About the production
An officer, an unattainable love and a deadly secret: Hermann loves Lisa, who is under the care of the old countess, but as a penniless outsider, his path to her remains blocked.
When Hermann learns that the countess is keeping a secret from her past, a possibility opens up to him: she knows three playing cards that never lose. Seized by this promise, Hermann makes his way to her - and stakes everything on a single chance. Tchaikovsky's Queen of Spades tells of the fatal hope of being able to change one's fate in one fell swoop.
Director Evgeny Titov focuses on the existential core of Queen of Spades. For him, the focus is not on the game as a social phenomenon, but on a radical inner movement: the idea of being able to fundamentally change one's own life with a single act.
Hermann is no mere player, but a driven man. His love for Lisa grows into an obsession that shifts and takes on a life of its own. The desire for money becomes an end in itself, hope becomes an obsession. For Titov, this is a decisive turning point: the path becomes the goal - and thus eludes all control.
He is particularly interested in the ambivalence between reality and delusion. Neither the appearance of the countess nor the secret of the three cards can be clearly explained. Both remain in a state of undecidability: supernaturally conceivable and at the same time an expression of an inner escalation. It is precisely this limbo that turns the events into a psychological thriller for Titov - and brings the story close to our present day.
Queen of Spades is one of Tchaikovsky's most dramatically dense scores. The composer combines a highly expressive, often darkly colored tonal language with an unusual stylistic variety. In addition to passionately charged scenes, there are deliberate contrasts: courtly dances, pastoral interludes and echoes of older musical forms.
These stylistic breaks are no mere effect. They reflect the inner turmoil of the characters and the tension between outer society and inner abyss. Hermann in particular is given a musical language that oscillates between lyrical sentiment and obsessive condensation.
At the same time, leitmotifs and recurring sound gestures run through the work and connect the scenes to form a psychological continuum. The result is music that is less narrative than propulsive - a world of sound in which passion, delusion and inevitability inexorably condense.
The Queen of Spades was written in 1890 based on a story by Alexander Pushkin. The libretto was written by Modest Tchaikovsky, the composer's brother, who decisively reshaped the original: he developed Pushkin's concentrated, psychologically pointed chamber play into a grand opera with extensive social scenes and tableaux. While Pushkin's text remains sober, ironic and almost clinical in its observation, the opera focuses on the passions of the characters.
The premiere took place in 1890 at the Mariinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg. Pushkin's story is already one of the defining literary myths of this city: a dark, psychologically charged Petersburg in which perception and delusion merge. Works such as Dostoyevsky's "The Double" and Gogol's "The Nose" are part of this tradition. Tchaikovsky's setting also gave the material an enormous cultural reach and made it one of the central works of the Russian repertoire.
Natalya Petrovna Golitsyna, an 18th century St. Petersburg noblewoman who was credited with a mysterious card game with which she always won, is considered a possible historical model for the countess. Whether truth or legend - it is precisely this uncertainty between fact and fiction that characterizes the fascination of The Queen of Spades to this day.
