Hungary in cultural diplomacy push with first US opera tour

Hungary in cultural diplomacy push with first US opera tour

The Hungarian State Opera and Hungarian National Ballet will perform in New York from October 30 to November 11.

The Hungarian National Ballet will make its US debut later this year. (AFP pic)
The Hungarian National Ballet will make its US debut later this year. (AFP pic)
NEW YORK:
Hungary on Wednesday launched a cultural diplomacy push in New York with its prolific state-run opera planning a full two weeks of music and ballet.

The Hungarian State Opera and Hungarian National Ballet will make their US debut by sending 350 musicians and dancers to New York with support from Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s right-wing government.

The October 30-November 11 performances at Lincoln Center will highlight Hungarian works including “Bánk bán,” a signature opera of national anthem composer Ferenc Erkel, and “Bluebeard’s Castle,” the only opera of Béla Bartók.

The company will also perform the more recent “Mario and the Magician,” based on the Thomas Mann novella, and “Swan Lake” in the version of late Dutch choreographer Rudi van Dantzig.

“We never had in the history of Hungarian culture anything that is this long, this big, mobilizes this much (personnel) and has a budget like this,” Ferenc Kumin, Hungary’s consul general in New York, told a news conference.

Szilveszter Ókovács, general director of the Hungarian State Opera, said that the government agreed to some $3 million (RM11.8 million) to support the performances in New York.

The Hungarian State Opera, whose landmark building in Budapest is under renovation, has been touring widely internationally including a 19-city tour of Japan last year.

The state opera is among the world’s most productive, with Ókovács putting its number of performances at more than 400 per year.

Orbán has cast himself as a defender of Christianity and has claimed that an influx of Muslims and Africans poses a threat to European culture.

The Hungarian State Opera was lambasted earlier this year by staging “Porgy and Bess,” with a mostly-white cast. Composer George Gershwin intended to be played by an African-American cast.

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