Today Kaunas Music Theatre is the second largest theatre in Lithuania
Published:
17 November 2002 y., Sunday
More than 80 performances were staged up at Kaunas State Musical Theatre
to the Second World War.
When the Opera Theatre moved to Vilnius, the capital, in 1948, the Theatre Palace housed the Kaunas State Music Theatre, which had started operating on 27th November 1940. The latter company has been the only one in Lithuania producing operetta and showing the best works of the genre to its audience since the Soviet period. But when the Opera Theatre moved to Vilnius and left Kaunas, which used to be the cradle of professional Lithuanian opera without any opera, Kaunas Music Theatre sought to enrich its repertoire with this most important genre of the music stage.Its repertoire includes all musical stage genres
Local people and visitors can see the most popular operas by Mozart, Gounod, Verdi, Puccini, Donizetti and von Flotow, operettas by J. Strauss, Lehar, Offenbach, Kalman, Abraham, and musicals by Loewe, Leigh and Bernstein. The theatre also arranges concerts.
Šaltinis:
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The Year 2000 update of the Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary is online today at the publishing company_s Website, a few months before word-searchers will be able to buy the print edition in stores.
more »
McCleod has organized a skydive along the international dateline, east of New Zealand and the Chatham Islands.
more »
NEW ELECTRONIC ENCYCLOPEDIA PUBLISHED IN RUSSIA.
more »
Pentagon took an hour out on Tuesday to recall one of its largely forgotten low-tech triumphs -- code talking.
more »
Encyclopaedia Britannica Goes Online For Free.
more »
Ethnographical Museum in Prague_s Kinsky Gardens celebrates European Heritage Day.
more »
eBay Goes Regional, Aims for Local Classifieds.
more »
PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS EXPERT PUBLISHES BOOK ON RUSSIAN TAX CODE.
more »
MTV Launches Its First Chinese-Language Site.
more »
WILL OPERA SINK OR SING?
more »