One of Russia’s most distinguished opera and ballet companies has an innovative solution to prohibitions on public gatherings over the coronavirus: playing to an audience of one.
The Perm Opera and Ballet Theatre, a Urals city company famed for its cutting-edge projects, said it would be launching the “One on One” performances from the end of March.
“A full-fledged performance cannot happen,” the company said in a statement, “without the participation of an audience.”
Each audience member will be chosen by lottery and will have to undergo a medical check before attending a performance, which will also be broadcast online.
Principal stage director Marat Gatsalov called the project “without precedent in the history of theatre” and said the company felt it was important to continue to play to an audience, even if consists of only one person.
“In the grand scheme of things,” he said in the statement, “one spectator is the same as a full house.”
The Perm Opera and Ballet Theatre is one of the most audacious cultural projects in post-Soviet Russia. Teodor Currentzis, among the world’s mostly highly regarded conductors, worked in Perm between 2011 and 2019.
The theatre traces its history to the 1870s, when it was built with donations from wealthy businessmen who included the grandfather of ballet impresario Sergei Diaghilev.
Governments around the world have ordered the closing of concert halls and theatres to try to contain the coronavirus pandemic and many venues have turned to streaming.
Russia has recorded 253 cases of the coronavirus, including three in the Perm region, according to the most recent official figures published Friday.
AFP
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