Imperial Valley Press

The show goes on at Madrid´s opera house despite pandemic

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MADRID (AP) — No one performing onstage in Spain’s Teatro Real opera house is masked, and that alone looks odd these days amid a pandemic.

And that’s even before the second act scene in Antonín Dvořák’s “Rusalka” — about a water nymph who falls in love with a mortal — in which cast members kiss and grope in a feigned, non-socially distanced orgy.

While many of the world’s major venues are shut down, including the Metropolit­an Opera in New York, Covent Garden in London and La Scala in Milan, watching a performanc­e at the Teatro Real in Madrid can almost make you forget about the coronaviru­s.

Located in one of the cities hit hardest by the virus, the Teatro Real is making a herculean effort for the show to go on, investing in safety measures that have allowed it to stage performanc­es — albeit with smaller audiences — since July.

In March and April, soaring infections had Madrid’s hospitals filled with COVID-19 patients. That eased in the summer, but another wave saw cases surge in the city and surroundin­g region. Authoritie­s now seem to have gained the upper hand, with hospital occupancy rates falling steadily. Overall, Spain’s Health Ministry has recorded more than 1.54 million cases and has attributed almost

42,300 deaths to the virus.

“The theater and culture must bet on staying open at all times,” Teatro Real managing director Ignacio García-Belenguer told The Associated Press. “It’s not about going against the flow or trying to be exceptiona­l. ... It’s what we believe we have to do.”

With a yearly budget of 60 million euros ($71 million), Spain’s prime cultural center acknowledg­es it has the capacity and ability to carry on.

García-Belenguer says its financing from public subsidies, sponsors and ticketing puts Teatro Real in a unique spot to break even, unlike other opera houses that are normally mostly public or private. Extra state funding because of the pandemic will help too, he adds.

But it also has the good fortune of being in a region that has decided to take a different tack with the virus and apply fewer and more-localized restrictio­ns, allowing bars, restaurant­s and cultural venues to stay open with reduced attendance.

It was closed during Spain’s three months of national confinemen­t between March and May, but preparatio­ns for reopening went on. It rolled out an array of measures that allowed it to stage a work with an audience, Giuseppe Verdi’s “La Traviata,” in July.

 ?? AP Photo/Bernat
Armangue ?? Andres Maspero directs the chorus backstage during a performanc­e of “Rusalka” at the Teatro Real in Madrid, Spain, on Thursday.
AP Photo/Bernat Armangue Andres Maspero directs the chorus backstage during a performanc­e of “Rusalka” at the Teatro Real in Madrid, Spain, on Thursday.

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