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Der Vampyr

Der Vampyr (The Vampire) is a Romantic opera in two acts by Heinrich Marschner. The German libretto by Wilhelm August Wohlbrück (Marschner's brother-in-law) is based on the play Der Vampir oder die Totenbraut (1821) by Heinrich Ludwig Ritter, which itself was based on the short story The Vampyre (1819) by John Polidori. The first performance took place on 29 March 1828 in Leipzig, where it was a hit.[1]

Der Vampyr
Opera by Heinrich Marschner
Poster from 1828
TranslationThe Vampire
LibrettistWilhelm August Wohlbrück
LanguageGerman
Based onHeinrich Ludwig Ritter's Der Vampir oder die Totenbraut
Premiere
29 March 1828 (1828-03-29)

The opera is still occasionally performed, and, in 1992, an updated adaptation, entitled The Vampyr: A Soap Opera, with new lyrics by Charles Hart, starring Omar Ebrahim and produced by Janet Street-Porter, was serialised on BBC television.

In June 2014, OperaHub in Boston premiered a new English-language adaptation of Der Vampyr by John J King that spoofs more modern vampire stories such as Twilight, Dracula, the Vampire Chronicles, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer.[2][3]

Roles edit

Role Voice type Premiere,
29 March 1828[4]
(Conductor: Heinrich Marschner)
Lord Ruthven, the vampire baritone Franz Eduard Genast
Sir Humphrey Davenaut bass Köckert
Malwina, his daughter soprano Wilhelmina Streit
Sir Edgar Aubry tenor Josef August Höfler
Sir John Berkley bass Gay
Janthe, his daughter soprano von Zieten
George Dibdin, a servant in Davenaut's house tenor Vogt
Emmy Perth soprano Dorothea Devrient
Toms Blunt baritone Wilhelm Fischer
Suse, his wife mezzo-soprano Wilhelmine Köckert
James Gadshill tenor
Richard Scrop tenor
Robert Green bass
The Vampire Master speaking part
John Perth speaking part Reinecke

Synopsis edit

Place: Scotland
Time: the eighteenth century.

Act 1 edit

Scene 1: After midnight

At a Witches' Sabbath, the Vampire Master tells Lord Ruthven that if he cannot sacrifice three virgin brides within the next 24 hours, he will die. If he can, he will be granted another year of life. The clock strikes one, and Ruthven's first victim, Janthe, arrives for a clandestine meeting, although she is due to marry another on the following day. Berkley, having discovered that she is missing, is searching for her with his men, and Ruthven hides with her in a cave. Her screams alert the search-party, and the body and the Vampire are discovered. Berkley stabs Ruthven and leaves him to die, but he is discovered by Aubry, whose life had been saved by Ruthven in the past. Ruthven pleads with Aubry to drag him into the moonlight so that he can revive, and Aubry, while doing so, realises that Ruthven is a vampire. He has to swear not to reveal this secret for twenty-four hours, or he will become a vampire, too.

Scene 2: Next morning

The 18-year-old Malwina and Aubry, with whom she is in love, are told by Davenaut that she must marry the Earl of Marsden. Aubry recognises the Earl as Lord Ruthven, but is told that he is Ruthven's brother, who has been abroad for some time. Aubry, however, recognises a wound that proves that the Earl really is Ruthven, and is about to denounce him when Ruthven reminds him of his oath and the consequences that will follow if he breaks it. The preparations for Malwina's marriage to "Marsden" begin.

Act 2 edit

Scene 1: Near Marsden castle

Emmy awaits her husband-to-be, George. News of Janthe's gruesome death emerges, and Emmy recounts the legend of the Vampire. Ruthven appears and impresses the villagers with his largesse. He flirts with Emmy until, interrupted by George, he departs - though by then he has extracted a promise from Emmy that she will dance with him later.

Scene 2

Aubry tries to persuade Ruthven to give up his claim to Malwina, but is again reminded of the fate that awaits if he breaks his oath. Ruthven, in a soliloquy, rails against the torments that a Vampire must face.

Scene 3

Aubry is torn by his choice between breaking his oath and saving Malwina, or keeping quiet and losing her to the Vampire. George asks Aubry to use his influence to stop "Marsden" from seducing Emmy. Aubry warns George that he must keep watch over Emmy - but already she is being led into the forest by Ruthven.

Scene 4: Outside the inn

Blunt, Gadshill, Scrop and Green sing of the pleasures of drink. Blunt's wife Suse upbraids the men, to the delight of the onlookers, but a dishevelled George arrives, recounting how he followed Emmy and "Marsden", only to find him standing over her dead body. He had shot the Earl immediately, leaving him to die in the moonlight. The villagers express their sympathy and sorrow.

Scene 5: In Davenaut's castle

Malwina is to be married to "Marsden" before midnight. Aubry warns her that she is in danger, and she puts her trust in God. The wedding-guests arrive, followed by Ruthven, who apologises for his lateness. Malwina and Aubry make one last appeal to Davenaut, who throws Aubry out and orders the wedding to proceed. A thunderstorm approaches, and Aubry returns, having decided to reveal Ruthven's secret at no matter what cost to himself. Suddenly, the clock strikes one, and Aubry, released from his oath, reveals that "Marsden" is Lord Ruthven, the Vampire. Ruthven, having failed in his task, is struck by lightning and descends into Hell. Now Davenaut asks Malwina to forgive him and consents to her marriage to Aubry, to general rejoicing.

Instrumentation edit

Marschner scored the opera for two piccolos and two flutes (not doubling), two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, serpent, four horns, two clarion natural trumpets, three trombones, timpani, tamtam, and strings, together with two offstage horns and two offstage trumpets.

Music edit

Apart from some references to Beethoven, and, in the Ruthven/Emmy/George scene, a similarity with Don Giovanni/Zerlina/Masetto, Marschner's opera is a notable link between two other operas with supernatural elements, Carl Maria von Weber's Der Freischütz (1821) and Richard Wagner's The Flying Dutchman (1843). Much of the music is reminiscent of Weber: one example is the Aubry/Malwina duet whose tune also appears in the overture, and there is a marked similarity between the Witches' Sabbath and the Wolf's Glen (Freischütz). Marschner, however, made no attempt to introduce any local colour into his score. On the other hand, Emmy's Legend of the Vampire prefigures Senta's aria about the story of the Flying Dutchman, and the identical description, "der bleiche Mann" (the pallid man), appears in both.

Wagner, in fact, conducted Der Vampyr when at Würzburg in 1833. When his brother, who sang the part of Aubry, complained that the aria "Wie ein schöner Frühlingsmorgen" was not effective enough, Wagner replaced Marschner's original agitato ending with a new allegro of his own. Despite being well received at the time, Wagner's allegro is rarely performed.[5]

The opera is normally performed in the 1924 edition by Hans Pfitzner.[1]

Recordings edit

  • Gisela Rathauscher, Traute Skladal, Liane Synek, Maria Nussbaumer, Kurt Equiluz, Erich Kuchar, Fritz Sperlbauer, Großes Wiener Rundfunkorchester (Viennese Radio Orchestra), conductor Kurt Tenner. Recording from Vienna, 1951. Line Music/Cantus Classics CACD 5.00269 F (supposedly not the revised version by Pfitzner)
  • Ursula Boecke, Albert Kunz, Bruno Manazza, Charles Gillig, Chloe Owen, Erich Arberle, Ernst Gutstein, Gottfried Fehr, Hans Eberg, Nelde Clavel, Bern Radio Orchestra, conductor Hans Haug. Recording from 1963 edited in 1971 on a 4-LP box set together with Hans Heiling, no label, ref. MRF-70-S.
  • Roland Hermann, Arleen Auger, Anna Tomowa-Sintow, Donald Grobe, Kurt Böhme, Jane Marsch, Nikolaus Hillebrand, Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, conductor Fritz Rieger. Live recording from Munich, 1974. OPD-Opera d'Oro 1186
  • Siegmund Nimsgern (Ruthven), Carole Farley (Malvina Davenaut), Anastasia Tomaszewska-Schepis, Josef Protschka (Aubry), Armando Caforio, Galina Pisarenko, Martin Engel, Chorus and Orchestra Sinfonica of Radio Italiana, conductor Günter Neuhold. Live recording from Rome, 1980. HOMMAGE 7001834-HOM (revised version by Pfitzner)
  • Franz Hawlata (Ruthwen), Jonas Kaufmann (Aubry), Regina Klepper, Thomas Dewald, Yoo-Chang Nah, Anke Hoffmann, Hein Heidbüchel, Kay Immer, Franz Gerihsen, Josef Otten, Marietta Schwittay-Niedzwicki, Dirk Schortemeier, WDR Rundfunkchor Köln and WDR Rundfunkorchester Köln, conductor Helmuth Froschauer. Recording from Cologne, 1999. Capriccio C5184, UPC 845221051840

Operas with similar themes edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ a b Loomis, George, "Another kind of vampire romance", New York Times (November 18, 2008)
  2. ^ "Wonderfully modern 'Der Vampyr' - The Boston Globe". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 24 June 2017.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-02-20. Retrieved 2014-06-23.
  4. ^ Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Der Vampyr, 29 March 1828". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  5. ^ Newman, pp. 101-102.

Sources

  • Bradley, Ian (1996). The Complete Annotated Gilbert and Sullivan. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-816503-X.
  • Hartford, Robert, "Marschner: Der Vampyr", Wexford Festival Opera programme book, 1992
  • Holden, Amanda; Kenyon, Nicholas; Walsh, Stephen, eds. (1993). The Viking Opera Guide. London: Viking. ISBN 0-670-81292-7.
  • Marschner, Heinrich, Der Vampyr: Große romantische Oper in zwei Akten. Full score critical edition in two volumes, ed. Egon Voss. Mainz: Schott, 2009.
  • Newman, Ernest, The Life of Richard Wagner London: Cambridge University Press, 1976
  • Palmer, Allen Dean, Heinrich August Marschner, 1795–1861: His life and stage works. Ann Arbor 1980
  • Warrack, John, and Ewan West (1992). The Oxford Dictionary of Opera. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-869164-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Weber, Brigitta, Heinrich Marschner. Königlicher Hofkapellmeister in Hannover. Hannover: Niedersächsische Staatstheater 1995. (Prinzenstraße. 5) ISBN 3-931266-01-X
  • Von der Lucretia zum Vampyr. Neue Quellen zu Marschner. Dokumente zur Entstehung und Rezeption der Lucretia. Vollständige Edition des Reise-Tagebuchs von 1826 bis 1828. Anmerkungen zu Marschners journalistischem Wirken. Hrsg. und kommentiert von Till Gerrit Waidelich. Tutzing: Schneider 1996. ISBN 3-7952-0837-8
  • Heinrich August Marschner. Bericht über das Zittauer Marschner-Symposium. Ein Symposium des Instituts für Kulturelle Infrastruktur Sachsen. Hrsg. von Allmuth Behrendt und Matthias Theodor Vogt. Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag 1998. (Kulturelle Infrastruktur. Bd. 5) ISBN 3-931922-22-7

External links edit

  • Vampyre page with first-night playbill and links to English translation of the libretto and programme-notes for a Los Angeles production
  • 4-act version of the libretto
  • Libretto in English

vampyr, this, article, about, opera, marschner, lindpaintner, opera, lindpaintner, vampire, romantic, opera, acts, heinrich, marschner, german, libretto, wilhelm, august, wohlbrück, marschner, brother, based, play, vampir, oder, totenbraut, 1821, heinrich, lud. This article is about the opera by Marschner For Lindpaintner s opera see Der Vampyr Lindpaintner Der Vampyr The Vampire is a Romantic opera in two acts by Heinrich Marschner The German libretto by Wilhelm August Wohlbruck Marschner s brother in law is based on the play Der Vampir oder die Totenbraut 1821 by Heinrich Ludwig Ritter which itself was based on the short story The Vampyre 1819 by John Polidori The first performance took place on 29 March 1828 in Leipzig where it was a hit 1 Der VampyrOpera by Heinrich MarschnerPoster from 1828TranslationThe VampireLibrettistWilhelm August WohlbruckLanguageGermanBased onHeinrich Ludwig Ritter s Der Vampir oder die TotenbrautPremiere29 March 1828 1828 03 29 Altes Theater Leipzig The opera is still occasionally performed and in 1992 an updated adaptation entitled The Vampyr A Soap Opera with new lyrics by Charles Hart starring Omar Ebrahim and produced by Janet Street Porter was serialised on BBC television In June 2014 OperaHub in Boston premiered a new English language adaptation of Der Vampyr by John J King that spoofs more modern vampire stories such as Twilight Dracula the Vampire Chronicles and Buffy the Vampire Slayer 2 3 Contents 1 Roles 2 Synopsis 2 1 Act 1 2 2 Act 2 3 Instrumentation 4 Music 5 Recordings 6 Operas with similar themes 7 References 8 External linksRoles editRole Voice type Premiere 29 March 1828 4 Conductor Heinrich Marschner Lord Ruthven the vampire baritone Franz Eduard GenastSir Humphrey Davenaut bass KockertMalwina his daughter soprano Wilhelmina StreitSir Edgar Aubry tenor Josef August HoflerSir John Berkley bass GayJanthe his daughter soprano von ZietenGeorge Dibdin a servant in Davenaut s house tenor VogtEmmy Perth soprano Dorothea DevrientToms Blunt baritone Wilhelm FischerSuse his wife mezzo soprano Wilhelmine KockertJames Gadshill tenorRichard Scrop tenorRobert Green bassThe Vampire Master speaking partJohn Perth speaking part ReineckeSynopsis editPlace Scotland Time the eighteenth century Act 1 edit Scene 1 After midnightAt a Witches Sabbath the Vampire Master tells Lord Ruthven that if he cannot sacrifice three virgin brides within the next 24 hours he will die If he can he will be granted another year of life The clock strikes one and Ruthven s first victim Janthe arrives for a clandestine meeting although she is due to marry another on the following day Berkley having discovered that she is missing is searching for her with his men and Ruthven hides with her in a cave Her screams alert the search party and the body and the Vampire are discovered Berkley stabs Ruthven and leaves him to die but he is discovered by Aubry whose life had been saved by Ruthven in the past Ruthven pleads with Aubry to drag him into the moonlight so that he can revive and Aubry while doing so realises that Ruthven is a vampire He has to swear not to reveal this secret for twenty four hours or he will become a vampire too Scene 2 Next morningThe 18 year old Malwina and Aubry with whom she is in love are told by Davenaut that she must marry the Earl of Marsden Aubry recognises the Earl as Lord Ruthven but is told that he is Ruthven s brother who has been abroad for some time Aubry however recognises a wound that proves that the Earl really is Ruthven and is about to denounce him when Ruthven reminds him of his oath and the consequences that will follow if he breaks it The preparations for Malwina s marriage to Marsden begin Act 2 edit Scene 1 Near Marsden castleEmmy awaits her husband to be George News of Janthe s gruesome death emerges and Emmy recounts the legend of the Vampire Ruthven appears and impresses the villagers with his largesse He flirts with Emmy until interrupted by George he departs though by then he has extracted a promise from Emmy that she will dance with him later Scene 2Aubry tries to persuade Ruthven to give up his claim to Malwina but is again reminded of the fate that awaits if he breaks his oath Ruthven in a soliloquy rails against the torments that a Vampire must face Scene 3Aubry is torn by his choice between breaking his oath and saving Malwina or keeping quiet and losing her to the Vampire George asks Aubry to use his influence to stop Marsden from seducing Emmy Aubry warns George that he must keep watch over Emmy but already she is being led into the forest by Ruthven Scene 4 Outside the innBlunt Gadshill Scrop and Green sing of the pleasures of drink Blunt s wife Suse upbraids the men to the delight of the onlookers but a dishevelled George arrives recounting how he followed Emmy and Marsden only to find him standing over her dead body He had shot the Earl immediately leaving him to die in the moonlight The villagers express their sympathy and sorrow Scene 5 In Davenaut s castleMalwina is to be married to Marsden before midnight Aubry warns her that she is in danger and she puts her trust in God The wedding guests arrive followed by Ruthven who apologises for his lateness Malwina and Aubry make one last appeal to Davenaut who throws Aubry out and orders the wedding to proceed A thunderstorm approaches and Aubry returns having decided to reveal Ruthven s secret at no matter what cost to himself Suddenly the clock strikes one and Aubry released from his oath reveals that Marsden is Lord Ruthven the Vampire Ruthven having failed in his task is struck by lightning and descends into Hell Now Davenaut asks Malwina to forgive him and consents to her marriage to Aubry to general rejoicing Instrumentation editMarschner scored the opera for two piccolos and two flutes not doubling two oboes two clarinets two bassoons serpent four horns two clarion natural trumpets three trombones timpani tamtam and strings together with two offstage horns and two offstage trumpets Music editApart from some references to Beethoven and in the Ruthven Emmy George scene a similarity with Don Giovanni Zerlina Masetto Marschner s opera is a notable link between two other operas with supernatural elements Carl Maria von Weber s Der Freischutz 1821 and Richard Wagner s The Flying Dutchman 1843 Much of the music is reminiscent of Weber one example is the Aubry Malwina duet whose tune also appears in the overture and there is a marked similarity between the Witches Sabbath and the Wolf s Glen Freischutz Marschner however made no attempt to introduce any local colour into his score On the other hand Emmy s Legend of the Vampire prefigures Senta s aria about the story of the Flying Dutchman and the identical description der bleiche Mann the pallid man appears in both Wagner in fact conducted Der Vampyr when at Wurzburg in 1833 When his brother who sang the part of Aubry complained that the aria Wie ein schoner Fruhlingsmorgen was not effective enough Wagner replaced Marschner s original agitato ending with a new allegro of his own Despite being well received at the time Wagner s allegro is rarely performed 5 The opera is normally performed in the 1924 edition by Hans Pfitzner 1 Recordings editGisela Rathauscher Traute Skladal Liane Synek Maria Nussbaumer Kurt Equiluz Erich Kuchar Fritz Sperlbauer Grosses Wiener Rundfunkorchester Viennese Radio Orchestra conductor Kurt Tenner Recording from Vienna 1951 Line Music Cantus Classics CACD 5 00269 F supposedly not the revised version by Pfitzner Ursula Boecke Albert Kunz Bruno Manazza Charles Gillig Chloe Owen Erich Arberle Ernst Gutstein Gottfried Fehr Hans Eberg Nelde Clavel Bern Radio Orchestra conductor Hans Haug Recording from 1963 edited in 1971 on a 4 LP box set together with Hans Heiling no label ref MRF 70 S Roland Hermann Arleen Auger Anna Tomowa Sintow Donald Grobe Kurt Bohme Jane Marsch Nikolaus Hillebrand Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra conductor Fritz Rieger Live recording from Munich 1974 OPD Opera d Oro 1186 Siegmund Nimsgern Ruthven Carole Farley Malvina Davenaut Anastasia Tomaszewska Schepis Josef Protschka Aubry Armando Caforio Galina Pisarenko Martin Engel Chorus and Orchestra Sinfonica of Radio Italiana conductor Gunter Neuhold Live recording from Rome 1980 HOMMAGE 7001834 HOM revised version by Pfitzner Franz Hawlata Ruthwen Jonas Kaufmann Aubry Regina Klepper Thomas Dewald Yoo Chang Nah Anke Hoffmann Hein Heidbuchel Kay Immer Franz Gerihsen Josef Otten Marietta Schwittay Niedzwicki Dirk Schortemeier WDR Rundfunkchor Koln and WDR Rundfunkorchester Koln conductor Helmuth Froschauer Recording from Cologne 1999 Capriccio C5184 UPC 845221051840Operas with similar themes editOther early 19th century vampire operas were Silvestro de Palma s I vampiri 1812 Martin Joseph Mengal s Le vampire 1826 and Lindpaintner s Der Vampyr 1828 References editNotes a b Loomis George Another kind of vampire romance New York Times November 18 2008 Wonderfully modern Der Vampyr The Boston Globe The Boston Globe Retrieved 24 June 2017 OperaHub Der Vampyr Archived from the original on 2015 02 20 Retrieved 2014 06 23 Casaglia Gherardo 2005 Der Vampyr 29 March 1828 L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian Newman pp 101 102 Sources Bradley Ian 1996 The Complete Annotated Gilbert and Sullivan Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 816503 X Hartford Robert Marschner Der Vampyr Wexford Festival Opera programme book 1992 Holden Amanda Kenyon Nicholas Walsh Stephen eds 1993 The Viking Opera Guide London Viking ISBN 0 670 81292 7 Marschner Heinrich Der Vampyr Grosse romantische Oper in zwei Akten Full score critical edition in two volumes ed Egon Voss Mainz Schott 2009 Newman Ernest The Life of Richard Wagner London Cambridge University Press 1976 Palmer Allen Dean Heinrich August Marschner 1795 1861 His life and stage works Ann Arbor 1980 Warrack John and Ewan West 1992 The Oxford Dictionary of Opera Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 869164 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Weber Brigitta Heinrich Marschner Koniglicher Hofkapellmeister in Hannover Hannover Niedersachsische Staatstheater 1995 Prinzenstrasse 5 ISBN 3 931266 01 X Von der Lucretia zum Vampyr Neue Quellen zu Marschner Dokumente zur Entstehung und Rezeption der Lucretia Vollstandige Edition des Reise Tagebuchs von 1826 bis 1828 Anmerkungen zu Marschners journalistischem Wirken Hrsg und kommentiert von Till Gerrit Waidelich Tutzing Schneider 1996 ISBN 3 7952 0837 8 Heinrich August Marschner Bericht uber das Zittauer Marschner Symposium Ein Symposium des Instituts fur Kulturelle Infrastruktur Sachsen Hrsg von Allmuth Behrendt und Matthias Theodor Vogt Leipzig Leipziger Universitatsverlag 1998 Kulturelle Infrastruktur Bd 5 ISBN 3 931922 22 7External links editVampyre page with first night playbill and links to English translation of the libretto and programme notes for a Los Angeles production 4 act version of the libretto Libretto in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Der Vampyr amp oldid 1172914503, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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