A night at the opera with Stalin
In 1936, Dmitri Shostakovich was a composer with a glittering career ahead of him. His first symphony had been a roaring success, and now his opera, Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk, was enjoying a similarly rapturous reception.
Until the evening when Stalin came to see the show. Tom Service meets Dmitry Sollertinsky, whose father was a friend of Shostakovich, to find out how the evening changed the lives of all Russian artists – and how ideology may have had little to do with it.
This is the third of Ten Icons of a Russian Century, part of the Radio 3 season Breaking Free: A Century of Russian Culture. (Photo: Corbis)
Duration:
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Unknown | Dmitry Shostakovich |
Featured in...
Ten Icons of a Russian Century—In Tune
Tom Service travels through the arts to find the essence of a century of Russian history.
More clips from In Tune
-
Ella Jarman-Pinto’s Plango: A Cure Lament
Duration: 05:16
-
Why are sea shanties trending on social media?
Duration: 07:06
-
Saint-Saëns, arr. Richard Birchall: The Swan
Duration: 02:54