"The Merry Widow" Filharmonia Narodowa

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"The Merry Widow"
Łukasz Borowicz, photo: Ksawery Zamoyski

Every year, the Warsaw Philharmonic invites listeners to spend New Year’s Eve in the company of music. This year, the orchestra led by Łukasz Borowicz, alongside outstanding soloists, will be performing in full one of the most celebrated operettas in the history of the genre. Ferenc Lehar’s The Merry Widow was first staged in Vienna towards the end of 1905. The history of the work’s composition is so colourful and dramatic that it could be used as the plot for another operetta. The name of the composer – whose music contributed to the extraordinary success of The Merry Widow, performed in its original production almost 500 times – ultimately eclipsed the names of the librettists and the initiators of the project. Lehar was the second composer asked to write the music for this operetta, and towards the end of his work, he was on the point of being dismissed. Until the very last minute, doubts remained as to whether the work would prove a success; the budget and number of rehearsals were reduced to a minimum, and the costs of preparing the costumes and sets were covered partly by the performers themselves. In addition, there was a whiff of diplomatic scandal in the air, and the librettists decided to cover up the source of their not entirely original – as it turned out – idea.

Bartłomiej Gembicki

 

* Opera Academy at Teatr Wielki – Polish National Opera in Warsaw
** soloists of the Warsaw Philharmonic Choir

Warsaw Philharmonic Patron of the Year – PGE Polska Grupa Energetyczna – warmly welcomes you to join us in this concert
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Tomasz Nosiński

Theatre and film actor. He graduated from the Ludwik Solski State Higher School of Theatre (now: Stanisław Wyspiański National Academy of Theatre Arts) in Krakow in 2008. He worked at the Stefan Żeromski Theatre in Kielce and the New Theatre in Poznań. He has worked with the New Theatre in Krakow, the Contemporary Theatre in Szczecin, the Dramatic Theatre in Warsaw. In the 2016/2017 season, he joined the company of Warsaw's Studio Theatre.

He has acted in over thirty plays, including award-winning plays at national and international festivals, such as: In the Solitude of Cotton Fields and Hamlet, directed by Radosław Rychcik, or Empress Katherine, directed by Wiktor Rubin, which were presented in, among others: New York, Los Angeles, Seattle, Santiago de Chile, Seoul, Berlin, Paris, Nancy.

Currently, he can be seen, among others, in the following Studio Theatre productions: Metaphysics of a Two-Headed Calf, Demons, The Scattered Card Index, Kiss of the Spider Woman, Berlin Alexanderplatz and in the Jewish Theatre's production You're Very Welcome presented at the Zachęta National Gallery of Art.

 

[2023]