Gala Lara, Anna Yanchuk, Annachiara Corti und Karine de Matos
Gala Lara, Anna Yanchuk, Annachiara Corti und Karine de Matos
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Ensemble
Ensemble
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Annachiara Corti, Elsa Le Breton, Gala Lara, Anna Yanchuk, Chigusa Fujiyoshi
Annachiara Corti, Elsa Le Breton, Gala Lara, Anna Yanchuk, Chigusa Fujiyoshi
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Gala Lara und Valbona Bushkola
Gala Lara und Valbona Bushkola
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Samuel Pellegrin, Valbona Bushkola und Lucas Leonardo
Samuel Pellegrin, Valbona Bushkola und Lucas Leonardo
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Samuel Pellegrin, Valbona Bushkola und Lucas Leonardo
Samuel Pellegrin, Valbona Bushkola und Lucas Leonardo
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Samuel Pellegrin, Valbona Bushkola, Lucas Leonardo
Samuel Pellegrin, Valbona Bushkola, Lucas Leonardo
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Valbona Bushkola
Valbona Bushkola
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Ensemble
Ensemble
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Ensemble
Ensemble
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Mikino Karube und Ensemble
Mikino Karube und Ensemble
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Mikino Karube und Matteo Rondinelli
Mikino Karube und Matteo Rondinelli
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Mikino Karube und Ensemble
Mikino Karube und Ensemble
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Valbona Bushkola und Mikino Karube
Valbona Bushkola und Mikino Karube
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Ben van Beelen, Valbona Bushkola und Ensemble
Ben van Beelen, Valbona Bushkola und Ensemble
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Ben van Beelen
Ben van Beelen
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Valbona Bushkola und Ensemble
Valbona Bushkola und Ensemble
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Lucas Leonardo, Ben van Beelen, Valbona Bushkola, Samuel Pellegrin
Lucas Leonardo, Ben van Beelen, Valbona Bushkola, Samuel Pellegrin
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Valbona Bushkola, Ben van Beelen, Lucas Leonardo, Samuel Pellegrin
Valbona Bushkola, Ben van Beelen, Lucas Leonardo, Samuel Pellegrin
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Ben van Beelen
Ben van Beelen
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Ben van Beelen und Mikino Karube
Ben van Beelen und Mikino Karube
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Ben van Beelen und Mikino Karube
Ben van Beelen und Mikino Karube
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Mikino Karube und Ben van Beelen
Mikino Karube und Ben van Beelen
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall
Ensemble
Ensemble
© SLT / Tobias Witzgall

The Sleeping Beauty

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Fairy-tale ballet by Reginaldo Oliveira based on the story by Charles Perrault

Revival: January 10, 2026 / Salzburg State Theatre

Synopsis

“Sleeping Beauty” is regarded as the masterpiece of composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. Ballet director Reginaldo Oliveira is fascinated not only by the irresistibly beautiful ballet music and the enchanting fairy-tale motifs, but also by the archetypal questions of good and evil, rejection and the resulting desire for revenge that this tale raises.

Aurora’s parents had to wait a very long time for their first child and relied on the help of fairies to fulfill their wish. Perhaps for that reason, their greatest goal is to protect their daughter from harm. And they almost succeed—except for one fairy they forgot to invite to the christening. And that is when disaster takes its course. The enraged fairy curses Aurora: she shall die at the age of 15. The curse cannot be undone, only softened by another fairy into a hundred-year sleep. Thus Aurora becomes the sleeping beauty who must be awakened after 100 years by a courageous prince.

The source of the ballet, “The Sleeping Beauty in the Woods,” an art fairy tale by French author Charles Perrault, also displays a good measure of humor. For example, when the prince notices that Sleeping Beauty’s dress after a hundred years reminds him of his grandmother. Or when Sleeping Beauty sees her prince and the first thing she says is: “You took quite a long time to get here!”

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840–1893) considered “Sleeping Beauty” his finest ballet. At its premiere in 1890 at the Mariinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg, an astonishing 155 performers stood on stage, including 59 solo dancers. Within just two years, there were 50 performances in St. Petersburg alone, and the work has remained a staple of the ballet repertoire to this day.

Following the double bill “Iolanta / The Nutcracker,” chief choreographer Oliveira devoted himself once again to one of Tchaikovsky’s great ballet scores in the 2023/24 season with his reinterpretation of this well-known fairy tale. He was supported by set designer Matthias Kronfuss and costume designer Judith Adam. The newly cast revival of this production will be conducted this season by Tobias Meichsner, who will lead the Mozarteum Orchestra.

“It is especially for these central scenes that Oliveira has developed an original modern ballet idiom, set against a background of classical pointe work, which unfolds expressive phrases of movement to match Tchaikovsky’s score. The meticulously choreographed solo performances, pas de deux and group sequences blend together and are ideally tailored to the three solo dancers.”                                                                                                                                                                                                              Die Deutsche Bühne

Duration: 2 h / one intermission

We offer introductory talks 45 and 30 minutes ahead of each performance.

Play video "https://www.salzburger-landestheater.at/uploads/youtubeThumbs/youtubeThumb_qyHo943KTgo.jpg"

Reviews

„Besonders für diese zentralen Szenen hat Oliveira eine von klassischem Spitzentanz grundierte, originell-moderne Ballett-Sprache entwickelt, die zu Tschaikowskis Takten ausdrucksstarke Bewegungs-Phrasen entfaltet. Übereinander gleitende Soli, Duette und Gruppensequenzen sind minutiös ausgearbeitet und ideal auf die drei Solisten ausgerichtet.“ 

Die Deutsche Bühne

„Reginaldo Oliveira verbindet klassischen Spitzentanz mit modernen, ausdrucksstarken Bewegungen und schafft mit den farbenfrohen Kostümen von Matthias Kronfuss und dem Bühnenbild von Judith Adam einen Rahmen, der Träumen lässt, aber auch die Realität in dunklen Tönen vor Augen hält.“

Traunsteiner Tagblatt