
2003
Mamay draws on traditional Ukranian and Tatar folktales for its Romeo and Juliet-like love story and parable about chivalry and the struggle for freedom. Hundreds of years ago, in the wild steppes of Crimea that form an uneasy border between East and West, Europe and Asia, nomad and farmer, the proud Cossack Mamay falls in love with the Tatar beauty Omai. The title, like the storyline, holds a variety of different meanings taken from different cultures. In Turkic languages, it means "no one," but it was also the name of a famous Mongol conqueror, the great grandson of Ghengis-Khan. In Persian legends, mamay literally means "the spirit of the steppes. "

Andrii Bilous
Mamay

Viktoria Spesivtseva
Tatar woman

Nazl Sejtablaeva
Little Tatar girl

Serhii Romaniuk
Eldest brother

Oles Sanin
Middle brother

Akhtem Seitablaiev
Tatar warrior

Eldar Akimov
Tatar warrior

Emil Rasilov
Tatar warrior

Andrii Sereda

Shevket Seydametov

Dmytro Sanin

Serhiy Marchenko

Eldar Dzhelilov

Príbeh o Fatime a Omarovi

Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner

A Story of the Forest: Mavka

The Eve of Ivan Kupalo

Dutý kameň

Beowulf & Grendel

Whom the Gods Wish to Destroy

The Adventures of Robin Hood

Pentos a Iola

Sita Sings the Blues

Hinemoa

William Tell

Nobleza baturra

Die Nibelungen: Siegfried

Musical Story of Aesops

Royal Opera House 2023/24: Das Rheingold

Faust

My Thoughts Are Silent

Oedipus Rex

All Small Bodies