This study deals with some of the Brno staging of Claudio Monteverdi’s (1567 – 1643) musical scenic works. It devotes special attention to the legacy of the directorial school of the Czechoslovak opera director Miloš Wasserbauer (1907 – 1970), who was active mainly in Brno and, in the 1950s, also in Bratislava. The study is based on the research that focused on the staging of Monteverdi’s works in the Czech lands from their first instances up to the present (2022). Since some of Monteverdi’s scenic works have recently been restaged, the author of this study asks what topics are presented to the audience through these works and what challenges these works pose, especially with respect to the directorial-scenographic concept. The first part of the study looks back at the twentieth century, when Czechoslovak theatre makers first encountered Monteverdi; the second part deals with the present. Based on archival material on the staging and interviews with witnesses and contemporary producers, the author introduces the possibilities of staging Monteverdi’s works depending on the changes in the awareness of, and ideas about, Baroque opera theatre and the period’s staging practices. She asks what topics or what motives are important for the producers when presenting these roughly four-hundred-year-old works to the contemporary audience.
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