Grand Théâtre de Dijon The Grand Théâtre de Dijon is located at the Place du Théâtre. It was inaugurated on 4 November 1828 with the play
Les deguisements, ou une folie des grands hommes, especially written for the occasion by the Dijon-born poet
Charles Brifaut. The theatre was designed by
Jacques Cellerier (1742–1814) and
Simon Vallot (1774–1850) in the
Neo-classical style with an interior modelled after of those of Italian opera houses. In 1975 its exterior was declared a
monument historique of France. The theatre's last major restoration was in 2005, and it now has a seating capacity of 692.
Auditorium de Dijon Planning for the construction of the Auditorium, a larger and more modern theatre and concert hall for the city, was begun by the Dijon City Council in 1988. It was designed by a consortium of architectural firms (
Arquitectonica of
Miami, Florida and Bougeault–Walgenwitz of Dijon with acoustics engineering by
Artec) and was officially opened on 20 June 1998. The
Orchestre National de France conducted by
Charles Dutoit performed the inaugural concert in November of that year. Located at the Place Jean Bouhey, the triangular-shaped building, reminiscent of a
grand piano, has two large glass-walled foyers and a main auditorium on four levels with a seating capacity of 1611. The exterior is covered in beige Chassagne
limestone from local quarries. More suited to large-scale productions than the Grand Théâtre, the Auditorium was the venue for Opéra de Dijon's 2013 production of Wagner's four-opera
Ring Cycle, the first complete production in France in 30 years. ==Opera repertory==