![]() |
|
[ Reserve a seat ]
| RECOMMENDED EVENTS
|
|
Orchestral concerts March 18th Academy of Music, 7:45 pm
Richard Strauss evening with the Budapest Festival Orchestra
Till Eulenspiegel Horn concerto No. 2 Salome – Dance of the Seven Veils Ariadne auf Naxos – Ariadne’s aria ("Es gibt ein Reich") Ariadne auf Naxos – final scene Conductor: Iván Fischer
With: Szabolcs Zempléni / horn, Jane Eaglen (Ariadne), Robert Dean Smith (Bacchus), Virginie Pochon (Echo), Claudia Mahnke (Dryade), Valerie Condoluci (Naiade) / voice |
|
|
Chamber evenings March 18th HAS Ceremonial Hall, Roosevelt tér, 7:30 pm Haydn: Trio in G major, No. 39 Mendelssohn: Trio in C minor, op. 66 Dvořák: Trio in F minor, op. 65 Violinist Gyula Stuller was born in Budapest in 1962. He earned diplomas from the Franz Liszt Music College in Budapest, where he was a student of Ferenc Halász, and the London Guildhall School of Music and Drama where he studied with György Pauk. He subsequently attended masterclasses by Nathan Milstein, Sándor Végh and Tibor Varga. Gyula Stuller won prizes at a number of international competitions: the József Szigeti International Violin Competition, Budapest, the Rodolfo Lipizer International Violin Competition, Gorizia. In 1986 he won first prize at the 20th Tibor Varga International Violin Competition in the Swiss town of Sion. This led to invitations to perform all over Europe. In Hungary, his regular chamber music partners are Imre Rohmann and Miklós Perényi and a concert at the Music Academy in 2002 was recorded by Hungarian Television. In 2003, he performed Schubert’s Trout Quintet with pianist Radu Lupu in Lausanne and other cities. In September he was invited to play at the Barcelona Mozart Festival and in October, was a soloist in a Swiss performance of the Chausson Concerto with the Bartók Quartet and Ricardo Castro. In 1996 he began teaching at the Fribourg Conservatoire and since 2002, has directed the artistic training class of the Tibor Varga Academy.
|
|
|
Crossover March 18th Festival Theatre, 7:30 pm
Miklós Rózsa evening
Three Hungarian Sketches, op. 14 Concerto for viola, op. 37 Ben Hur Suit (film music) Quo Vadis Suit (film music) Miklós Rózsa (1907-1995).
What Teller was to nuclear fission and Trauner was to film sets, Miklós Rózsa was to film music. He was an American-Hungarian musician who earned his reputation in Hollywood. He won three Oscars for his screen music – in 1945 for Spellbound (Hitchcock) for the two brilliant main themes with psychoanalytical content, in 1947 for A Double Life (G. Cukor), and in 1959 for Ben-Hur (Wyler). And he was nominated for the Film Academy’s prize no less than 16 times. He composed the melodies of Jungle Books while he was still in London (1942) for director Vincent Korda, with Alexander Korda as producer. Two years previously he had been highly successful with the sweetly melodious music of the thousand and one nights that sounded very much like Pest (The Thief of Baghdad). The script for that film was written by Lajos Bíró. There are many Hungarian names on the list of Rózsa’s films. Alexander Korda enticed Rózsa to London-Film in the late thirties. In 1937 he left his career in classical music and turned to applied music with an insignificant Marlene Dietrich film (Knight without Armour). Zoltán Korda directed The Four Feathers (1939), a film in colour noted for its battle scenes. Rózsa wrote the music. Alexander Korda directed Vivien Leigh in the title role of Lady Hamilton, with Laurence Olivier as Admiral Nelson (1941). Rózsa wrote the music. Then he went over to the United States. At United Artists he was the composer for Lubitsch’s comedy To Be or Not to Be (1942). Billy Wilder: Five Graves to Cairo (1943) and The Lost Weekend (1945) mark his achievements in Hollywood. He switched contracts from M.G.M. to Paramount. 1947: The Song of Scheherazade – he lavished his “prodigal talent” on a bio-pic of Rimsky-Korsakov. Minolli’s Madame Bovary (1949). Big budget films came back into fashion. Rózsa composed the music for Quo vadis (1951). Then Ivanhoe (1952): Walter Scott on horseback; Julius Caesar (1953): Shakespeare with Marlon Brando; Knights of the Round Table (1953): the Middle Ages in cinemascope; The King’s Thief (1955): conspiracy in the court of the English king Charles II; Diane de Poitiers (1955): love in the court of the French king Henri II; Ben-Hur (1959): the Ancient World in full colour (a budget of 15 million, ten years of preparation, a caste of a hundred thousand, fourteen months of shooting, eleven Oscars, and all we remember is the twenty-minute carriage race filmed by Marton), Sodom and Gomorra (1963): Sergio Leone begins the story of the Bible and got bored with it, Robert Aldrich finished it. Rózsa is invited to give impressive sounds to blockbuster films. He plays in The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970), in fact: he even appears in person on the screen, as the conductor of the Russian ballet. Péter Molnár Gál |
|
|
Dance March 18th House of Future Teátrum, 7:00 pm
Maria Serrano & Kálmán Balogh
“Flamenco meets Gypsy music” With: Spanish and Hungarian musicians, dancers “Unbridled dancing with amazing expressive power”
Berliner Kurier*** “She possesses miraculous force”. Der Kurier, Vienna |
|
|
Exhibitions March 18th Ernst Museum, 11:00 am
Exhibition of works by Gyula Derkovits art scholarship-holders
Mid-March to mid-April 2007. Each spring the Hungarian Ministry of Education and Culture holds an exhibition in our rooms of works by winners of its Gyula DERKOVITS art scholarship. For over fifty years this scholarship has been an important yardstick and an important stage in the career of young Hungarian artists and art students.
|
|