El Cimarrón
July 2026 | ||||||
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El Cimarrón
Hans Werner Henze (1926–2012) — Music Theater
New Production Of The Festival D’aix-en-provence
With The Support Of Karolina Blaberg Stiftung, Ammodo Art, Jean-françois Dubos, Cercle Incises, Fonds Axa Pour Le Progrès Humain
The maroon: a term which was originally used to describe domestic animals that had returned to the wild after escaping, and which later came to designate runaway slaves who took refuge in inaccessible places. In 1968 in Cuba, Hans Werner Henze happened upon the rare and vivid testimony of a former cimarrón, by then a centenarian, who had subsequently become a participant in the war of independence and then the revolution. Working in collaboration with Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Henze turned that testimony into a veritable musical phenomenon: an experimental recital of unparalleled dramatic intensity, poetic suggestiveness, vocal rigor, and instrumental inventiveness, which awakens in the very soul of the spectators a day-to-day existence of violence and suffering followed by an uncertain escape into a forest teeming with fantastical beings, and finally the intuition of a liberating revolutionary brotherhood, like the sudden appearance of the sky. Relying on a very physical stage direction, Elayce Ismail gives this moving story its universal mythical value and brings out its exceptional cathartic potential.
Program and cast
Recital For Four Players
Libretto By Hans Magnus Enzensberger Based On The Life Of Esteban Montejo (C. 1868–1973) And Miguel Barnet’s Biografía De Un Cimarrón (1966)
First Performed On 22 July 1970 At The Aldeburgh Festival
English Version
Stage direction: Elayce Ismail*
Baritone: Eric Greene
Guitar, flutes and percussion: Cast to be announced
*Former artist of the Académie
Jeu de Paume Theatre
This is where Louis XIV used to play ‘la paume’ – an early type of indoor tennis in 1660. Converted into a theatre during the following century, it is one of the last surviving examples – together with the Théâtre de la Reine in Versailles – of an 18th century Italian-style auditorium. Its plush red velvet décor makes it an ideal venue for intimate operas, contemporary creations, recitals or chamber music concerts.

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Seating plan