It seemed like a replica like all the others, but that night the characters rebelled against their author giving life to a new music, a new work.
Who really killed Guild? It will be the public who will discover it and decide the ending of an interactive, unique musical show ...
The show starts from Giuseppe Verdi's Rigoletto and, almost as a pretext, arrives at a contemporary language, also electronic, while maintaining the firm roots in the opera tradition. A transfiguration into music of a world parallel to that of Verdi, which sees different languages getting along as never before. If the poetic moments are more easily combined with pure neoclassical lyric singing, the moments of interaction of the public have a modern musical guise, almost "Netflix". In some moments of the show (i.e. the interactive-exploratory-investigative moments of the scene) time expands until it stops, allowing viewers to walk inside the scene with the motionless singers, in still images, being able to turn around to notice details hidden by the front view, and even take photoreliefs with the phone.
The show ends with alternative endings that the public has helped to rebuild, giving life to a truly interactive experience between the spectators and the work. The public with his vote will decide the culprit, deciding the final scene.