Plans were drawn up for a 1943 première at the
Bolshoi Theatre,
Moscow, to be directed by
Sergei Eisenstein and conducted by
Samuil Samosud. Nothing came of this project, although a private performance of eight scenes with piano accompaniment took place at the
Moscow Actors’ Centre on October 16, 1944, and a public concert performance of nine scenes, conducted by Samosud, was given in the Great Hall of the
Moscow Conservatory on June 7, 1945. The first staged performance was of a newly extended seven-scene version of Part 1 (what is now Scene 2 having been added at Samosud's suggestion), together with Scene 8, the first scene of Part 2. This took place on June 12, 1946, at the
Maly Theatre (before the Revolution – Mikhailovsky Theatre) in
Leningrad, again conducted by Samosud. Part 2, also with an additional scene (Scene 10), was to be performed there in July 1947, but after the dress rehearsal no public performances were given, “for reasons beyond the control of the theatre and the composer”. Following the
Zhdanov decree of February 1948, Prokofiev started work on a shortened single-evening version of the opera, at the same time making various revisions to his original scheme, although the thirteen-scene framework remained. This version was first performed on 26 May 1953, at the
Teatro Comunale,
Florence, conducted by
Artur Rodziński, two months after the composer's death. Scenes 2 and 9 were, however, omitted. The Russian première of this version was given at the Maly Theatre, Leningrad, on April 1, 1955, conducted by
Eduard Grikurov, in this case with the omission of Scenes 7 and 11. All thirteen scenes (but with cuts) were eventually first performed together on November 8, 1957, at the
Stanislavski-Nemirovich-Danchenko Theatre in Moscow, under the baton of Samosud's assistant
Alexander Shaverdov. On December 15, 1959, the 13 scenes and Epigraph were finally staged uncut (conducted by
Alexander Melik-Pashayev) at the Bolshoi Theatre, Moscow, although this was preceded in the United States by an
NBC telecast conducted by
Peter Herman Adler on January 13, 1957. The first British performance was a
Leeds Festival concert performance of nine scenes at
Leeds Town Hall on April 19, 1967 conducted by
Edward Downes. The first British staged performance was by
Sadlers’ Wells Opera on October 11, 1972 in English in a production by
Colin Graham conducted by
David Lloyd-Jones, and the first American staging by the
Opera Company of Boston on May 8, 1974. In other countries, the thirteen-scene version of the opera was first performed in Germany (
Bonn) and
Bulgaria (
Sofia) in 1957,
Serbia (
Belgrade) in 1958,
Croatia (
Zagreb) in 1961, the
Czech Republic (
Liberec) in 1962, France (
Théâtre des Champs-Élysées,
Paris, in concert) and Canada (
Montreal) in 1967, Austria (
Vienna State Opera, conducted by
Mstislav Rostropovich) in 1971, Australia (the opening performance at the
Sydney Opera House) and Argentina (
Teatro Colón,
Buenos Aires) in 1973, Spain (
Liceu,
Barcelona) in 1977 and the Netherlands (
Amsterdam, conducted by
Edo de Waart) in 1991. The
Canadian Opera Company performed the opera as part of its 2008–09 season.
Original version In 2010 Prokofiev's original version of the opera, edited by
Rita McAllister, was premiered in
Glasgow, in a collaboration between
Scottish Opera and the
Royal Conservatoire of Scotland (formerly
RSAMD). This briefer version represents Prokofiev's thoughts in 1941, before the various additions and amendments he assembled over the years. It runs some 90 minutes shorter than the later version. ==Roles==