Odesa Opera and Ballet Theatre

{{Short description|19th century theatre in Odesa, Ukraine}}

{{Infobox venue

| name = Odesa National Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre

| native_name = {{langx|uk|Одеський національний академічний театр опери та балету}}

| logo_caption = Logo

| image = Operniy-5.jpg

| image_size = 270px

| caption = Odesa Theatre of Opera and Ballet

| address = Tchaikovsky Lane 1

| city = Odesa

| country = {{flagu|Ukraine}}

| designation = Architectural Landmark

| coordinates = {{coord|46.485556|30.741667|type:landmark|display=inline}}

| architect =

| owner =

| capacity = 1,636

| type =

| opened = 1810

| yearsactive =

| rebuilt = 1887, Fellner & Helmer

| closed =

| othernames =

| logo_image = File:Odesa Theatre logo.svg

| production =

| currentuse =

| website = [https://operahouse.od.ua/en operahouse.od.ua]

}}

The Odesa{{Cite web |title=About theatre |url=https://operahouse.od.ua/en/about/ |access-date=2022-09-04 |website=Odesa Opera and Ballet Theatre}} National Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre ({{langx|uk|Одеський національний академічний театр опери та балету}}) is the oldest theatre in Odesa, Ukraine. The Theatre and the Potemkin Stairs are the most famous edifices in Odesa.{{cite book

| editor-last = Iljine

| editor-first = Nicholas V.

| others = essay by Patricia Herlihy; contributions by Bel Kaufman, Oleg Gubar, and Alexander Rozenboim

| year = 2004

| title = Odessa Memories

| publisher = University of Washington Press

| location = Seattle

| isbn = 0-295-98345-0

| page = [https://archive.org/details/odessamemoriessa00nico/page/13 13]

| url-access = registration

| url = https://archive.org/details/odessamemoriessa00nico/page/13

}}

The first opera house was opened in 1810 and destroyed by fire in 1873. The modern building was constructed by Fellner & Helmer in neo-baroque (Vienna Baroque) style and opened in 1887. The architecture of the luxurious audience hall follows the late French rococo style. The unique acoustics of the horseshoe-designed hall allows performers to deliver even a whisper-low tone of voice from the stage to any part of the hall. The most recent renovation of the theatre was completed in 2007.

History

Image:Hall and scene.jpg

File:Театр оперы и балета. Зал.jpg

Odessa's first theatre (called the City Theatre) was built on the location of the current Odessa Opera and Ballet Theatre and opened on 10 February 1810. The original design, created by the Italian architect Francesco Frapolli, was later modified by the French architect Jean-François Thomas de Thomon who also designed St. Petersburg's Old Stock Exchange.{{cite book |last1=Herlihy |first1=Patricia |title=Odessa: A History 1794–1914 |date=1986 |publisher=Harvard University Press |location=Cambridge MA |isbn=0916458083 |page=35}}{{cite web |last1=Verbytskaia |first1=Lada |title=История Одесского оперного театра: пожары, призраки и магическое зеркало |trans-title=The history of the Odesa Opera House: fires, ghosts and a magic mirror |url=https://www.048.ua/news/3200580/istoria-odesskogo-opernogo-teatra-pozary-prizraki-i-magiceskoe-zerkalo-foto |access-date=June 19, 2022 |website=048.ua}} The main entrance with its colonnade faced the sea. There was no foyer.{{cite book

| last = Kononova | first = G. | year = 1984 | title =Odessa: A Guide

| publisher = Raduga Publishers | location = Moscow | url = http://www.2odessa.com/wiki/index.php?title=Odessa_a_guide#51 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070928000158/http://www.2odessa.com/wiki/index.php?title=Odessa_a_guide | url-status = dead | archive-date = 2007-09-28 }} p. 67Karakina, p. 68 Lists the architect's name as Toma de Tomana.

In 1831, Michael Vorontsov, governor-general of Russian empire, Novorossia kray (currently part of Ukraine) decided to assign the old instituted quarantine fees to the Odessa Theatre.{{cite book | year =1990 | title =Prince Michael Vorontsov: Viceroy to the Tsar | publisher =McGill-Queen's Press – MQUP | isbn =0-7735-0747-7 | author =Anthony L.H. Rhinelander. | url-access =registration | url =https://archive.org/details/princemichaelvor0006rhin }} p. 110 Historian Charles King explains that one of the medical inspectors in Odessa was also the owner of the Odessa Theatre. When ticket sales were low, he would announce the discovery of an infection among newly arrived passengers and ordered them to be quarantined at their own cost. The expenses of the lazaretto, where the passengers stayed, would be used to hire a major performer for the theatre.{{cite book

| last =King

| first =Charles

| year =2004

| title =The Black Sea: A History

| publisher =Oxford University Press

| location =Oxford University Press

| isbn =0-19-924161-9

| url-access =registration

| url =https://archive.org/details/blackseahistory00king

}} p. 171

On the night of 2 January 1873, the building was gutted by fire.{{cite book | last =Karakina | first =Yelena | author2 =Tatyana Samoilova | author3 =Anna Ishchenko | year =2004 | title =Touring Odessa | url =http://shop.russia-on-line.com/books/book.php?isbn=9668137019 | publisher =BDRUK | isbn =966-8137-01-9 | url-status =dead | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20090907085248/http://shop.russia-on-line.com/books/book.php?isbn=9668137019 | archive-date =2009-09-07 }} p. 67

A fund raising campaign began immediately. The city announced an international contest for the best theatre design. Forty designs were submitted, but none was chosen.Karakina, p. 67 States: There were forty three entrants, and...Felner and Gelmer were selected. Finally, the project was drafted along the lines of Dresden Semperoper built in 1878, with its nontraditional foyer following the curvatures of auditorium.Buildings for Music, Michael Forsythe, Cambridge University Press, p. 344

Two Viennese architects, Ferdinand Fellner and Hermann Helmer began to construct the larger replacement in 1883. The foundation stone was laid on 16 September 1884. On 1 October 1887, the theatre was completed, costing 1,300,000 rubles to build. It was named the Odessa City Theatre.{{cite book | last = Herlihy | first = Patricia

| orig-year = 1987| year = 1991 | title = Odessa: A History, 1794–1914

| publisher = Harvard University Press | location = Cambridge, MA | isbn = 0-916458-15-6 }} p. 266-7Karakina, p. 70 States: The Opera and Ballet Theatre acquired its name in the early 20th century. When first created, it was simply called the City Theatre.{{cite journal

| first =Michael

| last =Wines

| date =November 1, 1999

| title =An Aged Beauty Gets a Facelift From a Geologist

| journal = The New York Times

| pages =4

| url = http://www.2odessa.com/wiki/index.php?title=Magazine_and_Newspaper_articles_on_Odessa#Odessa_Journal:_An_Aged_Beauty

| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070928000140/http://www.2odessa.com/wiki/index.php?title=Magazine_and_Newspaper_articles_on_Odessa

| url-status = dead

| archive-date = September 28, 2007

}}

The theatre was the first building in Odesa to employ the Edison Company with electric illumination.Kaufman, p. 14.

To keep theatre patrons comfortable in the summers, workers would lower wagonloads of ice and straw down a 35-foot shaft, then would carry it through a tunnel to a basement beneath the hall, where cool air rose up from vents beneath the seats.

File:The Theatre, Odessa.jpg

In 1925, the building was burnt again in a fire. A fire team localized the burning, but the stage and orchestra pit were destroyed. During the fire of 1925, the original curtain of the theatre stage burned, which was never restored.{{cite journal|title=Odessaguide: attractions|url=https://leodessa.com/odessa-opera-house/ |journal=Odessa Opera House|date=2019}}

File:Opera, Odessa.jpg

There is a story that, when the Odesa people learned that the construction cost 1.3 million gold rubles, they gasped, but when they saw the new theatre, they gasped again, this time in admiration.

In August 1941, when the Romanian army was dangerously close to Odesa, the command of the Odesa defensive area appointed a special anti-aircraft unit, which was given the task of protecting the theatre building from bombing. On the roofs of the houses adjacent to the theatre, guns were installed that shot all 73 days of the city defending.{{cite journal|title=Archodessa|url=http://archodessa.com/all/new-opera-theatre-history-world-war/ |journal=Odesa Opera House in the Second World War|date=2014}} During World War II, Nikita Khrushchev, concerned about the condition of the city, visited Odesa immediately after the German army was ousted from the city. Khrushchev reported that only one corner of the building had been damaged by an enemy shell.{{cite book

| last =Khrushchev

| first =Nikita

| editor=Sergei Khrushchev

| year =2004

| title =Memoirs of Nikita Khrushchev: The Commissar, 1918–1945

| publisher =Pennsylvania State University

| location =Penn State Press

| isbn =0-271-02332-5

}} p. 597

The theatre was remodelled in the 1960s.

The theatre sits upon shifting ground and is in danger of collapse. The first cracks in the foundation appeared almost as soon as the theatre opened. The theatre's eastern half sagged almost seven inches in its first three years, and the six walls began to tilt. Gleb Dranov, a former opera singer who sang at the theatre for 25 years, and who worked five years as a geologist, is helping repair the building.

During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine the theatre used similar defences, including anti-aircraft units and anti-tank hedgehogs, to defend the theatre as had been used during August 1941.{{Cite news |last=Khurshudyan |first=Isabelle |date=March 17, 2022 |title=Odessa's beloved opera house plays starring role in wartime drama |newspaper=Washington Post |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/03/17/ukraine-odessa-opera-russia/ |access-date=April 14, 2022}}

Construction

The building's façade is decorated in the Italian baroque style. In the niches are the busts of Mikhail Glinka, Nikolai Gogol, Alexandr Griboyedov and Alexander Pushkin. The large hall was modelled after the style of Louis XVI, and is richly decorated with gilded stucco figures and designs. The architects provided the foyer with twenty-four exits, to avoid tragedy in the case of a fire. On the side of the theatre is a lawn with fresh flowers and shrubs.

People

The famous Russian singer Feodor Chaliapin gave many concerts at the Odesa Opera. Soprano Lyudmila Shirina was a leading singer from 1975, and later head of the company.

Gallery

File:Одеський національний академічний театр опери та балету DJI 0112.jpg

File:Front view of Odessa opera theater.jpg

File:Front stairs.jpg

File:Ceiling Odessa opera theater.jpg

File:Одеський національний академічний театр опери та балету 02.jpg

See also

References

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