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      "@type": "Event",
      "id": "76812621a28658a5",
      "title": "CARMEN by Antonio Gades & Carlos Saura – Με την Compañía Antonio Gades",
      "description": "",
      "fullDescription": "Before the dancers move, you hear the heels. A sharp staccato against the stage floor of the Alexandra Trianti Hall — fifteen hundred seats and the sound reaches every one of them. Then the castanets answer. The flamenco announces itself through percussion before a single body crosses into the light.\n\nCarmen was created by choreographer Antonio Gades and filmmaker Carlos Saura in 1983, first staged in Paris shortly after their acclaimed film of the same name. Inspired by Prosper Merimee's 1845 novella rather than Bizet's opera, Gades stripped the story to its essentials — desire, jealousy, defiance, death — and rebuilt it in the language of flamenco. The result forged a stage heroine who came to embody Spanish dance itself. The production arriving at Megaron is staged by Stella Arauzo, Gades's longtime partner on stage and the artistic director of the Compania Antonio Gades since 2004. Arauzo faithfully revives the original choreography with the company that serves as the official custodian of Gades's artistic legacy. Esmeralda Manzanas dances Carmen, Alvaro Madrid takes Don Jose, Jairo Rodriguez is the Bullfighter, and Miguel Angel Rojas completes the principal cast.\n\nThe Megaron audience for international dance draws from across the spectrum — ballet subscribers in the first tiers who follow the season calendar, flamenco devotees who have waited years for the Gades company to return to Athens, and travelers who booked around the performance. The lobby before curtain has a different energy than a concert night — more formal, more anticipatory, the kind of room where people have dressed for the occasion.\n\n| Aspect | Details |\n|--------|---------|\n| **Setting** | Alexandra Trianti Hall, Megaron — 1,500 seats, acoustics inaugurated by the Berlin Philharmonic in 2004 |\n| **Vibe** | Formal, electric, reverential — a flagship stage for a flagship production |\n| **Sound** | Live flamenco guitar, castanets, footwork percussion — the dancers are the instruments |\n| **Door** | Ticketed, assigned seating |\n\nThe choreography moves through the narrative with the economy that defined Gades's approach — no wasted gesture, no decorative flourish. Carmen's defiance is communicated through the angle of a hip, the speed of a turn, the refusal to lower her gaze. The bullfight sequence translates violence into geometry. What Gades understood, and what Arauzo preserves, is that flamenco carries its drama in the body, not in the staging — and on the Trianti Hall stage, with its clean sightlines and precise acoustics, every footfall registers.\n\nIf you want contemporary experimental dance or multimedia spectacle, this is classical flamenco choreography presented with fidelity to its 1983 original. But if you want to see one of the defining works of twentieth-century Spanish dance performed by the company that inherited it directly from its creator, this is the production — and Athens dates for the Gades company are not annual events.\n\nMegaron sits directly adjacent to Megaro Moussikis metro station. The Alexandra Trianti Hall entrance is clearly signed from the main lobby. Performances run April 24, 25, and 26 at 20:30. Tickets range from thirty-five euros in the upper zones to ninety-five euros in the Grand Tier, with fifteen percent discounts available for groups of twenty or more. Purchase through the Megaron box office on Vasilissis Sofias Avenue or online at megaron.gr.\n\nThree nights. A choreography created over forty years ago, carried by the company its creator founded, performed in a hall built for exactly this scale of encounter.",
      "fullDescriptionEn": "Before the dancers move, you hear the heels. A sharp staccato against the stage floor of the Alexandra Trianti Hall — fifteen hundred seats and the sound reaches every one of them. Then the castanets answer. The flamenco announces itself through percussion before a single body crosses into the light.\n\nCarmen was created by choreographer Antonio Gades and filmmaker Carlos Saura in 1983, first staged in Paris shortly after their acclaimed film of the same name. Inspired by Prosper Merimee's 1845 novella rather than Bizet's opera, Gades stripped the story to its essentials — desire, jealousy, defiance, death — and rebuilt it in the language of flamenco. The result forged a stage heroine who came to embody Spanish dance itself. The production arriving at Megaron is staged by Stella Arauzo, Gades's longtime partner on stage and the artistic director of the Compania Antonio Gades since 2004. Arauzo faithfully revives the original choreography with the company that serves as the official custodian of Gades's artistic legacy. Esmeralda Manzanas dances Carmen, Alvaro Madrid takes Don Jose, Jairo Rodriguez is the Bullfighter, and Miguel Angel Rojas completes the principal cast.\n\nThe Megaron audience for international dance draws from across the spectrum — ballet subscribers in the first tiers who follow the season calendar, flamenco devotees who have waited years for the Gades company to return to Athens, and travelers who booked around the performance. The lobby before curtain has a different energy than a concert night — more formal, more anticipatory, the kind of room where people have dressed for the occasion.\n\n| Aspect | Details |\n|--------|---------|\n| **Setting** | Alexandra Trianti Hall, Megaron — 1,500 seats, acoustics inaugurated by the Berlin Philharmonic in 2004 |\n| **Vibe** | Formal, electric, reverential — a flagship stage for a flagship production |\n| **Sound** | Live flamenco guitar, castanets, footwork percussion — the dancers are the instruments |\n| **Door** | Ticketed, assigned seating |\n\nThe choreography moves through the narrative with the economy that defined Gades's approach — no wasted gesture, no decorative flourish. Carmen's defiance is communicated through the angle of a hip, the speed of a turn, the refusal to lower her gaze. The bullfight sequence translates violence into geometry. What Gades understood, and what Arauzo preserves, is that flamenco carries its drama in the body, not in the staging — and on the Trianti Hall stage, with its clean sightlines and precise acoustics, every footfall registers.\n\nIf you want contemporary experimental dance or multimedia spectacle, this is classical flamenco choreography presented with fidelity to its 1983 original. But if you want to see one of the defining works of twentieth-century Spanish dance performed by the company that inherited it directly from its creator, this is the production — and Athens dates for the Gades company are not annual events.\n\nMegaron sits directly adjacent to Megaro Moussikis metro station. The Alexandra Trianti Hall entrance is clearly signed from the main lobby. Performances run April 24, 25, and 26 at 20:30. Tickets range from thirty-five euros in the upper zones to ninety-five euros in the Grand Tier, with fifteen percent discounts available for groups of twenty or more. Purchase through the Megaron box office on Vasilissis Sofias Avenue or online at megaron.gr.\n\nThree nights. A choreography created over forty years ago, carried by the company its creator founded, performed in a hall built for exactly this scale of encounter.",
      "fullDescriptionGr": "Before the dancers move, you hear the heels. A sharp staccato against the stage floor of the Alexandra Trianti Hall — fifteen hundred seats and the sound reaches every one of them. Then the castanets answer. The flamenco announces itself through percussion before a single body crosses into the light.\n\nCarmen was created by choreographer Antonio Gades and filmmaker Carlos Saura in 1983, first staged in Paris shortly after their acclaimed film of the same name. Inspired by Prosper Merimee's 1845 novella rather than Bizet's opera, Gades stripped the story to its essentials — desire, jealousy, defiance, death — and rebuilt it in the language of flamenco. The result forged a stage heroine who came to embody Spanish dance itself. The production arriving at Megaron is staged by Stella Arauzo, Gades's longtime partner on stage and the artistic director of the Compania Antonio Gades since 2004. Arauzo faithfully revives the original choreography with the company that serves as the official custodian of Gades's artistic legacy. Esmeralda Manzanas dances Carmen, Alvaro Madrid takes Don Jose, Jairo Rodriguez is the Bullfighter, and Miguel Angel Rojas completes the principal cast.\n\nThe Megaron audience for international dance draws from across the spectrum — ballet subscribers in the first tiers who follow the season calendar, flamenco devotees who have waited years for the Gades company to return to Athens, and travelers who booked around the performance. The lobby before curtain has a different energy than a concert night — more formal, more anticipatory, the kind of room where people have dressed for the occasion.\n\n| Aspect | Details |\n|--------|---------|\n| **Setting** | Alexandra Trianti Hall, Megaron — 1,500 seats, acoustics inaugurated by the Berlin Philharmonic in 2004 |\n| **Vibe** | Formal, electric, reverential — a flagship stage for a flagship production |\n| **Sound** | Live flamenco guitar, castanets, footwork percussion — the dancers are the instruments |\n| **Door** | Ticketed, assigned seating |\n\nThe choreography moves through the narrative with the economy that defined Gades's approach — no wasted gesture, no decorative flourish. Carmen's defiance is communicated through the angle of a hip, the speed of a turn, the refusal to lower her gaze. The bullfight sequence translates violence into geometry. What Gades understood, and what Arauzo preserves, is that flamenco carries its drama in the body, not in the staging — and on the Trianti Hall stage, with its clean sightlines and precise acoustics, every footfall registers.\n\nIf you want contemporary experimental dance or multimedia spectacle, this is classical flamenco choreography presented with fidelity to its 1983 original. But if you want to see one of the defining works of twentieth-century Spanish dance performed by the company that inherited it directly from its creator, this is the production — and Athens dates for the Gades company are not annual events.\n\nMegaron sits directly adjacent to Megaro Moussikis metro station. The Alexandra Trianti Hall entrance is clearly signed from the main lobby. Performances run April 24, 25, and 26 at 20:30. Tickets range from thirty-five euros in the upper zones to ninety-five euros in the Grand Tier, with fifteen percent discounts available for groups of twenty or more. Purchase through the Megaron box office on Vasilissis Sofias Avenue or online at megaron.gr.\n\nThree nights. A choreography created over forty years ago, carried by the company its creator founded, performed in a hall built for exactly this scale of encounter.",
      "hasNativeGreek": false,
      "startDate": "2026-04-24T20:30:00+03:00",
      "endDate": null,
      "type": "dance",
      "genres": [
        "classical"
      ],
      "tags": [],
      "venue": {
        "name": "Μέγαρο Μουσικής Αθηνών",
        "address": "Βασιλίσσης Σοφίας & Κόκκαλη",
        "neighborhood": "Kolonaki",
        "coordinates": {
          "lat": 37.975,
          "lon": 23.757
        },
        "capacity": null
      },
      "price": {
        "type": "with-ticket",
        "amount": 25,
        "currency": "EUR",
        "range": "€15-80"
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      "url": "https://www.megaron.gr/event/carmen-by-antonio-gades-carlos-saura-me-tin-compania-antonio-gades/",
      "ticketUrl": "https://www.megaron.gr/event/carmen-by-antonio-gades-carlos-saura-me-tin-compania-antonio-gades/",
      "source": "megaron.gr",
      "createdAt": "2026-02-28T06:00:10.205Z",
      "updatedAt": "2026-04-15 12:14:03",
      "language": "en",
      "imageUrl": "https://www.megaron.gr/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/CARMEN-34_©-Stanislav-Levshin.jpg",
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