Haus für Mozart tickets 24 May 2026 - Premiere Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria | GoComGo.com

Premiere
Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria

Haus für Mozart, Salzburg, Austria
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11 AM
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US$ 120

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Important Info
Type: Opera
City: Salzburg, Austria
Starts at: 11:00
Acts: 3
Sung in: Italian
Titles in: German,English

E-tickets: Print at home or at the box office of the event if so specified. You will find more information in your booking confirmation email.

You can only select the category, and not the exact seats.
If you order 2 or 3 tickets: your seats will be next to each other.
If you order 4 or more tickets: your seats will be next to each other, or, if this is not possible, we will provide a combination of groups of seats (at least in pairs, for example 2+2 or 2+3).

Cast
Performers
Conductor: Gianluca Capuano
Soprano: Arianna Vendittelli (Minerva)
Orchestra: Les Musiciens du Prince - Monaco
Contralto: Sara Mingardo (Penelope)
Baritone: Vito Priante (Ulisse)
Creators
Composer: Claudio Monteverdi
Theater : Compagnia marionettistica Carlo Colla e figli
Librettist: Giacomo Badoaro
Festival

Salzburg Festival Whitsun 2026

Visitors to the Salzburg Festival are invited to Salzburg from 22 to 25 May 2026 for ‘Bon Voyage’.

Overview

The Phaeacians have set the sleeping Ulysses down on the shores of Ithaca, and his long wanderings are almost over. Monteverdi’s opera Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria depicts the last leg of Ulysses’s return from Troy: thanks to his divine protector Minerva, he reunites with his son Telemachus, then, disguised as an old beggar, sets out for the royal palace to destroy his wife’s power-hungry suitors. Penelope struggles to accept that the man to whom she has remained steadfastly faithful for 20 years is truly standing before her.

From her heartrending lament in Act I onward, Monteverdi gives Penelope the same care and attention he devotes to the opera’s hero himself. The path to the couple’s joyful reunion is lined with helpful and hostile gods, loyal and less loyal servants, hypocritical suitors and a social parasite as grotesque as he is gluttonous. With his genius for musical characterization, Monteverdi conjures up a vivid tapestry of characters and events, which the Milanese puppet company Colla will bring to life on stage with delightful inventiveness.

Co-production with the Opéra de Monte-Carlo

History
Premiere of this production: 30 November 1638, Carnival season Teatro Santi Giovanni e Paolo, Venice

Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria (The Return of Ulysses to his Homeland) is an opera consisting of a prologue and five acts (later revised to three), set by Claudio Monteverdi to a libretto by Giacomo Badoaro. The opera was first performed at the Teatro Santi Giovanni e Paolo in Venice during the 1639–1640 carnival season.

Synopsis

The action takes place on and around the island of Ithaca, ten years after the Trojan Wars. English translations used in the synopsis are from Geoffrey Dunn's version, based on Raymond Leppard's 1971 edition, and from Hugh Ward-Perkins's interpretation issued with Sergio Vartolo's 2006 recording for Brilliant Classics. Footnotes provide the original Italian.

Prologue
The spirit of human frailty (l'humana Fragilità) is mocked in turn by the gods of time (il Tempo), fortune (la Fortuna) and love (l'Amore). Man, they claim, is subject to their whims: "From Time, ever fleeting, from Fortune's caresses, from Love and its arrows...No mercy from me!" They will render man "weak, wretched, and bewildered."

Act 1
In the palace at Ithaca, Penelope mourns the long absence of Ulysses: "The awaited one does not return, and the years pass by." Her grief is echoed by her nurse, Ericlea. As Penelope leaves, her attendant Melanto enters with Eurimaco, a servant to Penelope's importunate suitors. The two sing passionately of their love for each other ("You are my sweet life"). The scene changes to the Ithacan coast, where the sleeping Ulisse is brought ashore by the Phaecians (Faeci), whose action is in defiance of the wishes of gods Giove and Nettuno. The Phaecians are punished by the gods who turn them and their ship to stone. Ulysses awakes, cursing the Phaecians for abandoning him: "To your sails, falsest Phaeacians, may Boreas be ever hostile!" From the goddess Minerva, who appears disguised as a shepherd boy, Ulisse learns that he is in Ithaca, and is told of "the unchanging constancy of the chaste Penelope", in the face of the persistent importunings of her evil suitors. Minerva promises to lead Ulisse back to the throne if he follows her advice; she tells him to disguise himself so that he can penetrate the court secretly. Ulisse goes to seek out his loyal servant Eumete, while Minerva departs to search for Telemaco, Ulisse's son who will help his father reclaim the kingdom. Back at the palace, Melanto tries vainly to persuade Penelope to choose one of the suitors: "Why do you disdain the love of living suitors, expecting comfort from the ashes of the dead?" In a wooded grove Eumete, banished from court by the suitors, revels in the pastoral life, despite the mockery of Iro, the suitors' parasitic follower, who sneers: "I live among kings, you here among the herds." After Iro is chased away, Ulisse enters disguised as a beggar, and assures Eumete that his master the king is alive, and will return. Eumete is overjoyed: "My long sorrow will fall, vanquished by you."

Act 2
Minerva and Telemaco return to Ithaca in a chariot. Telemaco is greeted joyfully by Eumete and the disguised Ulisse in the woodland grove: "O great son of Ulysses, you have indeed returned!" After Eumete goes to inform Penelope of Telemaco's arrival a bolt of fire descends on Ulisse, removing his disguise and revealing his true identity to his son. The two celebrate their reunion before Ulisse sends Telemaco to the palace, promising to follow shortly. In the palace, Melanto complains to Eurimaco that Penelope still refuses to choose a suitor: "In short, Eurymachus, the lady has a heart of stone." Soon afterwards Penelope receives the three suitors (Antinoo, Pisandro, Anfinomo), and rejects each in turn despite their efforts to enliven the court with singing and dancing: "Now to enjoyment, to dance and song!" After the suitors' departure Eumete tells Penelope that Telemaco has arrived in Ithaca, but she is doubtful: "Such uncertain things redouble my grief." Eumete's message is overheard by the suitors, who plot to kill Telemaco. However, they are unnerved when a symbolic eagle flies overhead, so they abandon their plan and renew their efforts to capture Penelope's heart, this time with gold. Back in the woodland grove, Minerva tells Ulisse that she has organised a means whereby he will be able to challenge and destroy the suitors. Resuming his beggar's disguise, Ulisse arrives at the palace, where he is challenged to a fight by Iro, ("I will pluck out the hairs of your beard one by one!"), a challenge he accepts and wins. Penelope now states that she will accept the suitor who is able to string Ulisse's bow. All three suitors attempt the task unsuccessfully. The disguised Ulisse then asks to try though renouncing the prize of Penelope's hand, and to everyone's amazement he succeeds. He then angrily denounces the suitors and, summoning the names of the gods, kills all three with the bow: "This is how the bow wounds! To death, to havoc, to ruin!"

Act 3
Deprived of the suitors' patronage, Iro commits suicide after a doleful monologue ("O grief, O torment that saddens the soul!") Melanto, whose lover Eurimaco was killed with the suitors, tries to warn Penelope of the new danger represented by the unidentified slayer, but Penelope is unmoved and continues to mourn for Ulisse. Eumete and Telemaco now inform her that the beggar was Ulisse in disguise, but she refuses to believe them: "Your news is persistent and your comfort hurtful." The scene briefly transfers to the heavens, where Giunone, having been solicited by Minerva, persuades Giove and Nettune that Ulisse should be restored to his throne. Back in the palace the nurse Ericlea has discovered Ulisse's identity by recognising a scar on his back, but does not immediately reveal this information: "Sometimes the best thing is a wise silence." Penelope continues to disbelieve, even when Ulisse appears in his true form and when Ericlea reveals her knowledge of the scar. Finally, after Ulisse describes the pattern of Penelope's private bedlinen, knowledge that only he could possess, she is convinced. Reunited, the pair sing rapturously to celebrate their love: "My sun, long sighed for! My light, renewed!"

Venue Info

Haus für Mozart - Salzburg
Location   Hofstallgasse 1

When it became clear that the ambitious plans to build a festival theater in Hellbrunn could not be realized, the idea of ​​transforming parts of the Hofstallkaserne into a theater hall came to the fore. After only four months of construction, a provisional festival theater was opened in 1925 on the terrain of the Great Winter Riding School with the Salzburg World Theater. Already in 1926 a first reconstruction phase of the insufficient Festspielhaus provisional by Clemens Holzmeister. Adaptations were made again in 1927, and now operas were also presented: Beethoven's Fidelio was performed here in 1927 as the first music theater work.
 

The later so-called "Small Festspielhaus" experienced numerous other renovation phases: 1937 was the rotation of the auditorium by 180 degrees, making a stage house cultivation was necessary. To accomplish this, Governor Franz Rehrl had his birthplace demolished in Toscaninihof. Benno von Arent redesigned the Festspielhaus in 1939 and replaced the wood paneling with a gilded plaster ceiling. The unfavorable visual and acoustic conditions required a further conversion in the years 1962/63. The Salzburg architects Hans Hofmann and Erich Engels gave the hall the form that it had until 2004.

For many years, the Salzburg Festival pursued the plan to create a "House for Mozart", which takes into account the stage works of the composer in every respect: with optimal acoustics and the best visibility from all seats. With the necessary intimacy of the room but at the same time a sufficient seating capacity had to go along. What seems like a squaring of the circle, the team of architects Holzbauer & Valentiny accomplished: The former Small Festival House was transformed in three phases from September 2003 in a "House for Mozart". The auditorium of the Kleine Festspielhaus was widened, shortened and lowered. Two new auditorium seats were created, which extend to the stage on both sides of the hall. Thus, the effect is achieved that not bare walls, but festive people frame the stage from three sides.

The foyer areas have changed considerably compared to the former Kleines Festspielhaus. High, floor-to-ceiling windows open the view to the cityscape in the main foyer - in return, the brightly lit interior of the theater in the evening looks outward. The main foyer is dominated by a 17-meter-high gilded louvre wall, through whose openings a Mozart's head created from Swarovski crystals can be seen. The terrace in front of the hall building was never open to the public since its construction in 1924. With the new building, it has now become part of the pause foyers. The arcade below was glazed and allows the auditorium to be opened from two sides instead of just one. This is the first time you can step directly from the Festspielhaus into the magnificent city landscape.

The new festival lounge on the roof, the SalzburgKulisse (made possible by the patron Gerhard Andlinger), has become a major attraction: the name itself already hints at the magnificent view that offers itself there to the old town of Salzburg. The furnishings of this lounge are made of pear-clad walls, and the tapestries in the niches are by Anton Kolig and Robin Andersen, two contemporaries of Anton Faistauer.

The Faistauer foyer (made possible by the patron Herbert Batliner) became a jewel of the new building: the famous frescoes of this room, created by the Salzburg painter Anton Faistauer in 1926, were removed after the Nazi invasion, in part wantonly destroyed, and could be reapplied until 1956. For the inauguration of the house for Mozart they were fundamentally restored and the room was also restored architecturally to its historical form.

The Holzmeister ensemble from the years 1924/37 has been preserved in its proportions on the outer façade. The visual impression of the façade is determined by the representative hall exits to the terrace designed by the sculptor Josef Zenzmaier. He created large bronze reliefs that were placed above the portals and depict scenes from Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro, Don Giovanni and The Magic Flute , The stone masks of Jakob Adlhart are now clearly visible in front of the entree of the house: under the new concrete roof with cantilevered gold and cantilevered out. Throughout the house, rough-sprayed concrete surfaces contrast with fine gold leaf and create an aesthetic tension.

From the back stage, a large iron gate opens into the Toscaninihof. The six concrete reliefs "Mask-Holding Genii" attached to the left and right of it were knocked off in 1938, but reconstructed in 1979 by their creator Jakob Adlhart. Above this, an organ is attached, which was recorded before the construction of the Great Festival Hall in the bad weather performances of Everyman.

On the occasion of the celebration of Mozart's 250th birthday in the so-called Mozart Year, the House of Mozart was ceremoniously opened on 26 July 2006 with the premiere of Le nozze di Figaro (directed by Claus Guth, conductor: Nikolaus Harnoncourt).

Important Info
Type: Opera
City: Salzburg, Austria
Starts at: 11:00
Acts: 3
Sung in: Italian
Titles in: German,English
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