With Janáček's The Cunning Vixen, the Stuttgart State Opera presents an opera full of contrasts - between nature and civilization, the animal world and humanity, longing and survival.

"I no longer have time to think about myself. In no year have I worked so much mentally as this one," wrote the composer Leoš Janáček while he was working on The Cunning Vixen. The composition absorbed him completely, so meticulously did he try to translate the sounds of nature and the animal world into music. Janáček got the inspiration for the story about a young vixen who comes into contact with the human world from a newspaper comic. Nevertheless, The Cunning Vixen is not a playful fairytale opera, on the contrary. Two worlds collide, that of the animals and that of the humans. The community around the forester and his family as well as the other villagers is cruel and at the same time full of longing for a better life - but who has the answer to the question of what a real life is like? When the forester and the vixen meet in the forest, nature and apparent civilization come face to face.

Thus, The Cunning Vixen explicitly shows no cute anecdotes about animals, but a pragmatic, uncompromising world in which it is all about survival. And yet there is room for the love between vixen and fox. Janáček succeeds in fathoming the animal in man and the human in the animal, thus holding up a mirror to us. Almost 101 years to the day after the premiere in Brno in 1924, Stephan Kimmig now turns his attention to an opera full of contrasts and the longing to find a place where one can live free from rules, following The Prince of Homburg and Das Rheingold. But does this place even exist?
Premiere November 9
Further performances: November 14, 21, 23 and 26, December 10, 2025

www.staatsoper-stuttgart.de