Experience Handel’s opera of desire and destruction in a darkly satirical new staging.
Pretty Yende stars in Handel’s opera of power and privilege, in a new production directed by Oliver Mears.
Théâtre des Champs-Elysées
Royal Ballet and Opera Principal Julia Rausing Trust
Charles Holloway OBE, The Estate of Mrs Gertrude Mary Looi, Dame Tina Taylor DBE and the Royal Opera House Endowment Fund
In the decadent world of the wealthy and powerful, hedonism rules supreme. Enter Semele, whose love for Jupiter introduces her to luxury – and total destruction.
Jupiter lives to seduce and destroy. Semele is his latest conquest. Installed as Jupiter’s lover in his luxurious home, Semele, a former servant in his household, can’t believe her good fortune. But Jupiter’s wife, Juno, concocts a plan for revenge that will bring ruin to her husband’s young lover.
Uncanny, strange and darkly satirical, this new production from Oliver Mears considers powerlessness, privilege and degradation. First performed in 1744, Semele marks the latest instalment in The Royal Opera's series of Handel's Covent Garden works. Pretty Yende (who sang at the Coronation of King Charles III) performs the title role of Semele, with Ben Bliss, who makes his debut with The Royal Opera, as her seductive but sinister lover. Brindley Sherratt, Carlo Vistoli and Alice Coote also star, conducted by Baroque specialist Christian Curnyn.
Visions of Paradise
The most famous aria in Handel's musical drama is ‘Where'er you walk’, sung by Jupiter to reassure Semele. It is equally popular across the classical music community. ‘Where'er you walk / Cool gales shall fan the glade / Trees where you sit / Shall crowd into a shade,’ sings Jupiter, likening his palace gardens to paradise. Set to lyrics by Alexander Pope from the poet’s Pastorals, the aria is recognisable for its calm and serene manner, making it a popular wedding – and funeral – song.
Sensual Music
The opera is surprising in its sensuality, especially given that it was first performed during the season of Lent: a time when, in Handel’s day, austere religious subjects were typically preferred. Instead, Handel takes a mortal heroine from the world of ancient myth who revels in her own sexuality, with arias including: ‘Endless pleasure, endless love / Semele enjoys above’, ‘With bliss expiring, panting, fainting’, and ‘Myself I shall adore’. Sadly, Semele’s enjoyment is cut short, when she is tricked by Juno into demanding that Jupiter appear to her in his true form, with disastrous consequences.
Handel's Covent Garden History
Semele is the latest instalment in The Royal Opera’s series of Handel’s Covent Garden works, which so far has included Susanna, the Olivier Award-winning Alcina, as well as Jephtha and Theodora. In many cases, these are works which have not been staged in their original home for upwards of 250 years, despite gaining popularity far beyond their Covent Garden origins. Semele is one such example, enjoying a homecoming over 280 years after its first performance in 1744.
A Mythological Tale
Semele is a mortal woman who in the original myth, has an affair with the god Jupiter. Jupiter’s wife, Juno is furious, and in revenge, she tricks Semele into demanding that Jupiter reveal himself to her in his true form. The result? She is overwhelmed by his power, and consumed by fire. From her ashes, Bacchus is born, and later becomes the god of revelry, fertlity and agriculture. Semele’s story is a cautionary tale, with contemporary themes, such as power imbalances and sexual exploitation.
There is lift access and step-free routes to over 100 seats in the Stalls Circle, Balcony and Amphitheatre. There are 10 steps or fewer to some seats in the Stalls Circle, Balcony, Amphitheatre and the Donald Gordon Grand Tier. All seats in the Orchestra stalls are accessed by 9 steps or more. A handheld bell is rung by Front of House staff to signal guests to take their seats before a performance. The bell is loud and can be startling. The bell is rung approximately ten minutes before the show starts and at each interval.
We have an assistive listening system available to use. This opera is sung English with English surtitles. Captions and translations will be displayed on screens above the stage and around the auditorium.
This production contains depictions of violence, murder and traumatic childbirth. There are pyrotechnics and flashing lights in Act I.
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