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William Tell (opera)

William Tell (French: Guillaume Tell; Italian: Guglielmo Tell) is a French-language opera in four acts by Italian composer Gioachino Rossini to a libretto by Victor-Joseph Étienne de Jouy and L. F. Bis, based on Friedrich Schiller's play Wilhelm Tell, which, in turn, drew on the William Tell legend. The opera was Rossini's last, although he lived for nearly 40 more years. Fabio Luisi said that Rossini planned for Guillaume Tell to be his last opera even as he composed it.[1] The often-performed overture in four sections features a depiction of a storm and a vivacious finale, the "March of the Swiss Soldiers".

Guillaume Tell
William Tell
Opera by Gioachino Rossini
Costume designs by Eugène Du Faget for the original production: Laure Cinti-Damoreau as Mathilde, Adolphe Nourrit as Arnold Melchtal, and Nicolas Levasseur as Walter Furst
Librettist
LanguageFrench
Based onWilhelm Tell
by Friedrich Schiller
Premiere
3 August 1829 (1829-08-03)

Paris Opéra archivist Charles Malherbe discovered the original orchestral score of the opera at a secondhand book seller's shop, resulting in its being acquired by the Paris Conservatoire in 1900.[2]

Performance history edit

 
1829 lithograph of Rossini

Guillaume Tell was first performed by the Paris Opéra at the Salle Le Peletier on 3 August 1829, but within three performances cuts were being made and after a year only three acts were performed.[3] The opera's length, roughly four hours of music, and casting requirements, such as the high range required for the tenor part, have contributed to the difficulty of producing the work.[4] When performed, the opera is often cut. Performances have been given in both French and Italian. Political concerns have also contributed to the varying fortunes of the work.

In Italy, because the work glorified a revolutionary figure against authority, the opera encountered difficulties with the Italian censors, and the number of productions in Italy was limited. The Teatro San Carlo produced the opera in 1833, but then did not give another production for around 50 years. The first Venice production, at the Teatro La Fenice, was not until 1856. By contrast, in Vienna, in spite of censorship problems there, the Vienna Court Opera gave 422 performances over the years 1830 to 1907.[5] As Hofer, or the Tell of the Tyrol, the opera was first performed at Drury Lane in London on 1 May 1830 (in English), with a production in Italian following in 1839 at Her Majesty's, and in French at Covent Garden in 1845.[6] In New York, William Tell was first presented on 19 September 1831.[7] It was revived at the Metropolitan Opera in 1923 with Rosa Ponselle and Giovanni Martinelli, and there were revivals during the 1930s in Milan, Rome, Paris, Berlin and Florence.[6] When the opera was performed at Gran Teatre del Liceu (Barcelona) in 1893, an anarchist threw two Orsini bombs in the theatre.[8]

In the later 20th century there were major productions in Florence (1972), Geneva (1979, 1991), La Scala (1988), Théâtre des Champs-Élysées (1989), Covent Garden (1990), and then Opéra Bastille (2003)[3] as well as at the Sportspalace in Pesaro (lasting over 5 hours, 1995). In 2010 there was an important revival of the opera, when it opened the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia's season, under Antonio Pappano.[9] This performance was of the French version, with some cuts to particularly the fourth act (which Pappano noted had been approved by Rossini himself).[10] A live recording of this concert performance was released in 2011, and the production was transferred to The Proms in July of that year, with Michele Pertusi taking on the title role, Patricia Bardon[11] as Hedwige, Nicolas Courjal as Gessler, and Mark Stone as Leuthold. The performance was very well reviewed, and marked the first full performance of the work in the history of the Proms.[12]

A co-production by the Dutch National Opera and the Metropolitan Opera New York of the opera in the original French opened at the Met in October 2016 with Gerald Finley in the title role.[13][14]

According to an anecdote, when an admirer told the composer that he had heard his opera the previous night, Rossini replied "What? The whole of it?".[6] Another version of the story refers only to act 2.[3] In 1864 Offenbach quoted the patriotic trio from act 2, "Lorsque la Grèce est un champ de carnage" in La belle Hélène.[3]

Overture edit

The famous overture to the opera is often heard independently of the complete work.[15] Its high-energy finale, "March of the Swiss Soldiers", is particularly familiar through its use in the American radio and television shows of The Lone Ranger. Several portions of the overture were used prominently in the films A Clockwork Orange and The Eagle Shooting Heroes; in addition, Dmitri Shostakovich quotes the main theme of the finale in the first movement of his 15th symphony. The overture has four parts, each linked to the next:

  • "The Prelude (Dawn)" is written only for the cello section (including parts for five soloists), the double basses, and the timpani, in a slow tempo and in E major.
  • "The Storm" is a dynamic section played by the full orchestra, with backup from the trombones, in E minor.
  • The "Ranz des Vaches", or "call to the dairy cows", features the cor anglais (English horn) and the flute. It is in G major.
  • The finale ("March of the Swiss Soldiers") is an ultra-dynamic "cavalry charge" galop heralded by horns and trumpets, and is played by the full orchestra in E major.

Roles edit

Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 3 August 1829
Conductor: Henri Valentino[16]
Guillaume Tell baritone Henri-Bernard Dabadie
Hedwige, his wife mezzo-soprano Mlle Mori
Jemmy, his son soprano Louise-Zulme Dabadie
Mathilde, a Habsburg princess soprano Laure Cinti-Damoreau
Arnold Melchtal tenor Adolphe Nourrit
Melchtal, his father bass Monsieur Bonel
Gesler, the Austrian Governor of the cantons of Uri and Schwyz bass Alexandre Prévost
Walter Furst bass Nicolas Levasseur
Ruodi, a fisherman tenor Alexis Dupont
Leuthold, a shepherd bass Ferdinand Prévôt
Rodolphe, Captain of Gesler's guard tenor Jean-Étienne-Auguste Massol
A hunter baritone Beltrame Pouilley
Peasants, shepherds, knights, pages, ladies, soldiers, bridal couples

Instrumentation edit

The instrumentation is:

Synopsis edit

Place: Austrian-occupied Switzerland
Time: 13th century[17]

Act 1 edit

 
A Mountain Village, set design for Guglielmo Tell, act 1 scene 1 (1899)
 
Set design for act 1 in a 19th-century production

By the shore of Lake Lucerne, at Bürglen in the canton of Uri

It is the day of the Shepherd Festival, in May, near Lake Lucerne. The action opens on an idyllic scene, with the local peasants busily preparing chalets for three newly wedded couples, singing as they work (Quel jour serein le ciel présage – "What a serene day the sky foretells"). The fisherman, Ruodi, sings a gentle love song from his boat (to orchestral accompaniment from the harps and flutes). Tell stands apart from the general merriment, however: he is consumed with ennui at Switzerland's continued oppression (Il chante, et l'Helvétie pleure sa liberté – "He sings, and Helvetia mourns her liberty"). His wife and son add their own interpretation of Ruodi's song, presaging the coming nautical dramas.

The activities are interrupted by the ranz des vaches resounding from the hills (often performed by off-stage horns, and echoing in its theme the ranz de vaches in the opera's overture). The horns also signal the arrival of Melchthal, a respected elder of the canton. He is persuaded by Hedwige to bless the couples at the celebration. However, his son Arnold, though of marriageable age, is not participating and is evidently uncomfortable. The entire on-stage cast sings in celebration (Célebrons tous en ce beau jour, le travail, l'hymen et l'amour – "Let all celebrate, on this glorious day, work, marriage and love"). Tell invites Melchthal into his chalet; before they move off, Melchthal chides his son for his failure to marry.

His father's rebuke provokes an outpouring of despair from Arnold: in his recitative we learn of his previous service in the forces of the Austrian rulers, his rescue of Mathilde from an avalanche, and the conflict between his love for her and his shame at serving the "perfidious power". Horn fanfares herald the approach of Gesler, the Austrian governor, whom the Swiss detest, and his entourage. Arnold moves off to greet their arrival, as Mathilde will accompany them, but is stopped by Tell. Inquiring as to where Arnold is going, Tell persuades him to consider joining the planned rebellion against the governor. The expressive duet in which this takes place again shows the tension Arnold feels between his love for Mathilde and the "fatherland" (Ah! Mathilde, idole de mon âme!...Ô ma patrie, mon cœur te sacrifie... – "Ah, Mathilde, idol of my soul...O my fatherland, my heart sacrifices to you..."). By the end of the exchange, Arnold is prepared to confront Gesler the moment he arrives; Tell persuades him to at least let the festival pass in peace, but knows he has gained a convert to the cause of freedom.

The villagers then reassemble, and Melchthal blesses the couples. The blessing is followed by singing, dancing and an archery contest that Tell's young son Jemmy wins with his first shot – a result of his "paternal heritage". It is Jemmy who notices the hurried approach of the pale, trembling and wounded shepherd, Leuthold, who killed one of Gesler's soldiers to defend his daughter and is fleeing the governor's forces. He seeks to escape to the opposite shore, but the cowardly Ruodi refuses to take him in his boat, fearing that the current and the rocks make approaching the opposite bank impossible. Tell returns from searching for the departed Arnold just in time: even as the soldiers approach, calling for Leuthold's blood, Tell takes Leuthold into the boat and out onto the water. Gesler's guards arrive, led by Rodolphe, who is further incensed by the villagers' prayers and their evident joy at the escape. Melchthal urges the villagers not to tell Rodolphe who it was who aided Leuthold, and is taken prisoner by the guards. As Rodolphe and the soldiers promise retribution (Que du ravage, que du pillage sur ce rivage pèse l'horreur!), Tell's family and friends take comfort in Tell's skills as an archer, which will surely save them.

Act 2 edit

On the heights of Rütli, overlooking the Lake and the Cantons

 
Set design for act 2 by Charles-Antoine Cambon

A hunting party of ladies and gentlemen, accompanied by soldiers, hears the sound of the shepherds returning from the hills as night approaches. Hearing the Governor's horns, they too take their leave. Mathilde, however, lingers, believing she has glimpsed Arnold in the vicinity. She is, like Arnold, anguished by the love she feels for her rescuer, and contemplates it as she sings (Sombre forêt, désert triste et sauvage – "Somber forest, sad and savage wilderness"). Arnold appears, and each confesses to the other their desire for this meeting. In their duet (Oui, vous l'arrachez à mon âme – "Yes, you wring from my soul"), they recognise their mutual passion, but also the obstacles they face. Urging him to "return to the fields of glory", Mathilde assures him of the eventual acceptability of his suit, and leaves at the approach of Tell and Walter. They question Arnold as to why he loves Mathilde, a member of the oppressing Austrians. Arnold, offended by their spying, declares his intention to continue fighting for the Austrians, and thus gain glory, rather than liberty. However, when Walter tells him that Gesler has executed his father Melchthal, Arnold vows revenge (Qu'entends-je? ô crime! – "What do I hear? O crime!").

As the three men affirm their dedication – "to independence or death" – they hear the sound of someone else approaching. It is the men of the canton of Unterwalden coming to join the fight, and describing their journey in a rather gentle refrain (Nous avons su braver). In quick succession, they are joined by the men of Schwyz (En ces temps de malheurs) and Uri (Guillaume, tu le vois). The gathering is complete, and the tone and tempo of the finale rises as the men of the three cantons affirm their willingness to fight or die for the freedom of Switzerland (Jurons, jurons par nos dangers – "Let us swear, let us swear by our dangers"). Plans are made to arm the cantons and to rise up when "the beacons of vengeance burn".

Act 3 edit

 
Tell prepares to shoot the apple off Jemmy's head

Scene 1: A ruined/deserted chapel in the Altdorf palace grounds

Arnold has come to tell Mathilde that, instead of leaving for battle, he is staying to avenge his father, and thereby renouncing both glory and Mathilde. When he tells her that it was Gesler who had his father executed, she denounces his crime, and recognises the impossibility of their love (Pour notre amour, plus d'espérance – "All hope for our love has gone"). Hearing preparations for the coming festival in the palace grounds, they bid a fond farewell to each other (Sur la rive étrangère – "Though upon a foreign shore").

Scene 2: The main square at Altdorf

The day is the hundredth anniversary of Austrian rule in Switzerland. Soldiers sing of the glories of Gesler and the Emperor. In commemoration, Gesler has had his hat placed on top of a pole and the Swiss are ordered and then forced to pay homage to the hat. Gesler commands that there should be dancing and singing to mark the century during which the empire has "deigned to sustain [Swiss] weakness", and a variety of dances and choruses follow. Soldiers have noticed Tell and his son in the crowd, refusing to pay homage to the hat, and drag him forward. Rodolphe recognises him as the man who assisted in Leuthold's escape, and Gesler orders his arrest. In a complex choir and quartet, the soldiers express their hesitation at arresting this famed archer (C'est là cet archer redoutable – "It's that redoubtable archer"), Gesler forces them to act, and Tell urges Jemmy to flee, but he prefers to stay with his father.

Gesler notices the affection Tell has for his son, and has Jemmy seized. Inspired, he devises his test: Tell must shoot an arrow through an apple balanced on Jemmy's head – should he refuse, both of them will die. The assembled Swiss are horrified at this cruelty, but Jemmy urges his father to courage, and refuses to be tied up for the challenge. Resigned, Tell retrieves his bow from the soldiers, but takes two arrows from his quiver and hides one of them. He sings an anguished aria to Jemmy, instructing him (Sois immobile – "Stay completely still"), and the two separate. Finally, Tell draws his bow, shoots, and drives the arrow through the apple and into the stake. The people acclaim his victory, and Gesler is enraged. Noticing the second arrow, he demands to know what Tell intended for it. Tell confesses his desire to kill Gesler with the second arrow, and both he and Jemmy are seized for execution.

Mathilde enters and claims Jemmy in the name of the emperor, refusing to let a child die (Vous ne l'obtiendrez pas – "You will not have him"). Gesler announces his intention to take Tell across Lake Lucerne to the fort at Kusnac/Küssnacht, and there to throw him to the reptiles in the lake. Rodolphe expresses concern at attempting a journey on the lake in the storm, but Gesler intends to force Tell, an expert boatman, to pilot the vessel. They leave, amid conflicting cries of "Anathema on Gesler" from the people, and "Long live Gesler" from the soldiers.

Act 4 edit

Scene 1: Old Melchthal's house

 
Tell pushes the boat back

Arnold, aware of Tell's arrest, is dispirited, but, set on revenge, draws strength from being in his father's former home and sings a moving lament (Ne m'abandonne point, espoir de la vengeance... Asile héréditaire... – "Do not abandon me, hope of vengeance... Home of my forefathers"). Would-be "confederates" arrive, sharing and reinforcing his hope of vengeance. Revived, Arnold points them to the weapons cache that his father and Tell had prepared. Seeing the men armed, Arnold launches into a hugely demanding aria (Amis, amis, secondez ma vengeance – "Friends, friends, assist my vengeance"), replete with multiple and sustained top Cs. Resolved, they leave to storm Altdorf and free Tell.

Scene 2: The rocky shore of Lake Lucerne

Hedwige is wandering by the lake, distraught. She tells the other women she intends to beg Gesler for Tell's life. In the distance, she hears Jemmy calling. Her son enters, along with Mathilde, whom Hedwige entreats for assistance. In some versions, Mathilde, Jemmy and Hedwige sing a moving trio (Je rends a votre amour un fils digne de vous – "I return to your love a son worthy of you"). Jemmy tells his mother that Tell is no longer in Altdorf, but on the lake, at which point Hedwige begins precipitously to mourn (Sauve Guillaume! Il meurt victime de son amour pour son pays – "Save William! He dies a victim of his love for his country"). Leuthold arrives, telling the assembled villagers that the boat carrying Tell, Gesler and the soldiers is being driven towards the rocks by a storm that has broken over the lake – Leuthold believes that the chains have been removed from Tell's hands, so that he might pilot the boat to safety.

The boat pulls into view, and Tell jumps ashore before pushing the boat back. He is amazed to see his house burning in the distance. Jemmy tells him that, for want of a beacon, he set fire to their home but, before doing so, he retrieved his father's bow and arrows. Gesler and the soldiers come into view, intent on recapturing Tell, who kills Gesler with a single shot and the cry, "Let Switzerland breathe!" Walter and a group of confederates arrive, having seen the burning house. Tell informs them of Gesler's death, but cautions that Altdorf still stands. Arnold and his band enter, and break the happy news: they have taken Altdorf. Arnold sees Mathilde, who declares herself "disabused of false grandeur" and ready to join the fight for liberty at his side.

The clouds break, and the sun shines on a pastoral scene of wild beauty. The gathered Swiss fighters and women sing a paean to the magnificence of nature and the return of freedom in a lyrical C major aria (Tout change et grandit en ces lieux... Liberté, redescends des cieux – "Everything is changing and growing grander in this place... Liberty, descend again from heaven") as the ranz des vaches motif returns once again and finally.

Noted excerpts edit

  • Overture
  • "Ah, Mathilde, je t'aime et je t'adore" (Arnold, act 1)
  • "Sombre forêt" (Mathilde, act 2)
  • "Oui, vous l'arrachez à mon âme" (Mathilde, Arnold, act 2)
  • "Quand l'Helvétie est un champs de supplice... Ses jours qu'ils ont osé proscire... Embrasons-nous d'un saint délire" (Tell, Arnold, Walter, act 2)
  • "Pour notre amour... Sur la rive étrangère" (Mathilde, act 3)
  • "Sois immobile" (Tell, act 3)
  • "Asile héréditaire... Amis, amis, secondez ma vengeance" (Arnold, act 4)

During the Crimean War John MacLeod transcribed "La tua danza sì leggiera", a chorus part in the third act, to create the tune "The Green Hills of Tyrol", a well-known retreat march in the Scottish bagpipe tradition. The musician Andy Stewart added lyrics and the song in 1961 became a hit under the name "A Scottish Soldier".

Recordings edit

In popular culture edit

Characters and scenes from the opera William Tell are recognisable on the court cards and aces of William Tell cards, playing cards that were designed in Hungary around 1835. These cards spread across the Austro-Hungarian Empire and are still the most common German-suited playing cards in that part of the world today. Characters portrayed on the Obers and Unters include: Hermann Gessler, Walter Fürst, Rudolf Harras and William Tell.[18]

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Interview on Toll Brothers Metropolitan Opera broadcast of Guillaume Tell, rebroadcast on 18 March 2017.
  2. ^ Charles Malherbe, The Monthly Musical Record, Vol. 39, 1900. on books.google.com. Retrieved 11 December 2013
  3. ^ a b c d Kaminski 2003, pp. 1355–1358
  4. ^ Fregosi, William (1993). "Guglielmo Tell. Gioachino Rossini". The Opera Quarterly. 9 (4): 259–264. doi:10.1093/oq/9.4.259. Retrieved 21 October 2007.
  5. ^ Braunstein, Joseph (1952). "Reviews of Records – Rossini: William Tell". The Musical Quarterly. 38 (4): 667–671. doi:10.1093/mq/xxxviii.4.667-b. Retrieved 21 October 2007.
  6. ^ a b c Kobbé & Lascelles 1954, pp. 370–373
  7. ^ Gossett & Brauner 2001, p. 794.
  8. ^ "Barcelona, 1893–1897". International Institute of Social History. 1 November 2014. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
  9. ^ "Report from Santa Cecilia", 3 September 2010, on santacecilias.it
  10. ^ Pappano, Antonio, (15 July 2011), "Proms take a bite of William Tell", The Guardian (London)
  11. ^ Patricia Bardon on Opera Rara
  12. ^ Seckerson, Edward, (17 July 2011), "Prom 2: Rossini – William Tell, Royal Albert Hall, London", The Independent (London).
  13. ^ Tommasini, Anthony (19 October 2016). "Review: A New, Abstract Guillaume Tell at the Met Opera". The New York Times. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  14. ^ "Guillaume Tell – The Metropolitan Opera (2016)". Opera Online. Retrieved 8 April 2018.
  15. ^ Kirby, Percival R., "Rossini's Overture to William Tell" (April 1952). Music & Letters, 33 (2): pp. 132–140.
  16. ^ Manuscript letter with Rossini's autograph signature from Rossini to Valentino (Paris, 9 August 1829), thanking Valentino for preparing and conducting the orchestra (BnF catalogue général – Notice bibliographique); Castil-Blaze 1855, p. 211; Pougin 1880; Chouquet 1889; Tamvaco 2000, pp. 56, 619; Cooper & Ellis 2001. Some authors have credited François Habeneck as the conductor: Wolff 1962, p. 105; Weinstock 1968, p. 164; Macdonald 2001; Casaglia 2005; Osborne 2007, p. 110.
  17. ^ Osborne 1994, p. 131.
  18. ^ Pattern Sheet 90 – Tell pattern Type I at i-p-c-s.org. Retrieved 29 November 2019.

Sources

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Guillaume Tell: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  • Libretto of Guillaume Tell at Stanford OperaGlass (in French)
  • Libretto of Guglielmo Tell at Stanford OperaGlass (in Italian)
  • Libretto of Guillaume Tell, murashev.com (in French and English)]
  • Portrait of the opera in the Online opera guide www.opera-inside.com
  • Wilhelm Tell, 1837 publication, German, digitized by BYU on archive.org
  • Wilhelm Tell, Danish, digitized by BYU on archive.org

william, tell, opera, this, article, about, rossini, opera, grétry, opera, guillaume, tell, grétry, other, uses, william, tell, disambiguation, william, tell, french, guillaume, tell, italian, guglielmo, tell, french, language, opera, four, acts, italian, comp. This article is about the Rossini opera For the Gretry opera see Guillaume Tell Gretry For other uses see William Tell disambiguation William Tell French Guillaume Tell Italian Guglielmo Tell is a French language opera in four acts by Italian composer Gioachino Rossini to a libretto by Victor Joseph Etienne de Jouy and L F Bis based on Friedrich Schiller s play Wilhelm Tell which in turn drew on the William Tell legend The opera was Rossini s last although he lived for nearly 40 more years Fabio Luisi said that Rossini planned for Guillaume Tell to be his last opera even as he composed it 1 The often performed overture in four sections features a depiction of a storm and a vivacious finale the March of the Swiss Soldiers Guillaume TellWilliam TellOpera by Gioachino RossiniCostume designs by Eugene Du Faget for the original production Laure Cinti Damoreau as Mathilde Adolphe Nourrit as Arnold Melchtal and Nicolas Levasseur as Walter FurstLibrettistEtienne de Jouy Hippolyte BisLanguageFrenchBased onWilhelm Tellby Friedrich SchillerPremiere3 August 1829 1829 08 03 Salle Le Peletier Paris Paris Opera archivist Charles Malherbe discovered the original orchestral score of the opera at a secondhand book seller s shop resulting in its being acquired by the Paris Conservatoire in 1900 2 Contents 1 Performance history 2 Overture 3 Roles 4 Instrumentation 5 Synopsis 5 1 Act 1 5 2 Act 2 5 3 Act 3 5 4 Act 4 6 Noted excerpts 7 Recordings 8 In popular culture 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksPerformance history edit nbsp 1829 lithograph of Rossini Guillaume Tell was first performed by the Paris Opera at the Salle Le Peletier on 3 August 1829 but within three performances cuts were being made and after a year only three acts were performed 3 The opera s length roughly four hours of music and casting requirements such as the high range required for the tenor part have contributed to the difficulty of producing the work 4 When performed the opera is often cut Performances have been given in both French and Italian Political concerns have also contributed to the varying fortunes of the work In Italy because the work glorified a revolutionary figure against authority the opera encountered difficulties with the Italian censors and the number of productions in Italy was limited The Teatro San Carlo produced the opera in 1833 but then did not give another production for around 50 years The first Venice production at the Teatro La Fenice was not until 1856 By contrast in Vienna in spite of censorship problems there the Vienna Court Opera gave 422 performances over the years 1830 to 1907 5 As Hofer or the Tell of the Tyrol the opera was first performed at Drury Lane in London on 1 May 1830 in English with a production in Italian following in 1839 at Her Majesty s and in French at Covent Garden in 1845 6 In New York William Tell was first presented on 19 September 1831 7 It was revived at the Metropolitan Opera in 1923 with Rosa Ponselle and Giovanni Martinelli and there were revivals during the 1930s in Milan Rome Paris Berlin and Florence 6 When the opera was performed at Gran Teatre del Liceu Barcelona in 1893 an anarchist threw two Orsini bombs in the theatre 8 In the later 20th century there were major productions in Florence 1972 Geneva 1979 1991 La Scala 1988 Theatre des Champs Elysees 1989 Covent Garden 1990 and then Opera Bastille 2003 3 as well as at the Sportspalace in Pesaro lasting over 5 hours 1995 In 2010 there was an important revival of the opera when it opened the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia s season under Antonio Pappano 9 This performance was of the French version with some cuts to particularly the fourth act which Pappano noted had been approved by Rossini himself 10 A live recording of this concert performance was released in 2011 and the production was transferred to The Proms in July of that year with Michele Pertusi taking on the title role Patricia Bardon 11 as Hedwige Nicolas Courjal as Gessler and Mark Stone as Leuthold The performance was very well reviewed and marked the first full performance of the work in the history of the Proms 12 A co production by the Dutch National Opera and the Metropolitan Opera New York of the opera in the original French opened at the Met in October 2016 with Gerald Finley in the title role 13 14 According to an anecdote when an admirer told the composer that he had heard his opera the previous night Rossini replied What The whole of it 6 Another version of the story refers only to act 2 3 In 1864 Offenbach quoted the patriotic trio from act 2 Lorsque la Grece est un champ de carnage in La belle Helene 3 Overture editMain article William Tell Overture nbsp Overture source source Chicago Symphony Orchestra Fritz Reiner conducting 1959 Problems playing this file See media help The famous overture to the opera is often heard independently of the complete work 15 Its high energy finale March of the Swiss Soldiers is particularly familiar through its use in the American radio and television shows of The Lone Ranger Several portions of the overture were used prominently in the films A Clockwork Orange and The Eagle Shooting Heroes in addition Dmitri Shostakovich quotes the main theme of the finale in the first movement of his 15th symphony The overture has four parts each linked to the next The Prelude Dawn is written only for the cello section including parts for five soloists the double basses and the timpani in a slow tempo and in E major The Storm is a dynamic section played by the full orchestra with backup from the trombones in E minor The Ranz des Vaches or call to the dairy cows features the cor anglais English horn and the flute It is in G major The finale March of the Swiss Soldiers is an ultra dynamic cavalry charge galop heralded by horns and trumpets and is played by the full orchestra in E major Roles editRoles voice types premiere cast Role Voice type Premiere cast 3 August 1829Conductor Henri Valentino 16 Guillaume Tell baritone Henri Bernard Dabadie Hedwige his wife mezzo soprano Mlle Mori Jemmy his son soprano Louise Zulme Dabadie Mathilde a Habsburg princess soprano Laure Cinti Damoreau Arnold Melchtal tenor Adolphe Nourrit Melchtal his father bass Monsieur Bonel Gesler the Austrian Governor of the cantons of Uri and Schwyz bass Alexandre Prevost Walter Furst bass Nicolas Levasseur Ruodi a fisherman tenor Alexis Dupont Leuthold a shepherd bass Ferdinand Prevot Rodolphe Captain of Gesler s guard tenor Jean Etienne Auguste Massol A hunter baritone Beltrame Pouilley Peasants shepherds knights pages ladies soldiers bridal couplesInstrumentation editThe instrumentation is Woodwinds a piccolo a flute 2 oboes 1st doubles cor anglais 2 clarinets in A and 2 bassoons Brass 4 horns 2 in G and 2 in E 4 trumpets in E and 3 trombones Percussion 2 timpani triangle bass drum cymbals bell and tam tam Strings first violins second violins viola violoncelli double basses 2 harps On stage 4 hornsSynopsis editPlace Austrian occupied Switzerland Time 13th century 17 Act 1 edit nbsp A Mountain Village set design for Guglielmo Tell act 1 scene 1 1899 nbsp Set design for act 1 in a 19th century production By the shore of Lake Lucerne at Burglen in the canton of UriIt is the day of the Shepherd Festival in May near Lake Lucerne The action opens on an idyllic scene with the local peasants busily preparing chalets for three newly wedded couples singing as they work Quel jour serein le ciel presage What a serene day the sky foretells The fisherman Ruodi sings a gentle love song from his boat to orchestral accompaniment from the harps and flutes Tell stands apart from the general merriment however he is consumed with ennui at Switzerland s continued oppression Il chante et l Helvetie pleure sa liberte He sings and Helvetia mourns her liberty His wife and son add their own interpretation of Ruodi s song presaging the coming nautical dramas The activities are interrupted by the ranz des vaches resounding from the hills often performed by off stage horns and echoing in its theme the ranz de vaches in the opera s overture The horns also signal the arrival of Melchthal a respected elder of the canton He is persuaded by Hedwige to bless the couples at the celebration However his son Arnold though of marriageable age is not participating and is evidently uncomfortable The entire on stage cast sings in celebration Celebrons tous en ce beau jour le travail l hymen et l amour Let all celebrate on this glorious day work marriage and love Tell invites Melchthal into his chalet before they move off Melchthal chides his son for his failure to marry His father s rebuke provokes an outpouring of despair from Arnold in his recitative we learn of his previous service in the forces of the Austrian rulers his rescue of Mathilde from an avalanche and the conflict between his love for her and his shame at serving the perfidious power Horn fanfares herald the approach of Gesler the Austrian governor whom the Swiss detest and his entourage Arnold moves off to greet their arrival as Mathilde will accompany them but is stopped by Tell Inquiring as to where Arnold is going Tell persuades him to consider joining the planned rebellion against the governor The expressive duet in which this takes place again shows the tension Arnold feels between his love for Mathilde and the fatherland Ah Mathilde idole de mon ame O ma patrie mon cœur te sacrifie Ah Mathilde idol of my soul O my fatherland my heart sacrifices to you By the end of the exchange Arnold is prepared to confront Gesler the moment he arrives Tell persuades him to at least let the festival pass in peace but knows he has gained a convert to the cause of freedom The villagers then reassemble and Melchthal blesses the couples The blessing is followed by singing dancing and an archery contest that Tell s young son Jemmy wins with his first shot a result of his paternal heritage It is Jemmy who notices the hurried approach of the pale trembling and wounded shepherd Leuthold who killed one of Gesler s soldiers to defend his daughter and is fleeing the governor s forces He seeks to escape to the opposite shore but the cowardly Ruodi refuses to take him in his boat fearing that the current and the rocks make approaching the opposite bank impossible Tell returns from searching for the departed Arnold just in time even as the soldiers approach calling for Leuthold s blood Tell takes Leuthold into the boat and out onto the water Gesler s guards arrive led by Rodolphe who is further incensed by the villagers prayers and their evident joy at the escape Melchthal urges the villagers not to tell Rodolphe who it was who aided Leuthold and is taken prisoner by the guards As Rodolphe and the soldiers promise retribution Que du ravage que du pillage sur ce rivage pese l horreur Tell s family and friends take comfort in Tell s skills as an archer which will surely save them Act 2 edit On the heights of Rutli overlooking the Lake and the Cantons nbsp Set design for act 2 by Charles Antoine Cambon A hunting party of ladies and gentlemen accompanied by soldiers hears the sound of the shepherds returning from the hills as night approaches Hearing the Governor s horns they too take their leave Mathilde however lingers believing she has glimpsed Arnold in the vicinity She is like Arnold anguished by the love she feels for her rescuer and contemplates it as she sings Sombre foret desert triste et sauvage Somber forest sad and savage wilderness Arnold appears and each confesses to the other their desire for this meeting In their duet Oui vous l arrachez a mon ame Yes you wring from my soul they recognise their mutual passion but also the obstacles they face Urging him to return to the fields of glory Mathilde assures him of the eventual acceptability of his suit and leaves at the approach of Tell and Walter They question Arnold as to why he loves Mathilde a member of the oppressing Austrians Arnold offended by their spying declares his intention to continue fighting for the Austrians and thus gain glory rather than liberty However when Walter tells him that Gesler has executed his father Melchthal Arnold vows revenge Qu entends je o crime What do I hear O crime As the three men affirm their dedication to independence or death they hear the sound of someone else approaching It is the men of the canton of Unterwalden coming to join the fight and describing their journey in a rather gentle refrain Nous avons su braver In quick succession they are joined by the men of Schwyz En ces temps de malheurs and Uri Guillaume tu le vois The gathering is complete and the tone and tempo of the finale rises as the men of the three cantons affirm their willingness to fight or die for the freedom of Switzerland Jurons jurons par nos dangers Let us swear let us swear by our dangers Plans are made to arm the cantons and to rise up when the beacons of vengeance burn Act 3 edit nbsp Tell prepares to shoot the apple off Jemmy s head Scene 1 A ruined deserted chapel in the Altdorf palace groundsArnold has come to tell Mathilde that instead of leaving for battle he is staying to avenge his father and thereby renouncing both glory and Mathilde When he tells her that it was Gesler who had his father executed she denounces his crime and recognises the impossibility of their love Pour notre amour plus d esperance All hope for our love has gone Hearing preparations for the coming festival in the palace grounds they bid a fond farewell to each other Sur la rive etrangere Though upon a foreign shore Scene 2 The main square at AltdorfThe day is the hundredth anniversary of Austrian rule in Switzerland Soldiers sing of the glories of Gesler and the Emperor In commemoration Gesler has had his hat placed on top of a pole and the Swiss are ordered and then forced to pay homage to the hat Gesler commands that there should be dancing and singing to mark the century during which the empire has deigned to sustain Swiss weakness and a variety of dances and choruses follow Soldiers have noticed Tell and his son in the crowd refusing to pay homage to the hat and drag him forward Rodolphe recognises him as the man who assisted in Leuthold s escape and Gesler orders his arrest In a complex choir and quartet the soldiers express their hesitation at arresting this famed archer C est la cet archer redoutable It s that redoubtable archer Gesler forces them to act and Tell urges Jemmy to flee but he prefers to stay with his father Gesler notices the affection Tell has for his son and has Jemmy seized Inspired he devises his test Tell must shoot an arrow through an apple balanced on Jemmy s head should he refuse both of them will die The assembled Swiss are horrified at this cruelty but Jemmy urges his father to courage and refuses to be tied up for the challenge Resigned Tell retrieves his bow from the soldiers but takes two arrows from his quiver and hides one of them He sings an anguished aria to Jemmy instructing him Sois immobile Stay completely still and the two separate Finally Tell draws his bow shoots and drives the arrow through the apple and into the stake The people acclaim his victory and Gesler is enraged Noticing the second arrow he demands to know what Tell intended for it Tell confesses his desire to kill Gesler with the second arrow and both he and Jemmy are seized for execution Mathilde enters and claims Jemmy in the name of the emperor refusing to let a child die Vous ne l obtiendrez pas You will not have him Gesler announces his intention to take Tell across Lake Lucerne to the fort at Kusnac Kussnacht and there to throw him to the reptiles in the lake Rodolphe expresses concern at attempting a journey on the lake in the storm but Gesler intends to force Tell an expert boatman to pilot the vessel They leave amid conflicting cries of Anathema on Gesler from the people and Long live Gesler from the soldiers Act 4 edit Scene 1 Old Melchthal s house nbsp Tell pushes the boat back Arnold aware of Tell s arrest is dispirited but set on revenge draws strength from being in his father s former home and sings a moving lament Ne m abandonne point espoir de la vengeance Asile hereditaire Do not abandon me hope of vengeance Home of my forefathers Would be confederates arrive sharing and reinforcing his hope of vengeance Revived Arnold points them to the weapons cache that his father and Tell had prepared Seeing the men armed Arnold launches into a hugely demanding aria Amis amis secondez ma vengeance Friends friends assist my vengeance replete with multiple and sustained top Cs Resolved they leave to storm Altdorf and free Tell Scene 2 The rocky shore of Lake LucerneHedwige is wandering by the lake distraught She tells the other women she intends to beg Gesler for Tell s life In the distance she hears Jemmy calling Her son enters along with Mathilde whom Hedwige entreats for assistance In some versions Mathilde Jemmy and Hedwige sing a moving trio Je rends a votre amour un fils digne de vous I return to your love a son worthy of you Jemmy tells his mother that Tell is no longer in Altdorf but on the lake at which point Hedwige begins precipitously to mourn Sauve Guillaume Il meurt victime de son amour pour son pays Save William He dies a victim of his love for his country Leuthold arrives telling the assembled villagers that the boat carrying Tell Gesler and the soldiers is being driven towards the rocks by a storm that has broken over the lake Leuthold believes that the chains have been removed from Tell s hands so that he might pilot the boat to safety The boat pulls into view and Tell jumps ashore before pushing the boat back He is amazed to see his house burning in the distance Jemmy tells him that for want of a beacon he set fire to their home but before doing so he retrieved his father s bow and arrows Gesler and the soldiers come into view intent on recapturing Tell who kills Gesler with a single shot and the cry Let Switzerland breathe Walter and a group of confederates arrive having seen the burning house Tell informs them of Gesler s death but cautions that Altdorf still stands Arnold and his band enter and break the happy news they have taken Altdorf Arnold sees Mathilde who declares herself disabused of false grandeur and ready to join the fight for liberty at his side The clouds break and the sun shines on a pastoral scene of wild beauty The gathered Swiss fighters and women sing a paean to the magnificence of nature and the return of freedom in a lyrical C major aria Tout change et grandit en ces lieux Liberte redescends des cieux Everything is changing and growing grander in this place Liberty descend again from heaven as the ranz des vaches motif returns once again and finally Noted excerpts editOverture Ah Mathilde je t aime et je t adore Arnold act 1 Sombre foret Mathilde act 2 Oui vous l arrachez a mon ame Mathilde Arnold act 2 Quand l Helvetie est un champs de supplice Ses jours qu ils ont ose proscire Embrasons nous d un saint delire Tell Arnold Walter act 2 Pour notre amour Sur la rive etrangere Mathilde act 3 Sois immobile Tell act 3 Asile hereditaire Amis amis secondez ma vengeance Arnold act 4 During the Crimean War John MacLeod transcribed La tua danza si leggiera a chorus part in the third act to create the tune The Green Hills of Tyrol a well known retreat march in the Scottish bagpipe tradition The musician Andy Stewart added lyrics and the song in 1961 became a hit under the name A Scottish Soldier Recordings editMain article William Tell discographyIn popular culture editCharacters and scenes from the opera William Tell are recognisable on the court cards and aces of William Tell cards playing cards that were designed in Hungary around 1835 These cards spread across the Austro Hungarian Empire and are still the most common German suited playing cards in that part of the world today Characters portrayed on the Obers and Unters include Hermann Gessler Walter Furst Rudolf Harras and William Tell 18 References editNotes Interview on Toll Brothers Metropolitan Opera broadcast of Guillaume Tell rebroadcast on 18 March 2017 Charles Malherbe The Monthly Musical Record Vol 39 1900 on books google com Retrieved 11 December 2013 a b c d Kaminski 2003 pp 1355 1358 Fregosi William 1993 Guglielmo Tell Gioachino Rossini The Opera Quarterly 9 4 259 264 doi 10 1093 oq 9 4 259 Retrieved 21 October 2007 Braunstein Joseph 1952 Reviews of Records Rossini William Tell The Musical Quarterly 38 4 667 671 doi 10 1093 mq xxxviii 4 667 b Retrieved 21 October 2007 a b c Kobbe amp Lascelles 1954 pp 370 373 Gossett amp Brauner 2001 p 794 Barcelona 1893 1897 International Institute of Social History 1 November 2014 Retrieved 1 November 2014 Report from Santa Cecilia 3 September 2010 on santacecilias it Pappano Antonio 15 July 2011 Proms take a bite of William Tell The Guardian London Patricia Bardon on Opera Rara Seckerson Edward 17 July 2011 Prom 2 Rossini William Tell Royal Albert Hall London The Independent London Tommasini Anthony 19 October 2016 Review A New Abstract Guillaume Tell at the Met Opera The New York Times Retrieved 8 April 2018 Guillaume Tell The Metropolitan Opera 2016 Opera Online Retrieved 8 April 2018 Kirby Percival R Rossini s Overture to William Tell April 1952 Music amp Letters 33 2 pp 132 140 Manuscript letter with Rossini s autograph signature from Rossini to Valentino Paris 9 August 1829 thanking Valentino for preparing and conducting the orchestra BnF catalogue general Notice bibliographique Castil Blaze 1855 p 211 Pougin 1880 Chouquet 1889 Tamvaco 2000 pp 56 619 Cooper amp Ellis 2001 Some authors have credited Francois Habeneck as the conductor Wolff 1962 p 105 Weinstock 1968 p 164 Macdonald 2001 Casaglia 2005 Osborne 2007 p 110 Osborne 1994 p 131 Pattern Sheet 90 Tell pattern Type I at i p c s org Retrieved 29 November 2019 Sources Casaglia Gherardo 2005 Guillaume Tell 3 August 1829 L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian Castil Blaze 1855 L Academie imperiale de musique histoire litteraire musicale politique et galante de ce theatre de 1645 a 1855 Vol 2 Paris Castil Blaze Chouquet Gustave 1889 Valentino Henri Justin Armand Joseph A Dictionary of Music and Musicians Vol 4 London Macmillan p 214 Cooper Jeffrey Ellis Katharine 2001 Valentino Henri Justin Armand Joseph in Sadie 2001 Gossett Philip Brauner Patricia 2001 Gioachino Rossini In Amanda Holden ed The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam pp 765 796 ISBN 0 14 029312 4 Kaminski Piotr 2003 Gioacchino Rossini Guillaume Tell Mille et Un Operas Paris Fayard ISBN 978 2 213 60017 8 Kobbe Gustav Lascelles George 1954 Kobbe s Complete Opera Book London and New York Putnam ISBN 978 0 399 11044 3 Macdonald Hugh 2001 Habeneck Francois Antoine in Sadie 2001 Osborne Charles 1994 The Bel Canto Operas of Rossini Donizetti and Bellini London Portland Oregon Methuen Amadeus Press ISBN 0 931340 71 3 Osborne Richard 2007 Rossini His Life and Works 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 518129 6 Pougin Arthur 1880 Valentino Henri Justin Joseph Biographie universelle des musiciens et Bibliographie generale de la musique par F J Fetis Supplement et complement Vol 2 Paris Firmin Didot pp 597 598 Sadie Stanley ed 2001 The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 Tamvaco Jean Louis 2000 Les Cancans de l Opera Chroniques de l Academie Royale de Musique et du theatre a Paris sous les deux restorations 2 volumes in French Paris CNRS Editions ISBN 978 2 271 05685 6 Weinstock Herbert 1968 Rossini A Biography reprint 1987 ed New York Knopf ISBN 978 0 87910 071 1 Wolff Stephane 1962 reprint 1983 L Opera au Palais Garnier 1875 1962 Paris Depose au journal L Entr acte OCLC 7068320 460748195 Paris Slatkine 1983 ISBN 978 2 05 000214 2Further reading editOsborne Richard 1990 Rossini Ithaca New York Northeastern University Press ISBN 1 55553 088 5 Osborne Richard 1996 Guillaume Tell vol 2 pp 573 576 in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera edited by Stanley Sadie London Macmillan ISBN 0 333 73432 7 ISBN 1 56159 228 5 Also Oxford Music Online subscription required Osborne Richard 2004 Rossini s Life in Emanuele Senici ed The Cambridge Companion to Rossini Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 00195 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Tell opera Guillaume Tell Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Libretto of Guillaume Tell at Stanford OperaGlass in French Libretto of Guglielmo Tell at Stanford OperaGlass in Italian Libretto of Guillaume Tell murashev com in French and English Portrait of the opera in the Online opera guide www opera inside com Wilhelm Tell 1837 publication German digitized by BYU on archive org Wilhelm Tell Danish digitized by BYU on archive org Portal nbsp Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Tell opera amp oldid 1220594945, 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