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Wikipedia

Liceu

The Gran Teatre del Liceu (Catalan pronunciation: [ˈɡɾan teˈatɾə ðəl liˈsɛw], English: Great Theatre of the Lyceum), known as El Liceu, is an opera house in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Located in La Rambla, it is the oldest running theatre in Barcelona.

Gran Teatre del Liceu
Teatro del Liceo de Montesión (1837–1847)
Liceu façade towards La Rambla (2006)
AddressLa Rambla, 51–59
Ciutat Vella, Barcelona, Catalonia
Spain
Public transitLiceu metro station
OwnerFundació del Gran Teatre del Liceu
TypeTheatre
Genre(s)Opera
Capacity2,292 seats
Construction
Opened4 April 1847 (founded 1837 in other location)
Reopened
  • 20 April 1862 (after 1861 fire)
  • 7 October 1999 (after 1994 fire)
Architect
Website
www.liceubarcelona.cat

Founded in 1837 at another location, El Liceu opened at its current location on 4 April 1847. The theatre was rebuilt after two fires in 1861 and 1994 and reopened on 20 April 1862 and 7 October 1999, respectively. On 7 November 1893, on the opening night of the season, an anarchist threw two bombs into the stalls, and some twenty people were killed and many more were injured.

Between 1847 and 1989, the Liceu was the largest opera house in Europe by capacity, with its 2,338 seats at the time.

Since 1994, the Liceu has been owned and managed by a public foundation, whose Board of Trustees comprises members representing the Ministry of Culture of the Government of Spain, the Generalitat de Catalunya, the Provincial Deputation of Barcelona and the City Council of Barcelona. The theatre has its own choir, the Cor del Gran Teatre del Liceu; symphonic orchestra, the Orquesta Simfònica del Gran Teatre del Liceu; and college of music, the Conservatori Superior de Música del Liceu.

History

Origins (1837–1847)

In 1837, the Liceo Filodramático de Montesión (Philodramatic Lyceum of Montesión, now named Conservatori Superior de Música del Liceu) was founded in Barcelona to promote musical education (hence the name "Liceo", or lyceum) and organize scenic representations of opera performed by Liceo students.

A theatre was built in the convent building — named Teatro de Montesión or Teatro del Liceo de Montesión — and plays and operas were performed, the first of which was Vicenzo Bellini's Norma (3 February 1838). The repertoire was Italian, the most performed composers being Donizetti and Mercadante as well as Bellini and Rossini. The Barcelona premiere of Hérold's Zampa was held here.

In 1838, the society changed its name to Liceo Dramático Filarmónico de S. M. la Reina Isabel II (Dramatic Philharmonic Lyceum of H.M. Queen Isabel II). Lack of space, as well as pressures brought to bear by a group of nuns (who were the former proprietors of the convent and had recovered rights to return), motivated the Liceu to leave its headquarters in 1844. The last performance there was on 8 September.

The Trinitarian convent building located in La Rambla, in the centre of the city, was purchased. The managers of the Liceu entrusted Joaquim de Gispert d'Anglí with a project to make the construction of the new building viable. Two different societies were created: a "building society" and an "auxiliary building society". Shareholders of the building society obtained the right of use in perpetuity of some theatre boxes and seats in exchange for their economic contributions. Those of the second society contributed the rest of the money necessary in exchange for property of other spaces in the building including some shops and a private club called the Círculo del Liceo.

In contrast to many other European cities, where the monarchy took on the responsibility of the building and upkeep of opera houses, the Liceu was funded by private shareholders of what would become the Societat del Gran Teatre del Liceu (Great Liceu Theatre Society), organized similarly to a trading company or societat. This is reflected in the building's architecture; for example, there is no royal box. The Queen did not contribute to the construction, so the name of the society was changed to Liceo Filarmónico Dramático, removing the Queen's name from it.

With Miquel Garriga i Roca as the architect, construction began on 11 April 1845. The theatre was inaugurated on 4 April 1847.

Opening, fire and rebuilding (1847–1862)

 
View of the house from the stage, 1847

The inauguration presented a mixed program including the premieres of José Melchior Gomis' musical ouverture, a historical play Don Fernando de Antequera by Ventura de la Vega, the ballet La rondeña (The girl from Ronda) by Josep Jurch, and a cantata Il regio himene with music by the musical director of the theatre Marià Obiols. The first complete opera, Donizetti's Anna Bolena was presented on 17 April.

At this point, Liceu was the biggest opera house in Europe, with 3,500 seats. Other operas performed in the Liceu during the first year were (in chronological order): I due Foscari (Verdi), Il bravo (Mercadante), Parisina d'Este (Donizetti), Giovanna d'Arco (Verdi), Leonora (Mercadante), Ernani (Verdi), Norma (Bellini), Linda di Chamounix (Donizetti) and Il barbiere di Siviglia (Rossini).

The building was severely damaged by fire on 9 April 1861, but it was rebuilt by the architect Josep Oriol Mestres and re-opened on 20 April 1862, performing Bellini's I puritani. From the old building, only the facade, the entrance hall and the foyer (Mirrors Hall) remained.

Bombing and civil war (1862–1940)

 
Explosion of Liceu of Barcelona by the anarchist Santiago Salvador on the cover of the newspaper Le Petit Journal, 1893

On 7 November 1893, on the opening night of the season and during the second act of Rossin's opera, Guillaume Tell, two Orsini bombs were thrown into the stalls of the opera house. Only one of the bombs exploded; some twenty people were killed and many more were injured. The attack, carried out by anarchist Santiago Salvador, deeply shocked Barcelona, becoming a symbol of the turbulent social unrest of the time. The Liceu re-opened its doors on 18 January 1894, but the seats occupied by those killed were not used for a number of years. The second bomb was displayed at the Van Gogh Museum in 2007 during an exhibition on Barcelona around 1900.

In 1909, the auditorium ornamentation was renewed. Spanish neutrality during World War I allowed the Catalan textile industry to amass enormous wealth through supplying the warring parties. The 1920s were prosperous years and the Liceu became fully established as a leading opera house welcoming leading singers, conductors and companies such as Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes.

When the Second Spanish Republic was proclaimed in 1931, political instability meant that the Liceu suffered a severe financial crisis which was only overcome through subsidies from Barcelona City Council and the regional government of Catalonia. During the Spanish Civil War, the Liceu was nationalized and took the name the Teatre del Liceu – Teatre Nacional de Catalunya (Liceu Opera House – the National Theatre of Catalonia). The opera seasons were suspended. After the war, it was returned to its original owners in 1939.

"Silver Age" and crisis (1940–1980)

From 1940 to the 1960s, the seasons were high-quality ones. 1955, thanks to the creation of a special board, saw a historic event when, for the first time since its foundation, the Bayreuth Festival was staged away from its normal venue. Performances of Parsifal, Tristan und Isolde and Die Walküre with innovative stage sets by Wieland Wagner were enthusiastically received.

In the 1970s, an economic crisis affected the theatre and the privately based organisation could not afford the increasing budgets of modern opera productions and general quality declined.

New direction and second fire (1980–1994)

The death of Joan Antoni Pàmias [es] in 1980 revealed the need for the intervention of the official bodies if the institution was to remain a leading opera house. In 1981, the Generalitat de Catalunya, with Barcelona's City Council and the Societat del Gran Teatre del Liceu, created the Consorci del Gran Teatre del Liceu (Consortium of the Great Liceu Theater) responsible for the theatre's management.

The Deputation of Barcelona and the Spanish Ministry of Culture joined the Consortium in 1985 and 1986 respectively. The Consortium managed to quickly attract the public back to the Liceu owing to a considerable improvement in its artistic standard. This included a more complete and up-to-date perspective of the very nature of an opera performance, a great improvement in the choir and orchestra, careful casting, and attracting the interest of the public to other aspects of productions besides the leading roles alone. This approach, coupled with the new economic support and a more demanding and discerning public, resulted in a high standard of productions.

The seasons organised by the Consortium maintained high standards in casting, production and public loyalty, as measured by public attendance, but all this came to a halt with a fire on 31 January 1994. The building was destroyed by a fire caused by a spark that accidentally fell on the curtain during a routine repair. At this time, Paul Hindemith's Mathis der Maler was performing at the theatre and the following opera to be performed was Puccini's Turandot.

Public and institutional response was unanimous on the need to rebuild a new opera house on the same site with improved facilities. The new Liceu is the result of a series of actions to preserve those parts of the building unaffected by the fire, the same ones as had survived the fire in 1861. The auditorium was rebuilt with the same layout, except for the roof paintings which were replaced with new art works by Perejaume, and state-of-the-art stage technology.

To rebuild and improve the theatre, it became public. The Fundació del Gran Teatre del Liceu (Liceu Great Theater Foundation) was created and the Societat del Gran Teatre del Liceu handed over the ownership of the building to the Foundation. Some owners disagreed with the decision, which was unsuccessfully challenged in court.

Reopening (1994–present)

 
Interior of the Gran Teatre del Liceu after the 1999 rebuilding

From 1994 until its reopening in 1999, the opera seasons in Barcelona took place in Palau Sant Jordi arena (some large-scale performances in 1994), Palau de la Música Catalana, and Teatre Victòria. The rebuilt, improved and expanded theatre opened on 7 October 1999, with Puccini's Turandot, the opera that had been next on the program at the time of the 1994 fire. The new venue had the same traditional horseshoe-shaped auditorium as before but with greatly improved technical, rehearsal, office and educational facilities, a new rehearsal hall, a new chamber opera and small performances' hall, and much more public space. Architects for the rebuilding project were Ignasi de Solà-Morales and Xavier Fabré i Lluís Dilmé.

Surtitles, projected onto a screen above the proscenium, are used for all opera performances and some lieder concerts. The electronic libretto system provides translations (into English, Spanish or Catalan) onto small individual monitors for most of the seats.

During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the opera house marked Spain's lifting of regulations by playing for an audience of 2,292 plants. The event was livestreamed on social media. Each plant was then donated to healthcare workers at the Hospital Clinic of Barcelona.[1]

Opera house building

The theatre is in La Rambla, in downtown Barcelona. The building has only two facades as the other two sides were limited, until 1994, by residential buildings.

Some parts of the first building remain:

  • The main facade in la Rambla (1847).
  • The hall and the staircase (1861), with a Vallmitjana's statue of the Music (1901).
  • The foyer (Saló de Miralls or Mirrors Hall) (1847). It preserves romantic ornamentation with round paintings of musicians, singers and dancers from that time of Pasta, Rubini, Donizetti, Bellini, Gluck, Marie Taglioni. It was partially redecorated in 1877 by Elies Rogent and the roof painting, with the Parnassus, is from this period.
 
Foyer of Gran Teatre del Liceu, named Saló dels Miralls (Mirrors Hall), preserved from the 1994 fire.

The auditorium was rebuilt after the 1994 fire; it is a faithful recreation of the 1861 auditorium, with some improvements[clarification needed]. It has a seat capacity of 2,292, making it one of the largest opera houses in Europe. It is a typical Italian horseshoe-shaped theatre. Maximum length and width are 33 and 27 metres. There is a platea (main floor) and five tiers (or balconies). Boxes, with small rooms attached, are in the fore stage, in the platea and in some galleries. There is no significant physical divisions among boxes: only a low screen separates one box from another. No columns are in the theatre apart from inside the platea giving the appearance of the galleries of a golden horseshoe without visual interruptions. Another peculiarity is in the first gallery where the amfiteatre ubicare is located. This is a projecting part of this gallery, with a less pronounced horseshoe shape, that allows three ranks of seats to be located there and are considered the best in the theatre.

Building expenses were covered by the sale of boxes and seats. Boxes were lavishly decorated by their owners but they disappeared in the 1994 fire. Upper balconies (4th and 5th tiers) are the cheapest seats and are called the galliner (literally "henroost").[citation needed]

The fore stage, or proscenium, reproduces the old one which was rebuilt in 1909. It has a big central arch with two Corinthian columns on both sides and, among the columns, four tiers of boxes parapets with the wider and more luxurious boxes in the theatre being called banyeres (literally "bathtubs").

The auditorium ornamentation reproduces that of 1909: sumptuous with golden and poly chromed plaster moldings, as usual in 19th-century European theatres. Lamps are of brass and glass in the shape of a drake. Armchairs on the main floor are made of strained iron and red velvet.

In the rebuilding some modern features were introduced. The eight circular paintings in the roof, and the three in the fore stage, were all lost in the fire and have been re-created by contemporary artist Perejaume. The stage curtain is a work of the Catalan designer Antoni Miró [ca]. The new hemispheric lamp in the center of the roof is a platform for technological facilities (lighting, sound and computer).

Other technological facilities are control and projecting cabins in some balconies, a "technical floor" over the roof, and high-tech equipment to record and broadcast performances. With computerized cameras, the auditorium could also be used as a television set. Stage facilities are among the most modern and allow quick scene changes and to perform four different sets simultaneously.

A new foyer has been built under the main auditorium. It is a room where the main bar and the restaurant are located and is also used to stage concerts, small format performances, lectures, cultural activities, and meetings etc.

The adjacent Liceu metro station of the Barcelona Metro line 3 is named after the theatre.

Artistic history

Performed works

 
Gaetano Donizetti, composer of Anna Bolena, the first opera performed at the Liceu.

At present, the Liceu is both a receiving and producing house, with two or three new productions staged each year. The Liceu company consists of a permanent orchestra and choir and some singers for the supporting roles. Leading roles are usually sung by guest singers. Stagecraft is in part produced internally by the theatre (alone or together with other opera houses) and also rented from other external houses. Until the 1990s, Liceu had its ballet company which was at its best in the 1920–1930s under Joan Magriñà.

Most of the performed operas were from the Italian and German schools of the 19th century: Verdi, Wagner, Belcanto authors and in more recent times Puccini, Richard Strauss and Mozart are included.

The history of Liceu premieres is a good instance of the evolution of European opera tastes. At first opera was only a part of the artistic activities and opera alternated with other forms of performance such zarzuela (Spanish light opera), classical dance (Giselle was given its first Barcelona performance in 1847), theatrical performances, magic shows and numerous activities which today might appear more appropriate for a variety concert or a music hall.

The first performed operas, Donizetti's Anna Bolena and Verdi's I due Foscari, are symptomatic of the taste for belcanto and Italian romantic melodrama: Rossini, Donizetti, Bellini, and Verdi etc. They are still in the repertory, and Verdi is by far the most performed composer.

The first operas by non-Italian composers which were put on in the Liceu were Ferdinand Hérold's Zampa (1848), Carl Maria von Weber's Der Freischütz (1849), Giacomo Meyerbeer's Robert le diable, Auber's La muette de Portici (1852) and Fra Diavolo (1853). These were sung in Italian as was the custom of the time.

The first performances of Il trovatore (1854) and La traviata (1855) led to the crowning of Giuseppe Verdi as the king of opera. In 1866 Mozart was staged at the Liceu for the first time with Don Giovanni.

1883 is a landmark when Wagner's Lohengrin is first performed. From there, and especially from the 1880s to 1950s, Wagner become one of the most beloved and highly regarded composers at Liceu. The theatre had the first staged performance of Parsifal outside Bayreuth on 31 December 1913, after the Bayreuth monopoly ended (although performance started 30 minutes before the deadline of 00:00 on 1 January 1914) with Francesc Viñas in the title role and conducted by Franz Beidler. In 1955, the Bayreuth Festival company visited the theatre and performed three operas.

Verismo, especially Puccini, is an esteemed school from the end of 19th century. The first Russian opera was given in 1915 with a great success; Mussorgsky, Rimsky-Korsakov and Tchaikovsky being often performed. The first years of the 20th century saw Richard Strauss conducting his works. In 1904, Siegfried Wagner conducted a concert and a year afterwards Pietro Mascagni conducted a work.

In 1915, impresario Mestres Calvet broadened the repertory and introduced composers such as Mozart, Richard Strauss, de Falla, Stravinsky, etc. It was a golden age for Russian and German operas which were now sung in their original language. Mestres also was closely associated with the success commencing in 1917 with the ballets of Diaghilev, with Nijinsky, Massine, Lopokova, Chernicheva and other great figures. Years later another famous dancer, Anna Pavlova, was also to perform here.

In 1947, the directing company changed and came into the hands of Arquer and Pàmias. In contrast with the preceding years, which had been marked by the almost exclusive programming of the great repertory works, the first season of the new directorship saw a special renewal of the repertoire featuring the first performances in Barcelona of some 100 works by numerous composers. Various revivals featured Donizetti's Anna Bolena, which had first been staged in the Liceu one hundred years earlier. For 33 years, Pàmias was the leading figure of the Liceu's activity during a period when it seemed that it would be impossible to maintain the opera house without any official aid.

From the 1950s to the present, the repertory has largely comprised the most performed titles in the world, including practically all the great 20th-century composers: Bartók, Honegger, Gershwin, Berg, Janáček, Weill, Shostakovich, Prokofiev, Britten, Schönberg, Hindemith, etc., along with Baroque and classical composers Monteverdi, Handel and Gluck.

Ballet seasons are an important part of the theatre's activities with some of the best known companies in the world performing, including Diaghilev and Béjart.

Most performed operas

Most performed operas in the history of Liceu are (in January 2009):

  • Verdi's Aida, with 442 performances from 1877 to 2008.
  • Verdi's Rigoletto with 359 performances from 1853 to 2005.
  • Gounod's Faust with 297 performances from 1864 to 1988.
  • Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor with 274 performances from 1849 to 2007.
  • Donizetti's La favorita with 263 performances from 1850 to 2002 (last 10 performances are from the French version)
  • Verdi's Il trovatore with 259 performances from 1854 to 1993.
  • Wagner's Lohengrin with 241 performances from 1883 to 2006.
  • Puccini's La bohème with 238 performances from 1898 to 2001.
  • Rossini's Il barbiere di Siviglia with 233 performances from 1847 to 1991.
  • Verdi's La traviata with 231 performances from 1855 to 2002.
  • Meyerbeer's Les Huguenots with 228 performances from 1856 to 1971 (mostly in Italian version).
  • Bizet's Carmen with 205 performances from 1888 to 1993.
  • Boito's Mefistofele with 195 performances from 1880 to 1988.
  • Meyerbeer's L'Africaine with 191 performances from 1866 to 1977 (mostly in Italian version).
  • Wagner's Die Walküre with 182 performances from 1899 to 2008.

Premieres at the theatre

As a prominent theatre the Liceu has been the location for the premieres of several works of theatre and music, and for the Spanish premieres of many musical works. Among these premieres are:

  • 1847 (4 April) Ventura de la Vega's history play Don Fernando de Antequera.
  • 1851 (June) El granuja, zarzuela with music by N. Gardyn.
  • 1853 (8 January) Temistocle Solera's Spanish opera La hermana de Pelayo; La tapada del retiro, Nicolau Manent's zarzuela; Sueño y realidad, zarzuela with music by Felipe Pedrell.
  • 1854 (16 February) J. Freixas' opera La figlia del deserto.
  • 1857 (23 May) Nicolau Manent's opera Gualtero di Monsonís.
  • 1858 Pujadas' Catalan zarzuela Setze jutges (Sixteen judges), the first all-Catalan language play performed at Liceu.
  • 1858 Juan Garín, o, Las peñas de Montserrat, music by Mariano Soriano Fuertes, Nicolau Manent and Francisco Porcell
  • 1859 (12 May) Nicolau Guanyabéns' opera Arnaldo d'Erill.
  • 1859 Josep Anselm Clavé's Catalan zarzuela L'aplec del Remei.
  • 1867 (23 March) Francesc Sánchez Gavagnach's opera Rahabba.
  • 1874 (28 January) Marià Obiols' opera Editta di Belcourt.
  • 1874 (14 April) Felipe Pedrell's opera L'ultimo Abenzerraggio.
  • 1878 (27 November) Salvatore Auteri-Manzocchi's opera Il negriero
  • 1885 (6 June) Manuel Giró's opera Il rinnegato Alonso García
  • 1885 (12 June) Antoni Baratta's opera Lo desengany, first Catalan language opera sung at Liceu.
  • 1889 (10 July) Francesc Sánchez Gavagnach's opera La messagiera.
  • 1892 (14 May) Tomás Bretón's opera Garín.
  • 1895 (8 May) Isaac Albéniz's opera Henry Clifford.
  • 1896 (5 January) Isaac Albéniz's opera Pepita Jiménez.
  • 1902 (4 January) Felipe Pedrell's grand-opera Els Pirineus.
  • 1903 (3 December) Joan Manén's opera Acté.
  • 1906 (20 January) Enric Morera's opera Empòrium.
  • 1906 (21 April) Enric Morera's opera Bruniselda.
  • 1907 (21 January) Joan Lamote de Grignon's opera Hesperia.
  • 1912 (17 January) Enric Morera's Titaina, with libretto by Àngel Guimerà.
  • 1913 (15 January) Jaume Pahissa's first opera Gal·la Placídia.
  • 1913 Jesús Guridi's opera Mirentxu (premiered as zarzuela in 1910, at Bilbao, and revised as opera by the author)
  • 1916 (18 January) Enric Morera's opera Tassarba.
  • 1919 (15 February) Jaume Pahissa's opera La morisca.
  • 1920 (24 January) Joaquim Cassadó's Lo monjo negre.
  • 1923 (31 March) Jaume Pahissa's Marianela.
  • 1924 (20 December) A. Marqués' opera Sor Beatriu.
  • 1927 (12 January) Facundo de la Viña's opera La espigadora.
  • 1928 (28 February) Jaume Pahissa's La princesa Margarida.
  • 1929 (12 February) Ricard Lamote de Grignon's ballet Somnis.
  • 1929 (14 December) Jose Maria Usandizaga's opera Las golondrinas (premiered as zarzuela in 1914 and revised as opera by Ramón Usandizaga)
  • 1932 (3 March) Joan Manén's opera Neró i Acté.
  • 1935 (15 January) Joan Gaig's opera El estudiante de Salamanca.
  • 1938 Salvador Bacarisse's ballet Corrida de feria.
  • 1948 (10 January) Xavier Montsalvatge's children opera El gato con botas.
  • 1948 (10 January) Carlos Surinach's opera El mozo que casó con mujer brava.
  • 1950 (14 December) Conrado del Campo's opera Lola la Piconera.
  • 1952 (12 December) Joan Manén's opera Soledad; his ballet Rosario la Tirana.
  • 1953 (21 May) Antoni Massana's Canigó, the first Catalan-language opera after the Civil War.
  • 1955 (17 December) Ángel Barrios' opera La Lola se va a los puertos.
  • 1955 (19 December) Joaquín Rodrigo's ballet Pavana real.
  • 1956 (28 April) Frederic Mompou and Xavier Montsalvatge's ballet Perlimplinada.
  • 1959 (1 January) Joan Altisent's opera Amunt!.
  • 1960 (17 November) Ricard Lamote de Grignon's opera La cabeza del dragón (written in 1939).
  • 1960 (1 May) Cristóbal Halffter's ballet Jugando al toro; Matilde Salvador's ballet El segoviano esquivo
  • 1961 (24 November) Manuel de Falla and Ernesto Halffter's scenic cantata Atlàntida.
  • 1962 (11 December) Xavier Montsalvatge's opera Una voce in off.
  • 1969 (1 February) Joan Guinjoan's ballet Els cinc continents.
  • 1974 (19 January) Matilde Salvador's opera Vinatea.
  • 1975 (29 November) J. Ventura Tort's opera Rondalla d'esparvers.
  • 1986 (22 May) Josep Soler's opera Oedipus et Iocasta (premiered as oratorio at Palau de la Música Catalana, 1972).
  • 1988 (21 September) Xavier Benguerel's scenic cantata Llibre vermell.
  • 1989 (24 September) Leonardo Balada's opera Cristóbal Colón.
  • 2000 (2 October) José Luis Turina's opera D.Q., Don Quijote en Barcelona, with settings by La Fura dels Baus.
  • 2004 (3 November) Joan Guinjoan's opera Gaudí.
  • 2006 (6 April) Josep Mestres Quadreny's camera opera El ganxo.
  • 2009 (20 April) Enric Palomar's opera La cabeza del Bautista.
Spanish opera premieres

The Liceu has also been the location for the Spanish premieres of prominent operas. Among them are:

Directors, orchestra, and company

The theatre is managed by a general director or intendant (empresari or administrador). From 1980 there is also an artistic director (director artistic).

General directors:

  • Albert Bernis (1901–1911)
  • Francesc Casanovas (1911–1913)
  • Alfredo Volpini (1913–1914)
  • Joan Mestres i Calvet (1915–1947)
  • Josep F. Arquer (to 1959) & Joan Pàmias, (1947–1980)
  • Lluís Portabella (1981–1986)
  • Josep M. Busquets (1986–1992)
  • Jordi Maluquer (1992–1993)
  • Josep Caminal (1993–2005)
  • Rosa Cullell (2005–2008)
  • Joan Francesc Marco (from 2008).

Artistic directors:

  • Napoleone Annovazzi [ca] (1947–1952)
  • Lluís Andreu (1981–1990)
  • Albin Hänseroth (1990–1996)
  • Joan Matabosch (1996–2014)
  • Christina Scheppelmann (2014–2019).

Orchestra and conductors

The theatre has had its own orchestra from its foundation in 1847, the Orquestra Simfònica del Gran Teatre del Liceu. It is the oldest still working orchestra in Spain. Its first conductor was Marià Obiols.

Orchestra music directors and chief conductors:

The current music director of the company is Josep Pons, since 2012. In November 2017, the Liceu announced the extension of Pons' contract through the 2021–2022 season.[2]

Choir conductors

The choir was consolidated during the 1960s by its conductor Riccardo Bottino (1960–1982). From 1982 the choir conductors were Romano Gandolfi [ca] (1982–1993), with Vittorio Sicuri (1982–1990), and Andrés Máspero (from 1990). The present choir conductor is William Spaulding.

Stage directors and stagecraft

During the second half of the 19th century, a school of stagecraft and theatrical scenery was developed at the Liceu. After the beginnings with Joan Ballester, well known for his setting for L'Africaine, the leading scenographer was Francesc Soler i Rovirosa, working in the 1880–1900s. The style was very realistic using painted paper flats and curtains. Settings and costumes were made in the theatre workshops. From the 1900s to 1930s the school is represented by scenic painters including Maurici Vilomara, Fèlix Urgellés, Salvador Alarma and Oleguer Junyent. The last of these painters was Josep Mestres Cabanes who painted sceneries in the 1930–1950s.

Singers

 

Many famous singers have sung at the Liceu. Composer Camille Saint-Saëns, when visiting the Liceu, once said: "Ils aiment trop the ténor" (They [the Liceu public] love tenors too much). In brackets are the dates of the house debuts and final/most recent performances of prominent singers who have appeared at the Liceu:

Conservatori de Música del Liceu

Linked to the theatre is the Conservatori Superior de Música del Liceu, a music college founded in 1837 which is part of the same corporation.

Círculo del Liceo

 
La Sargantain [ca], Júlia Peraire's portrait (1907) by Ramon Casas, a painting at the Círculo del Liceo

The Círculo del Liceo is an exclusive private club located in the Liceu building. The Círculo opened in November 1847, a few months after the Liceu opera house, with 125 founding members, according to its earliest records. The club's facilities include numerous elegant lounges, conference rooms, a restaurant, a library and other services.[3]

For the society's first 150 years, only men were permitted to become members; women were allowed access solely as guests of male society members. In 2001, following public controversy over the club's exclusively male membership, the club's constitution was amended and ten women (including renowned soprano Montserrat Caballé and several family members of existing members) were permitted to apply for membership for the first time. All ten women were initially turned down,[4] then later admitted after a subsequent vote by members, with a final vote of 373 votes in favor and 279 against their admission.[5] At present, the society has around one thousand members.[3]

The Círculo del Liceo is the oldest club in Spain which retains its original location.[6] The club's long history has enabled it to accumulate a unique heritage of artistic works. Many of its rooms are decorated in an Art Nouveau style. Four large windows in the low foyer serve as a testimony to the influence of Wagnerism in Catalan culture at the beginning of the 20th century.

In addition to the furniture and decor, the club retains a collection of sculptures, marquetry, enamels, engravings, etchings and paintings by Catalan artists: Alexandre de Riquer, Santiago Rusiñol, Modest Urgell Inglada and Francesc Miralles, among others. The most notable work belonging to the club is a set of twelve oils on fabric, commissioned to Ramon Casas and installed in the rotunda of the club. Each of the twelve paintings, Casas' most ambitious work, is inspired by a musical topic.

The Liceu in fiction, cinema, etc.

Fiction: novels, plays, etc.

  • Frederic Soler [es]'s satirical comedy "Liceístas" i "cruzados" (1865), about the quarrels among the fans of the Liceu and fans of the Teatre Principal, the two main opera houses as there was a great rivalry among them in Barcelona during the 19th century.
  • Narcís Oller's novel La febre d'or (1892).
  • Artur Masriera's sketch book Los buenos barceloneses: hombres, costumbres y anécdotas de la Barcelona ochocentista (1850–1870) (1925).
  • Ignacio Agustí [es]'s novels: Mariona Rebull (1944) and El viudo Rius (1945), where the 1893 bomb at Liceu is narrated.
  • Eduardo Mendoza's novel La ciudad de los prodigios (1986). However the film based on it was filmed at Teatre Fortuny at Reus, not at Liceu.
  • Joan Agut [es]'s short stories book El dia que es va cremar el Liceu (The day the Liceu was burnt) (1995).

Films

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Guy, Jack. "Barcelona opera house reopens with performance to 2,292 plants". CNN. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  2. ^ "Josep Pons renueva como director musical del Liceu hasta temporada 2021–2022". El Periódico. 17 November 2017. Retrieved 20 January 2018.
  3. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 29 October 2012. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  4. ^ "El Círculo del Liceo rechaza las 10 solicitudes de ingreso presentadas por mujeres". El Mundo. 25 February 2001. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  5. ^ "El Círculo del Liceo aprueba la admisión de mujeres como socias". El País. 4 April 2001. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 October 2012. Retrieved 6 January 2013.

Sources

  • Alier, Roger, El gran llibre del Liceu. Barcelona: Carroggio, DL 1999.
  • Alier, Roger, El Gran Teatro del Liceo: historia artística. Barcelona: Francesc X. Mata, 1991.
  • Alier, Roger, Historia del Gran Teatro del Liceo. Barcelona: La Vanguardia, 1983.
  • Anuari 1947–1997 del Gran Teatre del Liceu. Recerca i recopilació: Pau Nadal. Barcelona: Amics del Liceu: Àmbit, DL 1997.
  • Artís, Josep, El Gran Teatro del Liceo. Col·lecció Barcelona histórica y monumental. Barcelona: Aymá, 1946.
  • Daufí, Alícia. "De la transgressió carnavalesca al silenci de la postguerra. Estudi musical, social, cultural i econòmic dels balls de màscares al Gran Teatre del Liceu (1848-1936)" [Unpublished doctoral dissertation]. Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 2022. https://ddd.uab.cat/record/266133
  • Crònica il·lustrada del Gran Teatre del Liceu: 1947–1997. Barcelona: Amics del Liceu : Àmbit, DL 1997.
  • Lloret, Teresa, Gran Teatre del Liceu, Barcelona. [Barcelona: Fundació Gran Teatre del Liceu], cop. 2002.
  • Òpera Liceu: una exposició en cinc actes: Museu d'Història de Catalunya, 19 setembre de 1997-11 de gener de 1998, Barcelona. [Barcelona]: Generalitat de Catalunya, Departament de Cultura : Proa : Fundació Gran Teatre del Liceu, DL 1997.
  • Radigales, Jaume, Els orígens del Gran Teatre del Liceu: 1837–1847: de la plaça de Santa Anna a la Rambla: història del Liceu Filharmònic d'Isabel II o Liceu Filodramàtic de Barcelona. Barcelona: Publicacions de l'Abadia de Montserrat, 1998.
  • Subirá, José, La ópera en los teatros de Barcelona: estudio histórico cronológico desde el siglo XVIII al XX . Monografías históricas de Barcelona, 9. Millà. 1946.
  • Tribó, Jaume, Annals 1847–1897 del Gran Teatre del Liceu. Barcelona: Amics del Liceu: Gran Teatre del Liceu, 2004.

External links

  • Official website (in English, Catalan, and Spanish)


Coordinates: 41°22′49″N 2°10′25″E / 41.38028°N 2.17361°E / 41.38028; 2.17361

liceu, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citation. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Liceu news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Liceo redirects here For the Italian school type see Liceo Italian school For the Romanian school type see Liceu Romanian school For other school types see Lyceum For other uses see Lyceum disambiguation and Lyceum Theatre disambiguation The Gran Teatre del Liceu Catalan pronunciation ˈɡɾan teˈatɾe del liˈsɛw English Great Theatre of the Lyceum known as El Liceu is an opera house in Barcelona Catalonia Spain Located in La Rambla it is the oldest running theatre in Barcelona Gran Teatre del LiceuTeatro del Liceo de Montesion 1837 1847 Liceu facade towards La Rambla 2006 AddressLa Rambla 51 59Ciutat Vella Barcelona CataloniaSpainPublic transitLiceu metro stationOwnerFundacio del Gran Teatre del LiceuTypeTheatreGenre s OperaCapacity2 292 seatsConstructionOpened4 April 1847 founded 1837 in other location Reopened20 April 1862 after 1861 fire 7 October 1999 after 1994 fire ArchitectMiquel Garriga i Roca 1847 Josep Oriol Mestres 1862 Ignasi de Sola Morales 1999 Websitewww liceubarcelona catFounded in 1837 at another location El Liceu opened at its current location on 4 April 1847 The theatre was rebuilt after two fires in 1861 and 1994 and reopened on 20 April 1862 and 7 October 1999 respectively On 7 November 1893 on the opening night of the season an anarchist threw two bombs into the stalls and some twenty people were killed and many more were injured Between 1847 and 1989 the Liceu was the largest opera house in Europe by capacity with its 2 338 seats at the time Since 1994 the Liceu has been owned and managed by a public foundation whose Board of Trustees comprises members representing the Ministry of Culture of the Government of Spain the Generalitat de Catalunya the Provincial Deputation of Barcelona and the City Council of Barcelona The theatre has its own choir the Cor del Gran Teatre del Liceu symphonic orchestra the Orquesta Simfonica del Gran Teatre del Liceu and college of music the Conservatori Superior de Musica del Liceu Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1837 1847 1 2 Opening fire and rebuilding 1847 1862 1 3 Bombing and civil war 1862 1940 1 4 Silver Age and crisis 1940 1980 1 5 New direction and second fire 1980 1994 1 6 Reopening 1994 present 2 Opera house building 3 Artistic history 3 1 Performed works 3 1 1 Most performed operas 3 1 2 Premieres at the theatre 3 1 2 1 Spanish opera premieres 3 2 Directors orchestra and company 3 2 1 Orchestra and conductors 3 2 2 Choir conductors 3 2 3 Stage directors and stagecraft 3 3 Singers 4 Conservatori de Musica del Liceu 5 Circulo del Liceo 6 The Liceu in fiction cinema etc 6 1 Fiction novels plays etc 6 2 Films 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditOrigins 1837 1847 Edit In 1837 the Liceo Filodramatico de Montesion Philodramatic Lyceum of Montesion now named Conservatori Superior de Musica del Liceu was founded in Barcelona to promote musical education hence the name Liceo or lyceum and organize scenic representations of opera performed by Liceo students A theatre was built in the convent building named Teatro de Montesion or Teatro del Liceo de Montesion and plays and operas were performed the first of which was Vicenzo Bellini s Norma 3 February 1838 The repertoire was Italian the most performed composers being Donizetti and Mercadante as well as Bellini and Rossini The Barcelona premiere of Herold s Zampa was held here In 1838 the society changed its name to Liceo Dramatico Filarmonico de S M la Reina Isabel II Dramatic Philharmonic Lyceum of H M Queen Isabel II Lack of space as well as pressures brought to bear by a group of nuns who were the former proprietors of the convent and had recovered rights to return motivated the Liceu to leave its headquarters in 1844 The last performance there was on 8 September The Trinitarian convent building located in La Rambla in the centre of the city was purchased The managers of the Liceu entrusted Joaquim de Gispert d Angli with a project to make the construction of the new building viable Two different societies were created a building society and an auxiliary building society Shareholders of the building society obtained the right of use in perpetuity of some theatre boxes and seats in exchange for their economic contributions Those of the second society contributed the rest of the money necessary in exchange for property of other spaces in the building including some shops and a private club called the Circulo del Liceo In contrast to many other European cities where the monarchy took on the responsibility of the building and upkeep of opera houses the Liceu was funded by private shareholders of what would become the Societat del Gran Teatre del Liceu Great Liceu Theatre Society organized similarly to a trading company or societat This is reflected in the building s architecture for example there is no royal box The Queen did not contribute to the construction so the name of the society was changed to Liceo Filarmonico Dramatico removing the Queen s name from it With Miquel Garriga i Roca as the architect construction began on 11 April 1845 The theatre was inaugurated on 4 April 1847 Opening fire and rebuilding 1847 1862 Edit View of the house from the stage 1847 The inauguration presented a mixed program including the premieres of Jose Melchior Gomis musical ouverture a historical play Don Fernando de Antequera by Ventura de la Vega the ballet La rondena The girl from Ronda by Josep Jurch and a cantata Il regio himene with music by the musical director of the theatre Maria Obiols The first complete opera Donizetti s Anna Bolena was presented on 17 April At this point Liceu was the biggest opera house in Europe with 3 500 seats Other operas performed in the Liceu during the first year were in chronological order I due Foscari Verdi Il bravo Mercadante Parisina d Este Donizetti Giovanna d Arco Verdi Leonora Mercadante Ernani Verdi Norma Bellini Linda di Chamounix Donizetti and Il barbiere di Siviglia Rossini The building was severely damaged by fire on 9 April 1861 but it was rebuilt by the architect Josep Oriol Mestres and re opened on 20 April 1862 performing Bellini s I puritani From the old building only the facade the entrance hall and the foyer Mirrors Hall remained Bombing and civil war 1862 1940 Edit Explosion of Liceu of Barcelona by the anarchist Santiago Salvador on the cover of the newspaper Le Petit Journal 1893 On 7 November 1893 on the opening night of the season and during the second act of Rossin s opera Guillaume Tell two Orsini bombs were thrown into the stalls of the opera house Only one of the bombs exploded some twenty people were killed and many more were injured The attack carried out by anarchist Santiago Salvador deeply shocked Barcelona becoming a symbol of the turbulent social unrest of the time The Liceu re opened its doors on 18 January 1894 but the seats occupied by those killed were not used for a number of years The second bomb was displayed at the Van Gogh Museum in 2007 during an exhibition on Barcelona around 1900 In 1909 the auditorium ornamentation was renewed Spanish neutrality during World War I allowed the Catalan textile industry to amass enormous wealth through supplying the warring parties The 1920s were prosperous years and the Liceu became fully established as a leading opera house welcoming leading singers conductors and companies such as Sergei Diaghilev s Ballets Russes When the Second Spanish Republic was proclaimed in 1931 political instability meant that the Liceu suffered a severe financial crisis which was only overcome through subsidies from Barcelona City Council and the regional government of Catalonia During the Spanish Civil War the Liceu was nationalized and took the name the Teatre del Liceu Teatre Nacional de Catalunya Liceu Opera House the National Theatre of Catalonia The opera seasons were suspended After the war it was returned to its original owners in 1939 Silver Age and crisis 1940 1980 Edit From 1940 to the 1960s the seasons were high quality ones 1955 thanks to the creation of a special board saw a historic event when for the first time since its foundation the Bayreuth Festival was staged away from its normal venue Performances of Parsifal Tristan und Isolde and Die Walkure with innovative stage sets by Wieland Wagner were enthusiastically received In the 1970s an economic crisis affected the theatre and the privately based organisation could not afford the increasing budgets of modern opera productions and general quality declined New direction and second fire 1980 1994 Edit The death of Joan Antoni Pamias es in 1980 revealed the need for the intervention of the official bodies if the institution was to remain a leading opera house In 1981 the Generalitat de Catalunya with Barcelona s City Council and the Societat del Gran Teatre del Liceu created the Consorci del Gran Teatre del Liceu Consortium of the Great Liceu Theater responsible for the theatre s management The Deputation of Barcelona and the Spanish Ministry of Culture joined the Consortium in 1985 and 1986 respectively The Consortium managed to quickly attract the public back to the Liceu owing to a considerable improvement in its artistic standard This included a more complete and up to date perspective of the very nature of an opera performance a great improvement in the choir and orchestra careful casting and attracting the interest of the public to other aspects of productions besides the leading roles alone This approach coupled with the new economic support and a more demanding and discerning public resulted in a high standard of productions The seasons organised by the Consortium maintained high standards in casting production and public loyalty as measured by public attendance but all this came to a halt with a fire on 31 January 1994 The building was destroyed by a fire caused by a spark that accidentally fell on the curtain during a routine repair At this time Paul Hindemith s Mathis der Maler was performing at the theatre and the following opera to be performed was Puccini s Turandot Public and institutional response was unanimous on the need to rebuild a new opera house on the same site with improved facilities The new Liceu is the result of a series of actions to preserve those parts of the building unaffected by the fire the same ones as had survived the fire in 1861 The auditorium was rebuilt with the same layout except for the roof paintings which were replaced with new art works by Perejaume and state of the art stage technology To rebuild and improve the theatre it became public The Fundacio del Gran Teatre del Liceu Liceu Great Theater Foundation was created and the Societat del Gran Teatre del Liceu handed over the ownership of the building to the Foundation Some owners disagreed with the decision which was unsuccessfully challenged in court Reopening 1994 present Edit Interior of the Gran Teatre del Liceu after the 1999 rebuilding From 1994 until its reopening in 1999 the opera seasons in Barcelona took place in Palau Sant Jordi arena some large scale performances in 1994 Palau de la Musica Catalana and Teatre Victoria The rebuilt improved and expanded theatre opened on 7 October 1999 with Puccini s Turandot the opera that had been next on the program at the time of the 1994 fire The new venue had the same traditional horseshoe shaped auditorium as before but with greatly improved technical rehearsal office and educational facilities a new rehearsal hall a new chamber opera and small performances hall and much more public space Architects for the rebuilding project were Ignasi de Sola Morales and Xavier Fabre i Lluis Dilme Surtitles projected onto a screen above the proscenium are used for all opera performances and some lieder concerts The electronic libretto system provides translations into English Spanish or Catalan onto small individual monitors for most of the seats During the COVID 19 pandemic in 2020 the opera house marked Spain s lifting of regulations by playing for an audience of 2 292 plants The event was livestreamed on social media Each plant was then donated to healthcare workers at the Hospital Clinic of Barcelona 1 Opera house building EditThe theatre is in La Rambla in downtown Barcelona The building has only two facades as the other two sides were limited until 1994 by residential buildings Some parts of the first building remain The main facade in la Rambla 1847 The hall and the staircase 1861 with a Vallmitjana s statue of the Music 1901 The foyer Salo de Miralls or Mirrors Hall 1847 It preserves romantic ornamentation with round paintings of musicians singers and dancers from that time of Pasta Rubini Donizetti Bellini Gluck Marie Taglioni It was partially redecorated in 1877 by Elies Rogent and the roof painting with the Parnassus is from this period Foyer of Gran Teatre del Liceu named Salo dels Miralls Mirrors Hall preserved from the 1994 fire The auditorium was rebuilt after the 1994 fire it is a faithful recreation of the 1861 auditorium with some improvements clarification needed It has a seat capacity of 2 292 making it one of the largest opera houses in Europe It is a typical Italian horseshoe shaped theatre Maximum length and width are 33 and 27 metres There is a platea main floor and five tiers or balconies Boxes with small rooms attached are in the fore stage in the platea and in some galleries There is no significant physical divisions among boxes only a low screen separates one box from another No columns are in the theatre apart from inside the platea giving the appearance of the galleries of a golden horseshoe without visual interruptions Another peculiarity is in the first gallery where the amfiteatre ubicare is located This is a projecting part of this gallery with a less pronounced horseshoe shape that allows three ranks of seats to be located there and are considered the best in the theatre Building expenses were covered by the sale of boxes and seats Boxes were lavishly decorated by their owners but they disappeared in the 1994 fire Upper balconies 4th and 5th tiers are the cheapest seats and are called the galliner literally henroost citation needed The fore stage or proscenium reproduces the old one which was rebuilt in 1909 It has a big central arch with two Corinthian columns on both sides and among the columns four tiers of boxes parapets with the wider and more luxurious boxes in the theatre being called banyeres literally bathtubs The auditorium ornamentation reproduces that of 1909 sumptuous with golden and poly chromed plaster moldings as usual in 19th century European theatres Lamps are of brass and glass in the shape of a drake Armchairs on the main floor are made of strained iron and red velvet In the rebuilding some modern features were introduced The eight circular paintings in the roof and the three in the fore stage were all lost in the fire and have been re created by contemporary artist Perejaume The stage curtain is a work of the Catalan designer Antoni Miro ca The new hemispheric lamp in the center of the roof is a platform for technological facilities lighting sound and computer Other technological facilities are control and projecting cabins in some balconies a technical floor over the roof and high tech equipment to record and broadcast performances With computerized cameras the auditorium could also be used as a television set Stage facilities are among the most modern and allow quick scene changes and to perform four different sets simultaneously A new foyer has been built under the main auditorium It is a room where the main bar and the restaurant are located and is also used to stage concerts small format performances lectures cultural activities and meetings etc The adjacent Liceu metro station of the Barcelona Metro line 3 is named after the theatre Artistic history EditPerformed works Edit Gaetano Donizetti composer of Anna Bolena the first opera performed at the Liceu At present the Liceu is both a receiving and producing house with two or three new productions staged each year The Liceu company consists of a permanent orchestra and choir and some singers for the supporting roles Leading roles are usually sung by guest singers Stagecraft is in part produced internally by the theatre alone or together with other opera houses and also rented from other external houses Until the 1990s Liceu had its ballet company which was at its best in the 1920 1930s under Joan Magrina Most of the performed operas were from the Italian and German schools of the 19th century Verdi Wagner Belcanto authors and in more recent times Puccini Richard Strauss and Mozart are included The history of Liceu premieres is a good instance of the evolution of European opera tastes At first opera was only a part of the artistic activities and opera alternated with other forms of performance such zarzuela Spanish light opera classical dance Giselle was given its first Barcelona performance in 1847 theatrical performances magic shows and numerous activities which today might appear more appropriate for a variety concert or a music hall The first performed operas Donizetti s Anna Bolena and Verdi s I due Foscari are symptomatic of the taste for belcanto and Italian romantic melodrama Rossini Donizetti Bellini and Verdi etc They are still in the repertory and Verdi is by far the most performed composer The first operas by non Italian composers which were put on in the Liceu were Ferdinand Herold s Zampa 1848 Carl Maria von Weber s Der Freischutz 1849 Giacomo Meyerbeer s Robert le diable Auber s La muette de Portici 1852 and Fra Diavolo 1853 These were sung in Italian as was the custom of the time The first performances of Il trovatore 1854 and La traviata 1855 led to the crowning of Giuseppe Verdi as the king of opera In 1866 Mozart was staged at the Liceu for the first time with Don Giovanni 1883 is a landmark when Wagner s Lohengrin is first performed From there and especially from the 1880s to 1950s Wagner become one of the most beloved and highly regarded composers at Liceu The theatre had the first staged performance of Parsifal outside Bayreuth on 31 December 1913 after the Bayreuth monopoly ended although performance started 30 minutes before the deadline of 00 00 on 1 January 1914 with Francesc Vinas in the title role and conducted by Franz Beidler In 1955 the Bayreuth Festival company visited the theatre and performed three operas Verismo especially Puccini is an esteemed school from the end of 19th century The first Russian opera was given in 1915 with a great success Mussorgsky Rimsky Korsakov and Tchaikovsky being often performed The first years of the 20th century saw Richard Strauss conducting his works In 1904 Siegfried Wagner conducted a concert and a year afterwards Pietro Mascagni conducted a work In 1915 impresario Mestres Calvet broadened the repertory and introduced composers such as Mozart Richard Strauss de Falla Stravinsky etc It was a golden age for Russian and German operas which were now sung in their original language Mestres also was closely associated with the success commencing in 1917 with the ballets of Diaghilev with Nijinsky Massine Lopokova Chernicheva and other great figures Years later another famous dancer Anna Pavlova was also to perform here In 1947 the directing company changed and came into the hands of Arquer and Pamias In contrast with the preceding years which had been marked by the almost exclusive programming of the great repertory works the first season of the new directorship saw a special renewal of the repertoire featuring the first performances in Barcelona of some 100 works by numerous composers Various revivals featured Donizetti s Anna Bolena which had first been staged in the Liceu one hundred years earlier For 33 years Pamias was the leading figure of the Liceu s activity during a period when it seemed that it would be impossible to maintain the opera house without any official aid From the 1950s to the present the repertory has largely comprised the most performed titles in the world including practically all the great 20th century composers Bartok Honegger Gershwin Berg Janacek Weill Shostakovich Prokofiev Britten Schonberg Hindemith etc along with Baroque and classical composers Monteverdi Handel and Gluck Ballet seasons are an important part of the theatre s activities with some of the best known companies in the world performing including Diaghilev and Bejart Most performed operas Edit Most performed operas in the history of Liceu are in January 2009 Verdi s Aida with 442 performances from 1877 to 2008 Verdi s Rigoletto with 359 performances from 1853 to 2005 Gounod s Faust with 297 performances from 1864 to 1988 Donizetti s Lucia di Lammermoor with 274 performances from 1849 to 2007 Donizetti s La favorita with 263 performances from 1850 to 2002 last 10 performances are from the French version Verdi s Il trovatore with 259 performances from 1854 to 1993 Wagner s Lohengrin with 241 performances from 1883 to 2006 Puccini s La boheme with 238 performances from 1898 to 2001 Rossini s Il barbiere di Siviglia with 233 performances from 1847 to 1991 Verdi s La traviata with 231 performances from 1855 to 2002 Meyerbeer s Les Huguenots with 228 performances from 1856 to 1971 mostly in Italian version Bizet s Carmen with 205 performances from 1888 to 1993 Boito s Mefistofele with 195 performances from 1880 to 1988 Meyerbeer s L Africaine with 191 performances from 1866 to 1977 mostly in Italian version Wagner s Die Walkure with 182 performances from 1899 to 2008 Premieres at the theatre Edit As a prominent theatre the Liceu has been the location for the premieres of several works of theatre and music and for the Spanish premieres of many musical works Among these premieres are 1847 4 April Ventura de la Vega s history play Don Fernando de Antequera 1851 June El granuja zarzuela with music by N Gardyn 1853 8 January Temistocle Solera s Spanish opera La hermana de Pelayo La tapada del retiro Nicolau Manent s zarzuela Sueno y realidad zarzuela with music by Felipe Pedrell 1854 16 February J Freixas opera La figlia del deserto 1857 23 May Nicolau Manent s opera Gualtero di Monsonis 1858 Pujadas Catalan zarzuela Setze jutges Sixteen judges the first all Catalan language play performed at Liceu 1858 Juan Garin o Las penas de Montserrat music by Mariano Soriano Fuertes Nicolau Manent and Francisco Porcell 1859 12 May Nicolau Guanyabens opera Arnaldo d Erill 1859 Josep Anselm Clave s Catalan zarzuela L aplec del Remei 1867 23 March Francesc Sanchez Gavagnach s opera Rahabba 1874 28 January Maria Obiols opera Editta di Belcourt 1874 14 April Felipe Pedrell s opera L ultimo Abenzerraggio 1878 27 November Salvatore Auteri Manzocchi s opera Il negriero 1885 6 June Manuel Giro s opera Il rinnegato Alonso Garcia 1885 12 June Antoni Baratta s opera Lo desengany first Catalan language opera sung at Liceu 1889 10 July Francesc Sanchez Gavagnach s opera La messagiera 1892 14 May Tomas Breton s opera Garin 1895 8 May Isaac Albeniz s opera Henry Clifford 1896 5 January Isaac Albeniz s opera Pepita Jimenez 1902 4 January Felipe Pedrell s grand opera Els Pirineus 1903 3 December Joan Manen s opera Acte 1906 20 January Enric Morera s opera Emporium 1906 21 April Enric Morera s opera Bruniselda 1907 21 January Joan Lamote de Grignon s opera Hesperia 1912 17 January Enric Morera s Titaina with libretto by Angel Guimera 1913 15 January Jaume Pahissa s first opera Gal la Placidia 1913 Jesus Guridi s opera Mirentxu premiered as zarzuela in 1910 at Bilbao and revised as opera by the author 1916 18 January Enric Morera s opera Tassarba 1919 15 February Jaume Pahissa s opera La morisca 1920 24 January Joaquim Cassado s Lo monjo negre 1923 31 March Jaume Pahissa s Marianela 1924 20 December A Marques opera Sor Beatriu 1927 12 January Facundo de la Vina s opera La espigadora 1928 28 February Jaume Pahissa s La princesa Margarida 1929 12 February Ricard Lamote de Grignon s ballet Somnis 1929 14 December Jose Maria Usandizaga s opera Las golondrinas premiered as zarzuela in 1914 and revised as opera by Ramon Usandizaga 1932 3 March Joan Manen s opera Nero i Acte 1935 15 January Joan Gaig s opera El estudiante de Salamanca 1938 Salvador Bacarisse s ballet Corrida de feria 1948 10 January Xavier Montsalvatge s children opera El gato con botas 1948 10 January Carlos Surinach s opera El mozo que caso con mujer brava 1950 14 December Conrado del Campo s opera Lola la Piconera 1952 12 December Joan Manen s opera Soledad his ballet Rosario la Tirana 1953 21 May Antoni Massana s Canigo the first Catalan language opera after the Civil War 1955 17 December Angel Barrios opera La Lola se va a los puertos 1955 19 December Joaquin Rodrigo s ballet Pavana real 1956 28 April Frederic Mompou and Xavier Montsalvatge s ballet Perlimplinada 1959 1 January Joan Altisent s opera Amunt 1960 17 November Ricard Lamote de Grignon s opera La cabeza del dragon written in 1939 1960 1 May Cristobal Halffter s ballet Jugando al toro Matilde Salvador s ballet El segoviano esquivo 1961 24 November Manuel de Falla and Ernesto Halffter s scenic cantata Atlantida 1962 11 December Xavier Montsalvatge s opera Una voce in off 1969 1 February Joan Guinjoan s ballet Els cinc continents 1974 19 January Matilde Salvador s opera Vinatea 1975 29 November J Ventura Tort s opera Rondalla d esparvers 1986 22 May Josep Soler s opera Oedipus et Iocasta premiered as oratorio at Palau de la Musica Catalana 1972 1988 21 September Xavier Benguerel s scenic cantata Llibre vermell 1989 24 September Leonardo Balada s opera Cristobal Colon 2000 2 October Jose Luis Turina s opera D Q Don Quijote en Barcelona with settings by La Fura dels Baus 2004 3 November Joan Guinjoan s opera Gaudi 2006 6 April Josep Mestres Quadreny s camera opera El ganxo 2009 20 April Enric Palomar s opera La cabeza del Bautista Spanish opera premieres Edit The Liceu has also been the location for the Spanish premieres of prominent operas Among them are 1847 Giuseppe Verdi s Giovanna d Arco 1845 1848 Saverio Mercadante s Orazi e Curiazi 1846 1849 Carl Maria von Weber s Der Freischutz 1821 Giuseppe Verdi s Alzira 1847 Gaetano Donizetti s Les martyrs 1840 in Italian 1853 Daniel Francois Auber s Fra Diavolo 1830 1854 Giuseppe Verdi s Il trovatore 1853 1856 Giuseppe Verdi s Les vepres siciliennes 1855 1856 in Italian Giacomo Meyerbeer s Les huguenots in Italian 1836 1861 Giuseppe Verdi s Un ballo in maschera 1859 1862 Giuseppe Verdi s Simon Boccanegra 1857 1863 Giacomo Meyerbeer s Le prophete in Italian 1849 1864 Charles Gounod s Faust 1859 1868 Giacomo Meyerbeer s Dinorah in Italian 1859 1870 Giuseppe Verdi s Don Carlos 1868 Italian version 1869 1875 Giuseppe Verdi s Requiem 1874 Ambroise Thomas s Mignon 1866 1876 Carlos Gomes Il guarany 1870 1880 Arrigo Boito s Mefistofele 1868 rev 1875 1883 Amilcare Ponchielli s La Gioconda 1876 1885 Richard Wagner s Die fliegende Hollander 1843 1887 Richard Wagner s Tannhauser 1845 1861 1891 Pietro Mascagni s Cavalleria rusticana 1890 1894 Pietro Mascagni s L amico Fritz 1891 Jules Massenet s Manon 1884 1897 Camille Saint Saens s Samson et Dalila 1877 1898 Giacomo Puccini s La boheme 1896 Umberto Giordano s Andrea Chenier 1896 1899 Richard Wagner s Tristan und Isolde 1865 Jules Massenet s Werther 1892 1900 Umberto Giordano s Fedora 1898 Pietro Mascagni s Iris 1898 Richard Wagner s Siegfried 1876 Christoph Willibald Gluck s Iphigenie en Tauride 1779 1901 Richard Wagner s Gotterdammerung 1876 Engelbert Humperdinck s Hansel und Gretel 1893 1903 Francesco Cilea s Adriana Lecouvreur 1902 1904 Gustave Charpentier s Louise 1900 1905 Jules Massenet s Thais 1894 Richard Wagner s Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg 1868 1907 Pietro Mascagni s Amica 1905 1908 Camille Saint Saens s Les barbares 1901 1910 Richard Strauss Salome 1905 Eugen d Albert s Tiefland 1903 sung in Catalan 1911 Claude Debussy s L Enfant prodigue 1884 1913 Richard Wagner s Parsifal 1883 1915 Giacomo Puccini s La fanciulla del West 1914 Modest Mussorgsky s Boris Godunov 1869 1916 Ermanno Wolf Ferrari s Il segreto di Susanna 1909 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart s Le nozze di Figaro 1786 1919 Jules Massenet s Le jongleur de Notre Dame 1902 Pietro Mascagni s Guglielmo Rattcliff 1895 1920 Pietro Mascagni s Isabeau 1911 1921 Richard Strauss Rosenkavalier 1911 Vincent d Indy s L etranger 1901 1922 Nikolai Rimsky Korsakov s Schneguroschka 1885 Alexander Borodin s Prince Igor 1890 Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Pikovaia dama 1890 1923 Modest Mussorgsky s Khovanshchina 1886 1913 first Western performance 1924 Antonin Dvorak s Rusalka 1900 Bedrich Smetana s Prodana nevesta 1866 The bartered bride Jacques Offenbach s Les contes d Hoffmann 1881 Jules Massenet s Herodiade 1881 1925 Umberto Giordano s La cena delle beffe 1924 Richard Strauss Intermezzo 1924 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart s Die Zauberflote 1791 1926 Riccardo Zandonai s Francesca da Rimini 1914 Nikolai Rimsky Korsakov s The legend of the invisible city of Kitezh 1907 first performance out of Russia Pskovityanka 1873 1892 and May night 1879 1927 Zoltan Kodaly s Hary Janos suite orchestral suite from opera Hary Janos 1928 Igor Stravinsky s ballet La sacre du printemps 1913 Giacomo Puccini s Turandot 1926 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart s Die Entfuhrung aus dem Serail 1782 1929 Jules Massenet s Don Quichotte 1910 1930 Italo Montemezzi s L amore dei tre re 1913 1933 Igor Stravinsky s Oedipus rex 1927 1936 Antonin Dvorak s Jakobin 1897 rev 1939 Enric Granados s Goyescas 1916 1943 Richard Strauss Ariadne auf Naxos 1912 1948 Giacomo Puccini s Il trittico 1918 Ottorino Respighi s La fiamma 1934 Igor Stravinsky s Le rossignol 1914 1949 Richard Strauss Elektra 1909 Edouard Lalo s Le roi d Ys 1888 1951 Richard Strauss Die Frau ohne Schatten 1918 1952 Gian Carlo Menotti s The consul 1950 1953 Riccardo Zandonai s I cavalieri di Ekebu 1925 1954 Gian Carlo Menotti s Amelia al ballo 1937 Bela Bartok s Duke Bluebeard s castle 1919 Giacomo Puccini s La rondine 1920 1924 1955 Ildebrando Pizzetti s Debora e Jaele 1921 George Gershwin s Porgy and Bess 1935 Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky s Eugene Onegin 1879 1956 Henry Purcell s Dido and Aeneas 1689 1957 Ottorino Respighi s Maria Egiziaca 1932 Gian Carlo Menotti s The saint of Bleecker Street 1955 1958 Ildebrando Pizzetti s Assassinio nella catedrale 1958 Carl Orff s Die Kluge 1943 1959 Francis Poulenc s Dialogues des Carmelites 1959 Franco Alfano s Cyrano de Bergerac 1936 1962 Richard Strauss Arabella 1932 1963 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart s La clemenza di Tito 1791 1964 Alban Berg s Wozzeck 1925 Georg Friedrich Haendel s Giulio Cesare 1724 1965 Dmitri Shostakovich s Katerina Izmailova 1956 Leos Janacek s Jenufa 1904 1966 Jose Pablo Moncayo s La mulata de Cordoba 1948 Luis Sandi s Carlota Salvador Moreno s Severino Alfredo Keil s A serrana 1899 Francis Poulenc s La voix humaine 1959 Henri Busser s La carrosse du Saint Sacrement Ruggero Leoncavallo s La boheme 1896 1969 Igor Stravinsky s The Rake s Progress 1962 Alban Berg s Lulu 1938 Mikhail Glinka s One life for the Tsar 1971 Kurt Weill s Mahagonny 1972 Bohuslav Martinu s A Greek Passion Bedrich Smetana s Dalibor 1973 Leos Janacek s Katia Kabanova Gaetano Donizetti s Caterina Cornaro 1975 Benjamin Britten s Billy Budd 1941 Nino Rota s Il cappello di paglia di Firenze Gian Francesco Malipiero s Il capitano Spavento Igor Stravinsky s Mavra 1976 Leos Janacek s From the Dead House 1977 Sergei Prokofiev s War and Peace Hector Berlioz s Benvenuto Cellini Luigi Cherubini s Medea 1985 Arnold Schoenberg s Moses und Aaron 1987 Alban Berg s Lulu Friedrich Cerha s completed version 1979 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart s Lucio Silla 1991 Richard Strauss Capriccio 1942 1992 Philip Glass Einstein on the Beach 1976 Janos Vajda s Mario and the magician 1994 Paul Hindemith s Mathis der Maler 1938 1999 Leos Janacek s Vec Makropoulos 2000 Ermanno Wolf Ferrari s Sly 2001 Benjamin Britten s Gloriana 2002 Dmitri Shostakovich s Lady Macbeth de Mtsenk original version 1934 Gaetano Donizetti s La favorite French version 1850 2003 Philippe Boesmans Wintermarchen 1999 2004 Jules Massenet s Cleopatre 1914 2005 Benjamin Britten s A Midsummer Night s Dream 1960 Giuseppe Verdi s Il corsaro 1848 Gioacchino Rossini s La gazzetta 1816 2006 Erich Wolfgang Korngold s Die tote Stadt Georg Friedrich Haendel s Ariodante 1735 2007 Hans Werner Henze s Boulevard Solitude 1952 Jules Massenet s Le portrait de Manon 1894 Giuseppe Verdi s Don Carlos French original version 1868 2008 Benjamin Britten s Death in Venice L ape musicale 1789 pasticcio by Lorenzo da Ponte with music by Mozart Vicente Martin y Soler Giuseppe Gazzaniga Domenico Cimarosa Giordani and Tarchi 2009 Karol Szymanowski s Krol Roger 1926 Hector Parra s Hypermusic prologue 2009 2010 George Benjamin s Into the little hill 2006 2011 Agusti Charles Lord Byron un estiu sense estiu 2011 Gyorgy Ligeti s Le Grand Macabre 1978 2013 Kurt Weill s Street Scene 1946 Directors orchestra and company Edit The theatre is managed by a general director or intendant empresari or administrador From 1980 there is also an artistic director director artistic General directors Albert Bernis 1901 1911 Francesc Casanovas 1911 1913 Alfredo Volpini 1913 1914 Joan Mestres i Calvet 1915 1947 Josep F Arquer to 1959 amp Joan Pamias 1947 1980 Lluis Portabella 1981 1986 Josep M Busquets 1986 1992 Jordi Maluquer 1992 1993 Josep Caminal 1993 2005 Rosa Cullell 2005 2008 Joan Francesc Marco from 2008 Artistic directors Napoleone Annovazzi ca 1947 1952 Lluis Andreu 1981 1990 Albin Hanseroth 1990 1996 Joan Matabosch 1996 2014 Christina Scheppelmann 2014 2019 Orchestra and conductors Edit The theatre has had its own orchestra from its foundation in 1847 the Orquestra Simfonica del Gran Teatre del Liceu It is the oldest still working orchestra in Spain Its first conductor was Maria Obiols Orchestra music directors and chief conductors Ernest Xanco 1959 1961 Eugenio Marco 1981 1984 Uwe Mund 1987 1994 Bertrand de Billy 1999 2004 Sebastian Weigle 2004 2008 Michael Boder 2008 2012 Josep Pons 2012 present The current music director of the company is Josep Pons since 2012 In November 2017 the Liceu announced the extension of Pons contract through the 2021 2022 season 2 Choir conductors Edit The choir was consolidated during the 1960s by its conductor Riccardo Bottino 1960 1982 From 1982 the choir conductors were Romano Gandolfi ca 1982 1993 with Vittorio Sicuri 1982 1990 and Andres Maspero from 1990 The present choir conductor is William Spaulding Stage directors and stagecraft Edit During the second half of the 19th century a school of stagecraft and theatrical scenery was developed at the Liceu After the beginnings with Joan Ballester well known for his setting for L Africaine the leading scenographer was Francesc Soler i Rovirosa working in the 1880 1900s The style was very realistic using painted paper flats and curtains Settings and costumes were made in the theatre workshops From the 1900s to 1930s the school is represented by scenic painters including Maurici Vilomara Felix Urgelles Salvador Alarma and Oleguer Junyent The last of these painters was Josep Mestres Cabanes who painted sceneries in the 1930 1950s Singers Edit Turandot Liceu 1980 with Montserrat Caballe and Pedro Lavirgen Many famous singers have sung at the Liceu Composer Camille Saint Saens when visiting the Liceu once said Ils aiment trop the tenor They the Liceu public love tenors too much In brackets are the dates of the house debuts and final most recent performances of prominent singers who have appeared at the Liceu 1800s Manuela Rossi Caccia 1847 Pietro Mongini ca 1860 1862 Giuseppe Mario 1863 Roberto Stagno 1867 Rosa Vercolini Francesco Tamagno 1876 1890 Adelaida d Alberti Francesc Mateu Francesco Uetam 1874 1877 Carolina Cepeda 1877 Angelo Masini es 1881 Julian Gayarre 1881 1888 Victor Maurel Francesc Vinas 1888 1913 Hariclea Darclee 1894 Luisa Tetrazzini 1896 Genevieve Vix Josefina Huguet ca 1896 Maria Barrientos 1898 1918 Rosina Storchio 1898 1900s In 1904 Enrico Caruso in his only Liceu appearance participated in two performances of Rigoletto Gemma Bellincioni played the title role in a Salome the Catalan singer Conchita Supervia made her debut Success was recorded by other performers such as Mario Sammarco 1902 Adamo Didur 1905 Mattia Battistini 1906 Graziella Pareto 1906 1928 Giuseppe Anselmi 1907 Titta Ruffo 1908 1926 Riccardo Stracciari 1909 1939 1910s 1920s Elvira de Hidalgo 1911 Ebe Stignani Conchita Supervia 1912 1928 Hipolito Lazaro 1914 1945 Giovanni Zenatello Giacomo Lauri Volpi 1922 1945 and 1972 Miguel Fleta 1925 1933 Toti Dal Monte 1925 1934 Feodor Chaliapin 1927 1934 Lauritz Melchior 1927 1930 Tina Poli Randaccio Lily Hafgren Carlo Galeffi Gilda Dalla Rizza Georges Thill Giannina Arangi Lombardi and Gina Cigna 1940s Giulietta Simionato 1945 1951 Victoria de los Angeles 1945 1968 and 1994 Giuseppe Di Stefano 1946 1970 and 1986 Maria Caniglia 1947 1954 Gianni Poggi 1947 1963 Kirsten Flagstad 1949 1952 Hans Hotter 1948 1987 Max Lorenz 1950 1954 1950s Boris Christoff 1951 1952 Renata Tebaldi 1953 1959 Giuseppe Taddei 1953 1986 Wolfgang Windgassen 1954 1959 Walter Berry 1954 1985 Anton Dermota 1955 1966 Gianna D Angelo 1957 1965 Enriqueta Tarres ca 1957 1992 Fedora Barbieri Margherita Carosio Astrid Varnay 1955 1957 Gertrude Grob Prandl Birgit Nilsson 1957 1958 Regine Crespin 1958 1966 Carlo Bergonzi 1958 1982 Alfredo Kraus 1958 1994 1960s Joan Sutherland 1960 1989 Piero Cappuccilli 1961 1994 Fiorenza Cossotto 1961 1994 Montserrat Caballe 1962 2007 Virginia Zeani 1963 1977 Pedro Lavirgen 1964 1989 Placido Domingo 1966 2015 Jaume Aragall 1964 1997 Vicente Sardinero 1964 1997 Richard Tucker 1965 1975 Grace Bumbry 1966 1988 Anja Silja 1966 2000 1970s Mirella Freni 1970 1994 Jose Carreras 1958 as child and 1970 2008 Joan Pons 1970 2006 Elena Obraztsova 1970 1984 Agnes Baltsa 1971 1992 Edita Gruberova 1977 2008 1980s Simon Estes 1981 1997 Matti Salminen 1981 2004 Ewa Podles 1981 2007 Martti Talvela 1982 1989 Franco Bonisolli Eva Marton 1982 2006 Gwyneth Jones 1985 1997 Nicolai Ghiaurov 1985 1992 Rockwell Blake 1986 1996 Dolora Zajick 1988 2008 1990s amp 2000s Josep Bros 1992 2007 Deborah Polaski 2000 Angela Denoke 2002 Natalie Dessay Juan Diego Florez 2002 2008 Rolando Villazon 2005 2008 Peter Seiffert or Fiorenza Cedolins 2005 2007 Nina Stemme 2004 2005 2008 2009 Conservatori de Musica del Liceu EditLinked to the theatre is the Conservatori Superior de Musica del Liceu a music college founded in 1837 which is part of the same corporation Circulo del Liceo Edit La Sargantain ca Julia Peraire s portrait 1907 by Ramon Casas a painting at the Circulo del Liceo The Circulo del Liceo is an exclusive private club located in the Liceu building The Circulo opened in November 1847 a few months after the Liceu opera house with 125 founding members according to its earliest records The club s facilities include numerous elegant lounges conference rooms a restaurant a library and other services 3 For the society s first 150 years only men were permitted to become members women were allowed access solely as guests of male society members In 2001 following public controversy over the club s exclusively male membership the club s constitution was amended and ten women including renowned soprano Montserrat Caballe and several family members of existing members were permitted to apply for membership for the first time All ten women were initially turned down 4 then later admitted after a subsequent vote by members with a final vote of 373 votes in favor and 279 against their admission 5 At present the society has around one thousand members 3 The Circulo del Liceo is the oldest club in Spain which retains its original location 6 The club s long history has enabled it to accumulate a unique heritage of artistic works Many of its rooms are decorated in an Art Nouveau style Four large windows in the low foyer serve as a testimony to the influence of Wagnerism in Catalan culture at the beginning of the 20th century In addition to the furniture and decor the club retains a collection of sculptures marquetry enamels engravings etchings and paintings by Catalan artists Alexandre de Riquer Santiago Rusinol Modest Urgell Inglada and Francesc Miralles among others The most notable work belonging to the club is a set of twelve oils on fabric commissioned to Ramon Casas and installed in the rotunda of the club Each of the twelve paintings Casas most ambitious work is inspired by a musical topic The Liceu in fiction cinema etc EditFiction novels plays etc Edit Frederic Soler es s satirical comedy Liceistas i cruzados 1865 about the quarrels among the fans of the Liceu and fans of the Teatre Principal the two main opera houses as there was a great rivalry among them in Barcelona during the 19th century Narcis Oller s novel La febre d or 1892 Artur Masriera s sketch book Los buenos barceloneses hombres costumbres y anecdotas de la Barcelona ochocentista 1850 1870 1925 Ignacio Agusti es s novels Mariona Rebull 1944 and El viudo Rius 1945 where the 1893 bomb at Liceu is narrated Eduardo Mendoza s novel La ciudad de los prodigios 1986 However the film based on it was filmed at Teatre Fortuny at Reus not at Liceu Joan Agut es s short stories book El dia que es va cremar el Liceu The day the Liceu was burnt 1995 Films Edit Mariona Rebull 1947 directed by Jose Luis Saenz de Heredia Gayarre 1958 by Domingo Viladomat a biopic about Julian Gayarre performed by Alfredo Kraus Circus World 1964 directed by Henry Hathaway with John Wayne and Claudia Cardinale some circus scenes are filmed inside the Liceu theatre Romanza final 1986 directed by Jose Maria Forque a film about Julian Gayarre s life with Josep Carreras Un submari a les estovalles 1990 directed by Ignasi Pere Ferre La febre d or 1993 directed by Gonzalo Herralde with Fernando Guillen Rosa M Sarda and Alex Casanovas with fragments of a performance of Gounod s Faust The Life of David Gale 2003 directed by Alan Parker with Kevin Spacey and Kate Winslet See also EditConservatori Superior de Musica del Liceu List of theatres and concert halls in BarcelonaReferences EditNotes Guy Jack Barcelona opera house reopens with performance to 2 292 plants CNN Retrieved 24 June 2020 Josep Pons renueva como director musical del Liceu hasta temporada 2021 2022 El Periodico 17 November 2017 Retrieved 20 January 2018 a b Welcome Circulo del Liceo Archived from the original on 29 October 2012 Retrieved 6 January 2013 El Circulo del Liceo rechaza las 10 solicitudes de ingreso presentadas por mujeres El Mundo 25 February 2001 Retrieved 6 January 2013 El Circulo del Liceo aprueba la admision de mujeres como socias El Pais 4 April 2001 Retrieved 6 January 2013 The Club Circulo del Liceo Archived from the original on 29 October 2012 Retrieved 6 January 2013 Sources Alier Roger El gran llibre del Liceu Barcelona Carroggio DL 1999 Alier Roger El Gran Teatro del Liceo historia artistica Barcelona Francesc X Mata 1991 Alier Roger Historia del Gran Teatro del Liceo Barcelona La Vanguardia 1983 Anuari 1947 1997 del Gran Teatre del Liceu Recerca i recopilacio Pau Nadal Barcelona Amics del Liceu Ambit DL 1997 Artis Josep El Gran Teatro del Liceo Col leccio Barcelona historica y monumental Barcelona Ayma 1946 Daufi Alicia De la transgressio carnavalesca al silenci de la postguerra Estudi musical social cultural i economic dels balls de mascares al Gran Teatre del Liceu 1848 1936 Unpublished doctoral dissertation Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona 2022 https ddd uab cat record 266133 Cronica il lustrada del Gran Teatre del Liceu 1947 1997 Barcelona Amics del Liceu Ambit DL 1997 Lloret Teresa Gran Teatre del Liceu Barcelona Barcelona Fundacio Gran Teatre del Liceu cop 2002 Opera Liceu una exposicio en cinc actes Museu d Historia de Catalunya 19 setembre de 1997 11 de gener de 1998 Barcelona Barcelona Generalitat de Catalunya Departament de Cultura Proa Fundacio Gran Teatre del Liceu DL 1997 Radigales Jaume Els origens del Gran Teatre del Liceu 1837 1847 de la placa de Santa Anna a la Rambla historia del Liceu Filharmonic d Isabel II o Liceu Filodramatic de Barcelona Barcelona Publicacions de l Abadia de Montserrat 1998 Subira Jose La opera en los teatros de Barcelona estudio historico cronologico desde el siglo XVIII al XX Monografias historicas de Barcelona 9 Milla 1946 Tribo Jaume Annals 1847 1897 del Gran Teatre del Liceu Barcelona Amics del Liceu Gran Teatre del Liceu 2004 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gran Teatre del Liceu Official website in English Catalan and Spanish Coordinates 41 22 49 N 2 10 25 E 41 38028 N 2 17361 E 41 38028 2 17361 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Liceu amp oldid 1149852935, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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