- Source: Le marchand de Venise
Le Marchand de Venise (The Merchant of Venice) is a French opera in three acts by Reynaldo Hahn. The libretto was by Miguel Zamacoïs, after Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice. Hahn first started working on the opera during the First World War, imagining it as a 'Mozartian' work, with the role of Portia written specifically with the soprano Mary Garden in mind.
The opera was first performed at the Paris Opéra, on 25 March 1935. It was revived at the Opéra on 18 November 1949 and again on 19 February 1950, and in 1979 at the Opéra-Comique under Manuel Rosenthal. The United States premiere was by the Portland Opera on 4 November 1996 under French conductor Marc Trautmann. In May 2017 the opera received its German premiere at the Theater Bielefeld in a production by Klaus Hemmerle conducted by Pawel Poplawski.
Principal roles
Synopsis
The story follows Shakespeare's play, The Merchant of Venice, but with some transpositions of the text. The comic figures of Lancelot Gobbo and Old Gobbo are absent.
Recordings
Some of the original role creators have left recordings of arias: (Hahn: Recordings 1908-35 with Martial Singher, Andre Pernet, Fanny Heldy, on Pearl CD 1165392).
References
Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Le marchand de Venise". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
O'Connor, Patrick (1992), 'Marchand de Venise, Le' in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, ed. Stanley Sadie (London) ISBN 0-333-73432-7
External links
Classical Iconoclast page on the opera, accessed 28 March 2011
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Robert Wiene
- Le marchand de Venise
- The Merchant of Venice
- Reynaldo Hahn
- Paola Mori
- The Merchant of Venice (1953 film)
- Bassanio
- Sarah Kofman
- Distributed Proofreaders
- André Pernet
- François Laroque