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            Welcome to Been there. Your tips on the places you know - that you love,
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                <title>Cheap but good opera in Prague</title>
                
                <link>http://www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/tips/10944</link>
                
                <description><![CDATA[Being an opera lover who lives outside the home counties means expensive trips to London or to west country cities to catch the Welsh National Opera.<br><br>However, quality opera performances and productions do not appear to come<br>much more low-cost than Prague. <br><br>There, the National Theatre (Narodni<br>Divadlo), together with its little sister, the Estates Theatre,  and the State Opera (Statni Opera) provide excellent performances.<br><br>The NT has a stunning little auditorium in a large building so there is plenty of room for bars and restaurants. With its superb orchestra it<br>provides a substantial diet of the classics whilst putting on more Czech opera than the opposition. <br><br>The musical and production standards are very<br>high. Really worth catching are Jenufa (I have seen Anja Silja, Rosalind Plowright and Eva Randova all give wonderful and different versions of the<br>Kostelnicka), Dvorak's The Devil and Kate (why isn't this hilarious twist on the Orpheus and Euridice story more popular abroad? As fine as Hansel and<br>Gretel, it is perfomed most Sunday mornings to hoards of delighted children) and an operatic version of Verdi's Requiem. The musical director, Oliver<br>Dohnanyi, conducts regularly. The intendant is the superb designer Daniel Dvorak who often works in tandem with the theatre director, Jiri Neksavil. Jenufa is the best I have seen.<br><br>The State Opera, with a larger auditorium, squeezed into a smaller building is more variable and more based on the classics. Former conductors include Mahler, Klemperer and Szell. Both houses have excellent productions of<br>Dvorak's Rusulka. The best principals seem to appear in both houses and occasionaly one is spoilt for choice with Aida or Carmen on at both houses<br>on the same night.<br><br>Hardly surprisingly, as the birthplace of Don Giovanni and Il Clemenza diTito, the gorgeous little Estates Theatre mostly does Mozart and Donizetti. In all<br>the theatres opera prices are extraordinarily low by our standards;  £20 - £25 for the best seats. The subtitles are in English, as are large sections<br>of the programme notes which come in paperback books at the NT for about £1<br>or glossy magazines elsewhere. Tickets are usually available at the box offices if you go between September and March or are easy to book online<br><a target="_new" href="http://www.narodni-divadlo.cz">www.narodni-divadlo.cz</a> will show full repertoire and let you book. They also run the Estates Theatre). For the State Opera, details can be found on<br>operacz/en/index/opera and booking made through Bohemia Ticket: <a target="_new" href="http://www.bohemiaticket.cz">www.BohemiaTicket.cz</a><br><br>Forget hotels: go for apartments. Mary's Travel in Prague can put you near the NT for about £20 a night. Restaurants cater for every taste and nationality. Czech food itself is filling with the ubiquitous dumpling and meats acting as a ballast.<br><br>The city itself? Need one say more than it holds the most varied and<br>stunning architecture? Prague is an opera lover's paradise.]]></description>
                
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