Elena Maximova

История

ELENA MAXIMOVA completed her vocal training at the Tschaikowski-Conservatoire in Moscow and became engaged as a soloist to the Moscow Stanislavski Music Theater. There, Elena Maximova was heard, among others, in the following roles: Polina (Pique Dame), Siébel (Faust), Orlofsky (Die Fledermaus), Su­zuki (Madama Butterfly), Rosina (Il barbiere di Siviglia), Olga (Eugen Onegin), Carmen and Charlotte (Werther). Elena Maximova gave her debut in 2005 on the stage of the Bavarian State Opera in a new production of Rigoletto (Maddalena). She also sang there Suzuki, Carmen, Olga and Frederica (Luisa Miller). Furthermore, she has sung at the Opéra in Lyon (Eugen Onegin, Pique Dame) and performed as Carmen at houses like the Berlin State Opera, the Teatro Comunale in Florence, the Palau de les Arts in Valencia and in the Scala. Elena Maximova is also active worldwide as a concert singer. Recently she sang Carmen, Preziosilla, Charlotte, Despina, Rosina, Nicklausse and Isabella in Moscow, Giulietta at the Met, Carmen and Eboli in Helsinki, Charlotte in Tokyo, Olga at the ROH Covent Garten and at the Met. At the Wiener Staatsoper she gave her debut in 2012 as Carmen and continued to sing Maddalena, Marfa, Eboli, Rosina and Polina.     http://www.wiener-staatsoper.at/Content.Node/home/kuenstler/saengerinnen/Elena-Maximova.en.php

Фильмы

Rigoletto
Maddalena
An outsider—a hunchbacked jester—struggles to balance the dueling elements of beauty and evil that exist in his life.
Carmen
Carmen
Live performance from Taormina Opera Festival, July 15, 2015.
Pique Dame
Polina / Daphnis
"This is Vienna State Opera live at home". January 2015.
Rigoletto (Verdi) - Wiener Staatsoper
Maddalena
Eugene Onegin
Olga
Tchaikovsky's much-loved opera Eugene Onegin, a story of love, rejection and tragedy based on Pushkin's verse drama of the same name.
Tchaikovsky: Eugene Onegin
Olga
Described by Tchaikovsky as ‘lyric scenes’, Eugene Onegin receives a spectacular reinterpretation from the Norwegian director Stefan Herheim. His productions create controversy and excitement around Europe, and here he takes Pushkin’s story of illusion, disaffection and frustrated love, and places the protagonists – world-weary Onegin and naïve, passionate Tatyana – in a triple temporal perspective, referencing the theatrical present, the period of the work’s composition, and the pageant of Russia’s history. Mariss Jansons, renowned for his mastery of Tchaikovsky’s symphonies, conducts this performance from Amsterdam’s Muziektheater.