- National Theatre, Warsaw
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This article is about an institution. For a building, see Grand Theatre, Warsaw.
The National Theatre (Teatr Narodowy) in Warsaw, Poland, was founded in 1765, during the Polish Enlightenment, by that country's last monarch, Stanisław August Poniatowski.
Contents
History
Opera was brought to Poland by future King Władysław IV Vasa within twenty years of the first opera presentations in Florence.[1] In 1628 he invited the first Italian opera company to Warsaw. Upon ascending the Polish throne in 1632, he built a theatre in his castle, and regular opera performances were produced there by an Italian company directed by Marco Scacchi.[2]
The first public opera-theater in Poland, the Operalnia in Warsaw, was opened on July 3, 1748.[3] It was located in the Saxon Garden (at today's intersection of Marszałkowska Street of Królewska Street) and functioned under royal patronage. The Operalnia's building was erected in 1725 at the initiative of Augustus II, costing 5000 ducats, as a rectangular structure divided into three parts.
From 1774 on, opera, theatre and ballet performances were held in the Radziwiłł Palace (today the official home of Poland's president).[4] The first Polish opera was produced there on 11 July 1778, Maciej Kamieński's Poverty Made Happy, with Wojciech Bogusławski's libretto based on a comedy by Franciszek Bohomolec.
In 1779-1833 performances took place in a new theatre building on Krasiński Square, later called the National Theatre).[4] The National Theatre was founded in 1765, during the Polish Enlightenment, by the country's last monarch, Stanisław August Poniatowski. Known as the father of Polish National Theatre, Bogusławski was a renowned actor, singer, director, playwright and entrepreneur. Also, at the National Theatre, from 1785 a troupe of His Majesty's Dancers (headed by ballet masters François Gabriel Le Doux of Paris and Daniel Curz of Venice) became active. At this theatre, on 17 March 1830, Chopin premiered his Piano Concerto No. 1 in E minor, Op. 11. Closed after the November 1830 Uprising, in 1924 the National Theatre was revived under the Second Polish Republic.[4]
Under the Polish People's Republic (1945–89), the quality of the Theatre's productions was at times adversely affected by government pressures.[4]
References
- ^ (English) Melania Bucciarelli, Norbert Dubowy, Reinhard Strohm (2006). Italian opera in Central Europe. 1. BWV Verlag. p. 26-27. ISBN 38-30503-81-4.
- ^ (English) Erik Kjellberg (2010). The dissemination of music in seventeenth-century Europe: celebrating the Düben collection : proceedings from the international conference at Uppsala University 2006. Peter Lang. p. 220. ISBN 30-34300-57-3.
- ^ (Polish) Stanisław Herbst (1975). Encyklopedia Warszawy. Polish Scientific Publishers PWN. p. 439.
- ^ a b c d (English) International Theatre Institute. Polish Centre, Authors Agency (2001). Le Théâtre en Pologne: The Theatre in Poland. Authors Agency. p. 12.
See also
- Theatre of Poland
External links
Coordinates: 52°14′36″N 21°00′34″E / 52.2433°N 21.0094°E
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