him, telling him that he must leave. She now belongs to her husband Albert, but could perhaps envisage seeing him again at Christmas. Werther remains alone with thoughts of suicide.
Sophie comes again to take Werther to the party. In despair, he announces his intention of going away for ever.

Act Three
It is Christmas Day, and Charlotte is alone. Her feelings for Werther are stronger than she wanted to admit to herself. Unable to quell her great longing, she reads his passionate letters to her over and over again, shuddering at the bleak allusions to suicide they contain.
Sophie comes to visit, detects her sister’s melancholy mood and makes her promise to celebrate Christmas evening at their parents’ house.
Once Charlotte is alone again amid mounting despair, Werther suddenly stands before her. He could do nothing other than return to her on the day that she had named at their last encounter. The pair reminisce about the beautiful moments they have shared. Charlotte shows Werther the songs of Ossian, which they once read together. Deeply moved, he once more reads a few lines to her. Her emotional reaction leads him to believe that she is also in love with him. They fall into each other’s arms.
Then, however, Charlotte regains her composure and declares that they must never see one another again. Werther now takes the irrevocable decision to kill himself.
Albert has learned of Werther’s secret visit. Just as he is taking Charlotte to task about it, a messenger delivers a letter from Werther in which he announces that he is about to embark on an extended journey and asks Albert to lend him a pistol. Albert orders Charlotte to hand it over to the messenger.

Act Four
Werther has shot himself with Albert’s pistol. Charlotte finds him, mortally wounded. She feels she is to blame for his deed and acknowledges that she loves him as deeply as he does her. She gives him the kiss that he has always dreamt of receiving from her.
As he lies dying, Werther is happy and says that this moment does not mean the end of his life, but only just the beginning.
The children’s Christmas songs can be heard from afar. Werther dies.