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Cheers at the Premiere of the Dresden Neighborhood Opera for Prohlis

Cheers at the Premiere of the Dresden Neighborhood Opera for Prohlis
The Dresden-Prohlis prefab housing district has already served as the setting for a spectacular concert. Now an opera with cosmic dimensions is set to take place there. / Photo: Robert Michael/dpa
From: DieSachsen News
Halley's Comet last "visited" Earth in 1986. After its flyby, it is expected to return in 2061. But what does all this have to do with the Prohlis neighborhood in Dresden?

A musical highlight for Dresden-Prohlis: The premiere of the neighborhood opera “Plattenspieler:innen” sparked jubilation in the prefab housing district in the southeastern part of the state capital. At the end, the approximately 300 performers—mostly children and teenagers—received loud applause and standing ovations. The gymnasium of the 128th High School had been converted into a stage for the production. Despite tropical temperatures both outside and inside, the musicians, dancers, and actors kept their cool and put on a great show for the audience, which broke into spontaneous applause time and again.

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Musical Social Project

Behind the neighborhood opera is the musical social project “Musaik.” It was founded in 2017 in Prohlis—a neighborhood considered a social hotspot due to its prefabricated apartment buildings. Children and teenagers can receive free music lessons through “Musaik” and are also provided with an instrument. Currently, the orchestra brings together members from over 15 different countries. The organizers are convinced that it “helps break down prejudices against strangers and outsiders and fosters a climate of respectful coexistence and mindfulness.”

A famous Prohlis native plays an important role in the opera

This was palpable in every scene of the neighborhood opera. It was no coincidence that the subject matter had a cosmic dimension. For the farmer and amateur astronomer Johann Georg Palitzsch, who was born in 1723 in what was then the village of Prohlis, later gained fame when, on December 25, 1758, he was the first to observe the return of Halley’s Comet—whose return had been predicted by Edmond Halley (1656–1742) had predicted. The comet last appeared near Earth in 1986; it is expected to return in 2061—the same year the Prohlis opera begins.

“Intergalactic News” comes from the Prohlis studio

Halley’s Comet is approaching Earth once again and becomes the dominant topic of “Intergalactic News,” which, of course, is based in Prohlis. The comet loses a piece of itself—a singing stone (soprano Menna Cazel). The stone lands in Prohlis and then witnesses, in fast-forward, how a prehistoric settlement transforms into a vibrant city. The opera combines music from various centuries. Right at the beginning, the opening of Richard Strauss’s “Thus Spoke Zarathustra” can be heard. The “Musaik” orchestra is performing at full strength with about 120 members.

150 elementary and high school students are participating as young performers

Drama, dance, music, and choral singing come together. Also, 150 children from a Prohlis elementary school and a high school are taking part, performing in imaginative costumes as Prohlis prehistoric people, farmers, or simply potatoes. Palitzsch asks Halley, in a thick Saxon dialect, if he likes to eat potato salad. The corresponding recipe is displayed on the screen. There’s plenty of humor, but also serious moments—such as when a rap song recalls Prohlis’s image after the fall of the Berlin Wall—with a line like “nobody wants to stay here, everyone wants to leave.”

But just like in many an opera, “Plattenspieler:innen” also has a happy ending. Prohlis, which became increasingly international during the refugee crisis of 2015 and 2016, presents itself with confidence. “If everyone sticks together, no one is alone,” is the message at the end, and: “Prohlis is diverse.”

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