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A Midsummer Night's Dream (opera)

A Midsummer Night's Dream, Op. 64, is an opera with music by Benjamin Britten and set to a libretto adapted by the composer and Peter Pears from William Shakespeare's play, A Midsummer Night's Dream. It was premiered on 11 June 1960 at the Aldeburgh Festival, conducted by the composer and with set and costume designs by Carl Toms.[1] Stylistically, the work is typical of Britten, with a highly individual sound-world – not strikingly dissonant or atonal,[1] but replete with subtly atmospheric harmonies and tone painting. The role of Oberon was composed for the countertenor Alfred Deller. Atypically for Britten, the opera did not include a leading role for his partner Pears, who instead was given the comic drag role of Flute/Thisbe.

A Midsummer Night's Dream
Opera by Benjamin Britten
Britten's A Midsummer Night's Dream at the 19th Beijing Music Festival (2016)
Librettist
LanguageEnglish
Based onShakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream
Premiere
11 June 1960 (1960-06-11)

Performance history edit

A Midsummer Night's Dream was first performed on 11 June 1960 at the Jubilee Hall, Aldeburgh, UK as part of the Aldeburgh Festival. Conducted by the composer, it was directed by the choreographer John Cranko.[2]

The work received wide critical approval following its early performances.[3][better source needed] Howard Taubman in his review of the Aldeburgh premiere wrote that the orchestral colors of the score conveyed a sense of "soaring illusion" that never wavered and concluded:

Not every problem posed by Shakespeare has been solved, but Mr. Britten has accomplished so much that one may safely predict a wide vogue for his latest and happiest opera.[4]

A dissenting voice was Britten's estranged collaborator W. H. Auden. In a letter to Stephen Spender after seeing the 1961 London production, Auden dismissed it as "Dreadful! Pure Kensington".[3][5]

Dream was performed at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, in 1961, produced by John Gielgud and conducted by Georg Solti. This production was revived six times to 1984.[6]

The English Music Theatre Company staged the opera at Snape Maltings in 1980, directed by Christopher Renshaw and designed by Robin Don; the production was revived at the Royal Opera House for one performance in 1986.[7]

In 2005, the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, produced a version directed by Olivia Fuchs at the Linbury Studio Theatre with the Tiffin Boys' Choir. William Towers was Oberon, and Gillian Keith Tytania.[8]

English National Opera's production of 2011, directed by Christopher Alden, set the opera in a mid-20th-century school, with Oberon (Iestyn Davies) and Tytania (Anna Christy) as teachers and Puck and the fairies as schoolboys. Oberon's relationship with Puck (Jamie Manton) is given overtly sexual overtones, and Puck responds with alternate anger and despair to Oberon's new-found interest in Tytania's Changeling boy. The silent older man who stalks the action in the first two acts is revealed to be Theseus (Paul Whelan); reviewers have suggested that in this staging Theseus himself was once the object of Oberon's attentions, and is either watching history repeating itself, or is in fact daydreaming the magical events of the opera prior to his marriage to Hippolyta.[9][10]

Baz Luhrmann directed a music video of an arrangement of "Now Until the Break of Day" from the finale of act 3 for his 1998 album Something for Everybody featuring Christine Anu and David Hobson.

Roles edit

Roles, voice types; premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 11 June 1960
Conductor: Benjamin Britten
Director: John Cranko
Oberon, King of the Fairies countertenor Alfred Deller
Tytania, Queen of the Fairies coloratura soprano Jennifer Vyvyan
Puck speaking role Lorca Massine (as "Leonide Massine II")[11][12]
Cobweb treble Kevin Platts
Mustardseed treble Robert McCutcheon
Moth treble Barry Ferguson
Peaseblossom treble Michael Bauer
Lysander tenor George Maran
Demetrius baritone Thomas Hemsley
Hermia, in love with Lysander mezzo-soprano Marjorie Thomas
Helena, in love with Demetrius soprano April Cantelo
Theseus, Duke of Athens bass Forbes Robinson
Hippolyta, Queen of the Amazons contralto Johanna Peters
Bottom, a weaver (Pyramus) bass-baritone Owen Brannigan
Quince, a carpenter (Director) bass Norman Lumsden
Flute, a bellows-mender (Thisbe) tenor Peter Pears
Snug, a joiner (Lion) bass David Kelly
Snout, a tinker (Wall) tenor Edward Byles
Starveling, a tailor (Moonshine) baritone Joseph Ward

Instrumentation edit

Analysis edit

Britten delineated the three tiers of characters, the rustics being given folk-like "simple" music, the lovers a more romantic sound-world and the fairies being represented in a very ethereal way. Almost all of the action now takes place in the woods around Athens, and the fairies inhabit a much more prominent place in the drama. The comic performance by the rustics of Pyramus and Thisbe at the final wedding takes on an added dimension as a parody of nineteenth-century Italian opera. Thisbe's lament, accompanied by obbligato flute, is a parody of a Donizetti "mad scene" ("Il dolce suono").[1]

The opera contains several innovations: it is extremely rare in opera that the lead male role is written for the countertenor voice to sing. The part of Oberon was created by Alfred Deller. Britten wrote specifically for his voice, which, despite its ethereal quality, had a low range compared to more modern countertenors. Oberon's music almost never requires the countertenor to sing both at the top of the alto range and forte.

The plot of the opera follows that of the play, with several alterations. Most of Shakespeare's act 1 is cut, compensated for by the opera's only added line: "Compelling thee to marry with Demetrius." Therefore, much greater precedence is given to the wood, and to the fairies.[1] This is also indicated by the opening portamenti strings, and by the ethereal countertenor voice that is Oberon, the male lead, who throughout is accompanied by a characteristic texture of harp and celeste, in the same way that Puck's appearance is heralded by the combination of trumpet and snare-drum.[1]

The opera opens with a chorus, "Over hill, over dale" from Tytania's attendant fairies, played by boy sopranos. Other highlights include Oberon's florid – the exotic celeste is especially notable[1] – aria,"I know a bank" (inspired by Purcell's "Sweeter than roses", which Britten had previously arranged for Pears to sing),[13] Tytania's equally florid "Come now, a roundel", the chorus's energetic "You spotted snakes", the hilarious comedy of Pyramus and Thisbe, and the final trio for Oberon, Tytania and the chorus.

The original play is an anomaly among Shakespeare's works, in that it is very little concerned with character, and very largely concerned with psychology. Britten follows this to a large extent, but subtly alters the psychological focus of the work.[citation needed] The introduction of a chorus of boy-fairies means that the opera becomes greatly concerned with the theme of purity. It is these juvenile fairies who eventually quell the libidinous activities of the quartet of lovers, as they sing a beautiful melody on the three "motto chords" (also on the four "magic" chords) of the second act:[1] "Jack shall have Jill/Naught shall go ill/The man shall have his mare again/And all shall be well." Sung by boys, it could be considered that this goes beyond irony, and represents an idealised vision of a paradise of innocence and purity that Britten seems to have been captivated by throughout his life.[13]

Britten also pays attention to the play's central motif: the madness of love. Curiously he took the one relationship in the play that is grotesque (that of Tytania and Bottom) and placed it in the centre of his opera (in the middle of act 2).[13] Women in Britten operas tend to run to extremes, being either predators or vulnerable prey, but Tytania is an amalgam; she dominates Bottom, but is herself completely dominated by Oberon and Puck, the couple that are usually considered to really hold power in The Dream.[13] Their cruel pranks eventually quell her coloratura, which until she is freed from the power of the love-juice is fiendishly difficult to sing.

Britten also parodied operatic convention in less obvious ways than Pyramus and Thisbe. Like many other operas, A Midsummer Night's Dream opens with a chorus, but it is a chorus of unbroken boys' voices, singing in unison. After this comes the entrance of the prima donna and the male lead, who is as far away as possible from Wagner's heldentenors, and as close as it is possible to get to Handel's castrati of the 18th century.:[1] "There is an air of baroque fantasy in the music." Britten's treatment of Puck also suggests parody.[13] In opera, the hero's assistant is traditionally sung by baritones, yet here we have an adolescent youth who speaks, rather than sings.

Britten thought the character of Puck "absolutely amoral and yet innocent."[14] Describing the speaking, tumbling Puck of the opera, Britten wrote "I got the idea of doing Puck like this in Stockholm, where I saw some Swedish child acrobats with extraordinary agility and powers of mimicry, and suddenly realised we could do Puck this way."[14]

Recordings edit

There are many recordings available, including two conducted by the composer, one a live recording of the 11 June 1960 premiere with the complete original cast, the second a studio recording made in 1967 with some of the original cast, Deller as Oberon, Owen Brannigan as Bottom, and Peter Pears elevated from Flute to Lysander, which omits some music from the lovers' awakening early in act 3.[15]

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

References edit

  • "Britten, Benjamin—A Midsummer Night's Dream (1960)". Boosey & Hawkes. from the original on 6 October 2012. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  • Brett, Philip (1990). Britten's Dream (Brief essay to accompany the Britten recording). Decca Records.
  • Britten, Benjamin (2003) [first published 1960]. "A New Britten Opera (1960)". In Kildea, Paul Francis (ed.). Britten on Music. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 186–189. ISBN 9780198167143.
  • Capon, Brian, ed. (September 2008). "Recordings of A Midsummer Night's Dream". Opera Discography. from the original on 27 November 2010. Retrieved 2 May 2011.
  • Clements, Andrew (20 May 2011). "A Midsummer Night's Dream – review". The Guardian. from the original on 10 March 2016.
  • Craine, Debra; Mackrell, Judith, eds. (2010). "Massine, Lorca". The Oxford Dictionary of Dance (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acref/9780199563449.001.0001. ISBN 9780191727658.
  • McDonald, Russ (2012). "Benjamin Britten's Dreams". In Holland, Peter (ed.). Shakespeare Survey. Vol. 65, A Midsummer Night's Dream. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 138–146. doi:10.1017/SSO9781139170000. ISBN 9781139170000 – via Cambridge Core.
  • "A Midsummer Night's Dream (1961)". Royal Opera House Collections Online. from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  • "A Midsummer Night's Dream (1986)". Royal Opera House Collections Online. from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  • "A Midsummer Night's Dream (2005)". Royal Opera House Collections Online. from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  • Taubman, Howard (19 June 1960). "Britten's Dream; His Setting of Shakespeare Drama Is Composer's Newest, Happiest Opera" (PDF). The New York Times. p. 9.
  • White, Michael (22 May 1994). "Sweet Dream, sour looks". The Independent on Sunday. from the original on 11 November 2012.
  • White, Michael (20 May 2011). . The Telegraph Blogs. Archived from the original on 30 July 2013. Retrieved 20 July 2013.
  • Whittall, Arnold (1998). "Midsummer Night's Dream, A". In Sadie, Stanley (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Opera. Vol. 3. London: Macmillan. pp. 379–381. ISBN 1-56159-228-5.

External links edit

  • from the English Touring Opera
  • Midsummer Night's Dream from the Britten-Pears Foundation with audio clips
  • Benjamin Britten's manuscript score for A Midsummer Night's Dream at the British Library

midsummer, night, dream, opera, midsummer, night, dream, opera, with, music, benjamin, britten, libretto, adapted, composer, peter, pears, from, william, shakespeare, play, midsummer, night, dream, premiered, june, 1960, aldeburgh, festival, conducted, compose. A Midsummer Night s Dream Op 64 is an opera with music by Benjamin Britten and set to a libretto adapted by the composer and Peter Pears from William Shakespeare s play A Midsummer Night s Dream It was premiered on 11 June 1960 at the Aldeburgh Festival conducted by the composer and with set and costume designs by Carl Toms 1 Stylistically the work is typical of Britten with a highly individual sound world not strikingly dissonant or atonal 1 but replete with subtly atmospheric harmonies and tone painting The role of Oberon was composed for the countertenor Alfred Deller Atypically for Britten the opera did not include a leading role for his partner Pears who instead was given the comic drag role of Flute Thisbe A Midsummer Night s DreamOpera by Benjamin BrittenBritten s A Midsummer Night s Dream at the 19th Beijing Music Festival 2016 LibrettistBenjamin Britten Peter PearsLanguageEnglishBased onShakespeare s A Midsummer Night s DreamPremiere11 June 1960 1960 06 11 Aldeburgh Festival Contents 1 Performance history 2 Roles 3 Instrumentation 4 Analysis 5 Recordings 6 Notes and references 6 1 Notes 6 2 References 7 External linksPerformance history editA Midsummer Night s Dream was first performed on 11 June 1960 at the Jubilee Hall Aldeburgh UK as part of the Aldeburgh Festival Conducted by the composer it was directed by the choreographer John Cranko 2 The work received wide critical approval following its early performances 3 better source needed Howard Taubman in his review of the Aldeburgh premiere wrote that the orchestral colors of the score conveyed a sense of soaring illusion that never wavered and concluded Not every problem posed by Shakespeare has been solved but Mr Britten has accomplished so much that one may safely predict a wide vogue for his latest and happiest opera 4 A dissenting voice was Britten s estranged collaborator W H Auden In a letter to Stephen Spender after seeing the 1961 London production Auden dismissed it as Dreadful Pure Kensington 3 5 Dream was performed at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden in 1961 produced by John Gielgud and conducted by Georg Solti This production was revived six times to 1984 6 The English Music Theatre Company staged the opera at Snape Maltings in 1980 directed by Christopher Renshaw and designed by Robin Don the production was revived at the Royal Opera House for one performance in 1986 7 In 2005 the Royal Opera House Covent Garden produced a version directed by Olivia Fuchs at the Linbury Studio Theatre with the Tiffin Boys Choir William Towers was Oberon and Gillian Keith Tytania 8 English National Opera s production of 2011 directed by Christopher Alden set the opera in a mid 20th century school with Oberon Iestyn Davies and Tytania Anna Christy as teachers and Puck and the fairies as schoolboys Oberon s relationship with Puck Jamie Manton is given overtly sexual overtones and Puck responds with alternate anger and despair to Oberon s new found interest in Tytania s Changeling boy The silent older man who stalks the action in the first two acts is revealed to be Theseus Paul Whelan reviewers have suggested that in this staging Theseus himself was once the object of Oberon s attentions and is either watching history repeating itself or is in fact daydreaming the magical events of the opera prior to his marriage to Hippolyta 9 10 Baz Luhrmann directed a music video of an arrangement of Now Until the Break of Day from the finale of act 3 for his 1998 album Something for Everybody featuring Christine Anu and David Hobson Roles editRoles voice types premiere cast Role Voice type Premiere cast 11 June 1960Conductor Benjamin BrittenDirector John CrankoOberon King of the Fairies countertenor Alfred DellerTytania Queen of the Fairies coloratura soprano Jennifer VyvyanPuck speaking role Lorca Massine as Leonide Massine II 11 12 Cobweb treble Kevin PlattsMustardseed treble Robert McCutcheonMoth treble Barry FergusonPeaseblossom treble Michael BauerLysander tenor George MaranDemetrius baritone Thomas HemsleyHermia in love with Lysander mezzo soprano Marjorie ThomasHelena in love with Demetrius soprano April CanteloTheseus Duke of Athens bass Forbes RobinsonHippolyta Queen of the Amazons contralto Johanna PetersBottom a weaver Pyramus bass baritone Owen BranniganQuince a carpenter Director bass Norman LumsdenFlute a bellows mender Thisbe tenor Peter PearsSnug a joiner Lion bass David KellySnout a tinker Wall tenor Edward BylesStarveling a tailor Moonshine baritone Joseph WardInstrumentation editwoodwinds 2 flutes 2nd with piccolo oboe with English horn 2 clarinets bassoon Brass 2 horns trumpet in D trombone percussion 2 players timpani triangle cymbals tambourine gong 2 wood blocks vibraphone glockenspiel xylophone tamburo snare drum tenor drum bass drum 2 bells Other 2 harps harpsichord celesta strings minimum 4 2 2 2 2 Stage band sopranino recorders cymbals 2 wood blocksAnalysis editBritten delineated the three tiers of characters the rustics being given folk like simple music the lovers a more romantic sound world and the fairies being represented in a very ethereal way Almost all of the action now takes place in the woods around Athens and the fairies inhabit a much more prominent place in the drama The comic performance by the rustics of Pyramus and Thisbe at the final wedding takes on an added dimension as a parody of nineteenth century Italian opera Thisbe s lament accompanied by obbligato flute is a parody of a Donizetti mad scene Il dolce suono 1 The opera contains several innovations it is extremely rare in opera that the lead male role is written for the countertenor voice to sing The part of Oberon was created by Alfred Deller Britten wrote specifically for his voice which despite its ethereal quality had a low range compared to more modern countertenors Oberon s music almost never requires the countertenor to sing both at the top of the alto range and forte The plot of the opera follows that of the play with several alterations Most of Shakespeare s act 1 is cut compensated for by the opera s only added line Compelling thee to marry with Demetrius Therefore much greater precedence is given to the wood and to the fairies 1 This is also indicated by the opening portamenti strings and by the ethereal countertenor voice that is Oberon the male lead who throughout is accompanied by a characteristic texture of harp and celeste in the same way that Puck s appearance is heralded by the combination of trumpet and snare drum 1 The opera opens with a chorus Over hill over dale from Tytania s attendant fairies played by boy sopranos Other highlights include Oberon s florid the exotic celeste is especially notable 1 aria I know a bank inspired by Purcell s Sweeter than roses which Britten had previously arranged for Pears to sing 13 Tytania s equally florid Come now a roundel the chorus s energetic You spotted snakes the hilarious comedy of Pyramus and Thisbe and the final trio for Oberon Tytania and the chorus The original play is an anomaly among Shakespeare s works in that it is very little concerned with character and very largely concerned with psychology Britten follows this to a large extent but subtly alters the psychological focus of the work citation needed The introduction of a chorus of boy fairies means that the opera becomes greatly concerned with the theme of purity It is these juvenile fairies who eventually quell the libidinous activities of the quartet of lovers as they sing a beautiful melody on the three motto chords also on the four magic chords of the second act 1 Jack shall have Jill Naught shall go ill The man shall have his mare again And all shall be well Sung by boys it could be considered that this goes beyond irony and represents an idealised vision of a paradise of innocence and purity that Britten seems to have been captivated by throughout his life 13 Britten also pays attention to the play s central motif the madness of love Curiously he took the one relationship in the play that is grotesque that of Tytania and Bottom and placed it in the centre of his opera in the middle of act 2 13 Women in Britten operas tend to run to extremes being either predators or vulnerable prey but Tytania is an amalgam she dominates Bottom but is herself completely dominated by Oberon and Puck the couple that are usually considered to really hold power in The Dream 13 Their cruel pranks eventually quell her coloratura which until she is freed from the power of the love juice is fiendishly difficult to sing Britten also parodied operatic convention in less obvious ways than Pyramus and Thisbe Like many other operas A Midsummer Night s Dream opens with a chorus but it is a chorus of unbroken boys voices singing in unison After this comes the entrance of the prima donna and the male lead who is as far away as possible from Wagner s heldentenors and as close as it is possible to get to Handel s castrati of the 18th century 1 There is an air of baroque fantasy in the music Britten s treatment of Puck also suggests parody 13 In opera the hero s assistant is traditionally sung by baritones yet here we have an adolescent youth who speaks rather than sings Britten thought the character of Puck absolutely amoral and yet innocent 14 Describing the speaking tumbling Puck of the opera Britten wrote I got the idea of doing Puck like this in Stockholm where I saw some Swedish child acrobats with extraordinary agility and powers of mimicry and suddenly realised we could do Puck this way 14 Recordings editThere are many recordings available including two conducted by the composer one a live recording of the 11 June 1960 premiere with the complete original cast the second a studio recording made in 1967 with some of the original cast Deller as Oberon Owen Brannigan as Bottom and Peter Pears elevated from Flute to Lysander which omits some music from the lovers awakening early in act 3 15 Notes and references editNotes edit a b c d e f g h Whittall 1998 Boosey amp Hawkes n d a b McDonald 2012 p 140 Taubman 1960 White 1994 ROHC A Midsummer Night s Dream 1961 ROHC A Midsummer Night s Dream 1986 ROHC A Midsummer Night s Dream 2005 Clements 2011 White 2011 McDonald 2012 p 139 Craine amp Mackrell 2010 a b c d e Brett 1990 a b Britten 1960 Capon 2008 References edit Britten Benjamin A Midsummer Night s Dream 1960 Boosey amp Hawkes Archived from the original on 6 October 2012 Retrieved 22 May 2011 Brett Philip 1990 Britten sDream Brief essay to accompany the Britten recording Decca Records Britten Benjamin 2003 first published 1960 A New Britten Opera 1960 In Kildea Paul Francis ed Britten on Music Oxford Oxford University Press pp 186 189 ISBN 9780198167143 Capon Brian ed September 2008 Recordings of A Midsummer Night s Dream Opera Discography Archived from the original on 27 November 2010 Retrieved 2 May 2011 Clements Andrew 20 May 2011 A Midsummer Night s Dream review The Guardian Archived from the original on 10 March 2016 Craine Debra Mackrell Judith eds 2010 Massine Lorca The Oxford Dictionary of Dance 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780199563449 001 0001 ISBN 9780191727658 McDonald Russ 2012 Benjamin Britten s Dreams In Holland Peter ed Shakespeare Survey Vol 65 A Midsummer Night s Dream Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 138 146 doi 10 1017 SSO9781139170000 ISBN 9781139170000 via Cambridge Core A Midsummer Night s Dream 1961 Royal Opera House Collections Online Archived from the original on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 22 May 2011 A Midsummer Night s Dream 1986 Royal Opera House Collections Online Archived from the original on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 22 May 2011 A Midsummer Night s Dream 2005 Royal Opera House Collections Online Archived from the original on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 22 May 2011 Taubman Howard 19 June 1960 Britten s Dream His Setting of Shakespeare Drama Is Composer s Newest Happiest Opera PDF The New York Times p 9 White Michael 22 May 1994 Sweet Dream sour looks The Independent on Sunday Archived from the original on 11 November 2012 White Michael 20 May 2011 ENO s shocking new paedophile Midsummer Night s Dream is brilliant and I hated it The Telegraph Blogs Archived from the original on 30 July 2013 Retrieved 20 July 2013 Whittall Arnold 1998 Midsummer Night s Dream A In Sadie Stanley ed The New Grove Dictionary of Opera Vol 3 London Macmillan pp 379 381 ISBN 1 56159 228 5 External links editSynopsis of Britten s Midsummer Night s Dream from the English Touring Opera Midsummer Night s Dream from the Britten Pears Foundation with audio clips Benjamin Britten s manuscript score for A Midsummer Night s Dream at the British Library Portal nbsp Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Midsummer Night 27s Dream opera amp oldid 1171821124, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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