
The old Slovak National Theatre
building

Front of the new Slovak National
Theatre building
The
Slovak National Theatre ( ) denotes:
- the
oldest Slovak
professional
theatre consisting of 3 ensembles (opera,
ballet and drama),
- a
Neo-Renaissance theatre building in
the Old Town of Bratislava
, Slovakia, which formerly housed two of the
theatre's ensembles (opera and ballet, drama was based elsewhere),
and
- the theatre's large modern theatre building in Bratislava near
the Danube, which opened on 14 April 2007.
Professional theatre
The Slovak National Theatre is the second oldest Slovak
professional theatre. It has 3 ensembles (drama, opera and ballet).
It was
founded in 1920 after the creation of Czechoslovakia
as a cooperative and became a state-run company in
1945. Between 1920 and 1945, there was also a musical
ensemble. The Slovak National Theatre has represented
Slovak culture on its numerous tours abroad.
It was created and, in the 1920s, also run by
Czech artists (e.g.
Oskar Nedbal, director during 1923-1930). The
first performance was the Czech opera
Hubička by
Bedřich Smetana on
March 1,
1920. The ensembles
were Slovakized only gradually. In 1932, the drama ensemble split
into the
SNT Slovak Drama Company led by Janko Borodáč,
and into the
SNT Czech Drama Company, led by V. Šulc. The
Czech Drama Company ceased to operate when it was forced to leave
Slovakia in 1938. Since then, the drama ensemble has performed in
Slovak only, but in the opera
ensemble there were Czech artists even after 1945. In recent years,
operas have been presented in their original languages.
Initially, all 3 ensembles were active at the old Slovak National
Theatre building. From 1955 to early 2007, the drama company
performed at the
P. O. Hviezdoslav
Theatre and from 1962 to (?)2006 also at a chamber theatre
called
Malá scéna SND (SNT Small Stage). Since 2007, the
ensembles perform only at the old Slovak National Theatre building
and the new Slovak National Theatre building opened in April,
2007.
The drama company was shaped by the directors Janko Borodáč, F.
Hoffman, J. Jamnický, J.Budský, T. Rakovský, K. I. Zachary, P.
Haspra, M. Pietor and the current one –
Dušan Jamrich.
The opera ensemble was led by conductors such as
Oskar Nedbal, K. Nedbal, J. Vincourek and T.
Frešo, and directors including V. Šulc and M. Wasserbauer. The
opera became known abroad under the leadership of Czech conductor
Oskar Nedbal, who also introduced the first Slovak operas of Jozef
Levoslav Bella and V. Figuš Bystrý, and under K. Nedbal, who
improved the dramma programme. A great boom occurred after WWII.
The SNT witnessed the rise of modern Slovak opera by
Eugen Suchoň,
Ján Cikker,
Alexander Moyzes,
Tibor Andrašovan, T. Frešo, and many
others. Many singers from the SNT are famous abroad, e.g.
Edita Grúberová,
Lucia
Popp,
Peter Dvorský, R.
Petrák, S. Kopčák, M. Hajóssyová, E. Jenisová, J. Galla,
Jozef Kundlák, and many others.
The ballet ensemble has grown from a small group in 1920 to a huge
ensemble today.
The old building
This theatre's names were earlier:
City Theatre (
- )
The Neo-Renaissance Slovak National Theatre, standing at the end of
the long
today's Hviezdoslav
Square, was built in 1885–1886 during the time of
Austria-Hungary, based on a design
by the Viennese
architects Nándor Fellner and Henrik Helmer, who
designed theatre buildings in 10 European countries. It was
opened as the
City Theatre on
September 22 1886 with the
opera
Bánk bán of
Ferenc Erkel, which is one of the most
important Hungarian opera. As a sign of this event's importance
Kálmán Tisza Hungarian Prime
Minister and his all government,
Mór
Jókai took part on this ceremony. Gala performance was
conducted by
Ferenc Erkel himself. The
original building was designed for 1000 spectators and was
illuminated using 800
gas lamps, while the
auditorium had a lustre with 64 lights.
The interior was
decorated, with frescos of by Pressburg native painter Kornél
Spányik and by paintings by Munich
artist Leo
Lüttgendorf-Leinburg, among others. The City Theatre was
hired by German and Hungarian professional theatre companies, but
beginning in 1919 (at the creation of Czechoslovakia
), it was used by Czech and later also Slovak
ensembles (see above). In 1920 it became the
Slovak
National Theatre.
The new building was constructed on the site of a previous
Classic style theatre built in 1776, the first
permanent theatre building in Slovakia, which was demolished in
1884.
Bratislava native sculptor
Victor
Tilgner crafted the famous
Ganymede's Fountain in 1888, now
located immediately in front of the theatre.
The building has housed Slovak National Theatre ensembles since
1920, but today only the opera and ballet ensembles are resident.
It was restored between 1969 and 1972, when a new modern technical
building was added behind the old building. It features a unique
lustre (a special ball) with 2532 bulbs enabling the creation of
millions of combinations of light pictures based on a selected
programme.
The new building

Front of the new Slovak National
Theatre building
The design of the new building was begun in the early 1980s, and
construction started in 1986. Due to a lack of funds, the building
was under construction (with long interruptions) for 21 years,
which increased the planned costs from 874 million to almost 5
billion
Slovak crowns (although this
figure is exaggerated by the relatively high inflation of the
1990s).
The
building was finally opened on April 14,
2007 and it houses all three ensembles of the
Slovak National Theatre, although the ensembles continue to use the
old building in the Old Town
in parallel. The building is designed to
hold 1700 spectators at a time in its three sections.
References
- Otvorili novú budovu SND - Pravda.sk
External links