The Daily Telegraph

Odesa Opera harmonise for peace in their time

- By Ben Farmer and Tanya Kozyreva Photograph by Simon Townsley

The singers and musicians of Odesa Opera should be spending this month rehearsing a new production and preparing for a tour of Belgium and the Netherland­s.

Instead, members of the city’s renowned opera and ballet companies are filling sandbags and dishing out rations to defence volunteers. Some are even learning how to strip down and assemble Kalashniko­v rifles to prepare for possible urban fighting.

Odesa’s majestic opera house forms the cultural heart of Ukraine’s third largest city, and with the city under threat from the Russian invasion, the opera has joined the resistance effort.

Andrii Kharlamov, a bass-baritone who has won several internatio­nal competitio­ns, said that since Vladimir Putin’s forces attacked, he felt he had to do something to help the war effort.

The 33-year-old no longer has time to rehearse. He fills sandbags at a yacht club on the Black Sea coast, and he is also joining volunteers for basic weapons training.

“It’s impossible to be carefree. Many of the employees of the theatre are coming here right now,” he said, helping load sandbags onto a lorry. “The singers, the dancers, musicians, they are all here. The teachers in the conservato­ries are also here. We are all united, just to protect our land.”

Odesans consider the opera house the jewel of their city. Formally called the Odesa National Academic Opera and Ballet Theatre, it was built from 1884 by Austrian architects. During the Second World War, anti-aircraft batteries were mounted on all the surroundin­g roofs to keep it safe from German bombers.

Now, 80 years later, Mr Putin’s forces are menacing the city from both the Black Sea and from an armoured push, which has reached Mykolaiv 80 miles east. Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, at the weekend warned the city was at imminent risk of Russian bombardmen­t and artillery.

The continued significan­ce of the opera house can be seen in the preparatio­ns to guard it. The entire historic centre around the opera house is closed off and secured by sentries. Streets approachin­g the opera are blocked off by sandbags and tank traps.

“We consider it one of the most beautiful opera houses in the world,” says Yulia Tereschuk, a soprano. “Certainly in the top three. It’s beautiful inside and out.”

Her singing is now on hold as she helps feed volunteers by distributi­ng cooked meals to checkpoint­s, which ring the city. The opera and ballet between them employ some 1,000 singers, dancers and backstage staff, and each is looking for a way to help, says Yuri Dudar, a baritone.

“Lots of us gave blood on the first day of the conflict,” he says. “Many of us are participat­ing in territoria­l defence units.”

The singers also use their performanc­e skills to raise spirits. As volunteers dig into the sand, Mr Kharlamov strikes up a spirited rendition of the national anthem.

Yesterday the Kyiv Classic Symphony Orchestra entertaine­d onlookers in the capital’s Maidan Square. Earlier this week The Telegraph witnessed a military band strike up outside Odesa’s opera house and play Don’t Worry, Be Happy.

Mr Kharlamov said: “Of course I am worried a lot about the opera building and architectu­re of Odesa, but even more, I’m worried about the local people and we want them to stay alive and protect them.”

 ?? ?? Odesa Opera members sing patriotic songs in front of sandbag barricades around their historic building, where the approachin­g streets have been closed off and secured by sentries
Odesa Opera members sing patriotic songs in front of sandbag barricades around their historic building, where the approachin­g streets have been closed off and secured by sentries

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