Schedule - Deutsche Oper Berlin

Dramma giocoso in two acts
Libretto by Angelo Anelli
First performed on 22 May 1813 at the Teatro San Benedetto in Venice
Premiere at the Deutsche Oper Berlin on 8 March 2026
3 hrs / one interval
In Italian with German and English surtitles
45 minutes before beginning: Introduction (in German language)
recommended from 13 years- Conductor
- Director
- Stage design
- Set design collaboration
- Costume design
- Light design
- Choreography
- Chorus master
- Dramaturgy
- Mustafà
- Elvira
- Zulma
- Haly
- Lindoro
- Isabella
- Taddeo
- Chorus
- Orchestra
- Premiere08202617:00MarSun
- 11202619:30MarWed
- 14202619:30MarSat
- 20202619:30MarFri
- 28202619:30MarSat
- Last performance in this season02202619:30AprThu
- Conductor
- Director
- Stage design
- Set design collaboration
- Costume design
- Light design
- Choreography
- Chorus master
- Dramaturgy
- Mustafà
- Elvira
- Zulma
- Haly
- Lindoro
- Isabella
- Taddeo
- Chorus
- Orchestra
Following on from Puccini’s LA RONDINE and Johann Strauss’s DIE FLEDERMAUS, Rolando Villazón returns to the Deutsche Oper Berlin to tackle one of the great comedies of the bel canto genre and demonstrate that he can do humour. L’ITALIANA IN ALGERI remains one of the most popular works by Gioacchino Rossini, who is said to have dashed the piece off in less than a month and was a tender 21 years of age when the opera premiered at Venice’s Teatro San Benedetto in 1813. It’s a testament to Rossini’s boldness that he chose material that had been set to music only a few years before by his more experienced colleague Luigi Mosca. His audacity paid off, with the subsequent triumph bringing him immediate fame across Italy and widespread popularity soon afterwards throughout Europe.
Mustafa, the Bey of Algiers, has grown weary of his wife Elvira. This wry tale of his amorous extramarital aspirations and the schemes of the reunited lovers Lindora and Isabella to thwart him, coupled with the exotic setting, resonated strongly with audiences of the day. The rising fascination since the 18th century for non-European cultures was finding artistic expression and making inroads into the world of opera. That said, it is undoubtedly thanks to Rossini’s musical sophistication that L’ITALIANA continues to excite operagoers today and the maestro remains the undisputed king of opera buffa. Many of the solo numbers are straight out of the bel canto playbook – renditions such as Lindoro’s sweeping cavatina “Languir per una bella”, which pushes even the best tenor to the limit, and Isabella’s famous introductory aria “Cruda sorte” with its rich plunges and rousing coloraturas. So it was that Rossini found a style with L’ITALIANA which earns him the reverence of fans to this day.
Spotlight
Aigul Akhmetshina was only 21 when she gave her breakout international performance as Carmen at the Royal Opera in London, a role that she has gone on to sing at the Salzburg Festival and venues such as the Arena di Verona, the Wiener Staatsoper, the New York Metropolitan Opera and the Deutsche Oper Berlin. The mezzo-soprano also thrilled Bismarckstrasse audiences with her Rosina – another signature role of Akhmetshina’s - in Katharina Thalbach’s much-loved production of Rossini’s BARBIERE DI SIVIGLIA. Her many accolades include the 2023 International Opera Award as Female Singer of the Year and the 2025 OPER! AWARD for her acclaimed first solo album. She now makes her debut as Isabella in a brand-new production of L’ITALIANA IN ALGERI.