Lucia Lacarra Ballet, Lost Letters

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GUEST PERFORMANCE - LUCIA LACARRA BALLET: LOST LETTERS

Choreography Matthew Golding. Music Sergej Rachmaninow, Max Richter.

 

As part of the Ballet Festival Week 2025, the Lucia Lacarra Ballet ensemble will present the production Lost Letters. The ballet evening revolves around the theme of lost connections and invites the audience to reflect on the power of communication. The musical programme includes recordings of orchestral music by Max Richter and Sergei Rachmaninov. Lucia Lacarra is a former first soloist of the Bayerisches Staatsballett and returns with this guest performance to her former home stage. Together with Matthew Golding, she created the two Max Award-winning performances Fordlandia (2020) and In The Still Of The Night (2021) before her newest creation: Lost Letters.

Lost Letters tells a moving and haunting story from the time of the First World War. Handwritten letters sent from the front and the replies from those at home are still to this day an essential link between soldiers and their social environment in wartime situations. – Lost Letters is based on a real letter that the gunner Frank Bracey wrote to his wife “Win” during the First World War. The ballet production poses the question of what would have happened to this woman if she had never received a letter from her beloved husband.

Program and cast

Production: Lucia Lacarra, Matthew Golding

Choreography: Matthew Golding

Music: Sergej W. RachmaninowMax Richter

Solistin: Lucia Lacarra

Solist: Matthew Golding

Ensemble: Lucia Lacarra Ballet

National Theatre Munich

The National Theatre Munich (German: Nationaltheater München) is an opera house in Max-Joseph-Platz in Munich, Germany. It is the home of the Bavarian State Opera and the Bayerisches Staatsballett(Bavarian State Ballet).

 

The Bavarian State Opera also performs in the Prinzregententheater, which opened in 1901 and, like the Bayreuth Festspielhaus, is built to Richard Wagner's specifications, and in the Cuvilliés Theatre at the Residenz, constructed in 1751–1753 and described by Thierry Beauvert as "a Rococo gem".

 

The Nationaltheater is very easy to get to both by car and by MVV public transportation. 



By MVV public transportation

S-Bahn: S 1 - 8 Marienplatz
U-Bahn: U 3, 6 Marienplatz, U 3 - 6 Odeonsplatz
Bus: 52, 131 Marienplatz, 100 Odeonsplatz
Straßenbahn: 19 Nationaltheater

On the day of the performance, holders of regular tickets are entitled to use public transport provided by the Münchner Verkehrsverbund (MVV). This service starts at 3 pm respectively three hours before the performance commences and ends with the closing hour of the MVV.



By Car

Take the Altstadt-Ring to Maximilianstraße.

Parking garage Max-Joseph-Platz: open Monday to Sunday from 6:00 A.M. to 2:00 A.M.

You can take advantage of the special theatre parking fee of Euro 10,- from 6:00 P.M. to 8:00 A.M. by presenting your admission tickets.

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