Sun, 21.6.
8 – 10:05 pm
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Sun, 21.6.
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Photo: Julian Baumann

MK:

Eurydike und Orpheus

Musical theatre about the hope for immortal love
Based on a libretto by Robert Bolesto with music by J Jan Duszyński

 Schauspielhaus
 Premiere: 26.4.2026
 approx. 2 hours 5 minutes
 With strobe effect
 Thu-Sat: 15-45 €, Sun-Wed: 10-40 €, under 30 years each seat category: 10 €
 Schauspielhaus
 Premiere: 26.4.2026
 approx. 2 hours 5 minutes
 With strobe effect
 Thu-Sat: 15-45 €, Sun-Wed: 10-40 €, under 30 years each seat category: 10 €

One should at least be allowed to hope for immortality

Orpheus, probably the most well-known singer from ancient Greece, could control animals and the elemental forces of nature with his art of singing. But he was unable to avert the inevitable fate of humans: the death of his beloved. In the soon-to-be present, the situation has not fundamentally changed: people know, down to the second, when they will die, and their death date is updated everyday based on medical data. And yet, the immortality of the beloved remains humanity’s unfulfilled dream.

Orpheus is the female president of a foundation dedicated to freezing terminally ill and dead people so they can be thawed out again once the problem of death has been resolved. Her partner, Eurydice, learns during a routine morning checkup that she only has 60 minutes left to live. She wants to spend her remaining time at Orpheus’s side. She refuses to be frozen.

With her elemental musical theatre, a modern continuation of the musical traditions of Monteverdi and Gluck, Polish director Anna Smolar explores the reasons for human hope. Does salvation lie in beauty and emotional connection? Or in the hope of a technology that secures immortality? And what does an immortal soul do with a mortal body? The two award-winning and highly musical young actresses Annika Neugart and Elisabeth Nittka sing Eurydice and Orpheus – and embody a pair of lovers from the future.

“Imagine, when a human dies,
the soul misses the body, actually grieves
the loss of its hands and all
they could hold.”

– Andrea Gibson, “Tincture”, 2018

  • Surtitles Yvonne Griesel (SPRACHSPIEL)
  • Translation surtitles Anna Galt
  • Assistant director Hannah Waldow
  • Stage design assistant Hannah Grimme
  • Costume assistant Sophie Höper
  • Direction and music intern Catalina Bartdorff
  • Stage design intern Johannes Buhrow
  • Stage management Barbara Stettner
  • Voice coaching Axel Humbert, Eleni-Lydia Stamellou, Andreas Sippel 
  • Artistic Production Management Josh Menges
  • Technical production management Adrian Bette
  • Construction Kilian Klingler
  • Stage master Weronika Patan
  • Stage Machinery Michael Preusser, Stefan Wickop
  • Signal box Diana Dorn
  • Lighting Tankred Friedrich, Parthasarathi Sampath Kumar, Yongwoo Kwon
  • Sound Jonathan Wimer, Katharina Widmaier-Zorn
  • Video technology Kai Metzner, Daniel Steigthaler
  • Mask Marisa Schleimer, Elvira Liesenfeld
  • Costumes Paulina Engelhardtova, Iroha Kaneshiro, Maria Popp, Teresa Winkelmann
  • Props deparment Dagmar Nachtmann, Heidemarie Sänger, Wolfgang Staudinger
  • Carpentry Sebastian Nebe, Stefan Klodt-Bussmann, Michael Buhl, Wolfgang Mechmann, Franz Wallner, Josef Piechatzek, Josef Friesl, Hannes Zippert, Tobias Holland
  • Metalworker Fritz Würzhuber, Jürgen Goudenhooft
  • Decorator Tobias Herzog, Anja Gebauer, Tim Hagemeyer, Maria Hörger
  • Scenic Painter Evi Eschenbach, Jeanette Raue, Jasmin Budde, Natalie Knäble, Ingrid Weindl
  • Theatre sculpture Maximilian Biek
  • Lighting extra Nepomuk Siller
  • With special thanks to Paweł Sakowicz für die Mickey-Mouse-Performance im Video
c
Julian Baumann

Find out more about the production, cryonics, transhumanism and the dream of immortality, and get a first taste of Jan Duszyński’s music!

This is how part of the set design for “Eurydice and Orpheus” came to be.

Press reviews

“It is astonishing and captivating how smoothly the two young actresses guide their voices through the atonal scales of Duszyński’s score, with crystal-clear articulation.”

nachtkritik.de • 27.4.26

‘Neugart sings as if she were speaking, in a rich variety of tones and inflections. (…) It’s as if Kate Bush had recorded music with The XX whilst listening to Neue Musik and Radiohead at the same time. So, what do you think? Brilliant!’

Süddeutsche Zeitung • 28.4.26

“Duszynski’s highly cinematic-sounding music begins as little more than a muffled hum or rumble, before the dissonances become increasingly expansive, with wind instruments, synthesizers and percussion joining in by the finale”

Münchner Merkur • 28.4.26

Dates & Tickets

  • Wed 20.5. 8 – 10:05 pm

    Introduction from 7:30 pm

    Second show subscription
  • Wed 3.6. 8 – 10:05 pm
  • Mon 15.6. 8 – 10:05 pm

    Introduction from 7:30 pm

    Take part For TUM students 5€ Monday subscription
  • Sun 21.6. 8 – 10:05 pm

    Introduction from 7:30 pm

  • Tue 30.6. 8 – 10:05 pm

    Introduction from 7:30 pm

    Tuesday subscription
  • Wed 15.7. 8 – 10:05 pm
    Wednesday subscription
    On sale from 1.6.
  • Thu 23.7. 8 – 10:05 pm
    Thursday subscription
    On sale from 1.6.
Eurydike und Orpheus
  • Schauspielhaus
  • Premiere: 26.4.2026
  • approx. 2 hours 5 minutes
  • With strobe effect
  • Thu-Sat: 15-45 €, Sun-Wed: 10-40 €, under 30 years each seat category: 10 €