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On today’s date in 2000, the Royal Danish Opera in Copenhagen gave the premiere of The Handmaid’s Tale, a new opera based on the dystopian novel by Canadian writer Margaret Atwood.
The book and opera tell of a nightmarish future: following a nuclear disaster in the United States, infertility rates have soared, and a religious sect has staged a military coup, enslaving the few fertile women who remain as breeders, or “handmaids,” for the military and religious commanders of their sect. Said Atwood, “There is nothing new about the society I depicted in The Handmaid's Tale except the time and place. All of the things I have written about have been done before — more than once, in fact.”
Despite its grim subject matter, Danish composer Poul Ruders said he saw “huge operatic potential” when he first read the book back in 1992.
The original production in Copenhagen was sung in Danish, but Ruders says he conceived the work in English. The opera was staged in that language first in London at the English National Opera, and subsequently, at the opera’s American premiere, in St. Paul by The Minnesota Opera, to great critical acclaim.
Poul Ruders (b. 1949): The Handmaid’s Tale; Royal Danish Orchestra; Michael Schonwandt, conductor; DaCapo 9.224165-66
By American Public Media4.7
176176 ratings
On today’s date in 2000, the Royal Danish Opera in Copenhagen gave the premiere of The Handmaid’s Tale, a new opera based on the dystopian novel by Canadian writer Margaret Atwood.
The book and opera tell of a nightmarish future: following a nuclear disaster in the United States, infertility rates have soared, and a religious sect has staged a military coup, enslaving the few fertile women who remain as breeders, or “handmaids,” for the military and religious commanders of their sect. Said Atwood, “There is nothing new about the society I depicted in The Handmaid's Tale except the time and place. All of the things I have written about have been done before — more than once, in fact.”
Despite its grim subject matter, Danish composer Poul Ruders said he saw “huge operatic potential” when he first read the book back in 1992.
The original production in Copenhagen was sung in Danish, but Ruders says he conceived the work in English. The opera was staged in that language first in London at the English National Opera, and subsequently, at the opera’s American premiere, in St. Paul by The Minnesota Opera, to great critical acclaim.
Poul Ruders (b. 1949): The Handmaid’s Tale; Royal Danish Orchestra; Michael Schonwandt, conductor; DaCapo 9.224165-66

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