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Jacques Offenbach

Jacques Offenbach (/ˈɒfənbɑːx/, also US: /ˈɔːf-/, French: [ʒak ɔfɛnbak], German: [ˈʔɔfn̩bax] (listen); 20 June 1819 – 5 October 1880) was a German-born French composer, cellist and impresario of the Romantic period. He is remembered for his nearly 100 operettas of the 1850s to the 1870s, and his uncompleted opera The Tales of Hoffmann. He was a powerful influence on later composers of the operetta genre, particularly Johann Strauss Jr. and Arthur Sullivan. His best-known works were continually revived during the 20th century, and many of his operettas continue to be staged in the 21st. The Tales of Hoffmann remains part of the standard opera repertory.

Offenbach in the 1860s

Born in Cologne, the son of a synagogue cantor, Offenbach showed early musical talent. At the age of 14, he was accepted as a student at the Paris Conservatoire but found academic study unfulfilling and left after a year. From 1835 to 1855 he earned his living as a cellist, achieving international fame, and as a conductor. His ambition, however, was to compose comic pieces for the musical theatre. Finding the management of Paris' Opéra-Comique company uninterested in staging his works, in 1855 he leased a small theatre in the Champs-Élysées. There he presented a series of his own small-scale pieces, many of which became popular.

In 1858, Offenbach produced his first full-length operetta, Orphée aux enfers ("Orpheus in the Underworld"), which was exceptionally well received and has remained one of his most played works. During the 1860s, he produced at least 18 full-length operettas, as well as more one-act pieces. His works from this period included La belle Hélène (1864), La Vie parisienne (1866), La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein (1867) and La Périchole (1868). The risqué humour (often about sexual intrigue) and mostly gentle satiric barbs in these pieces, together with Offenbach's facility for melody, made them internationally known, and translated versions were successful in Vienna, London and elsewhere in Europe.

Offenbach became associated with the Second French Empire of Napoleon III; the emperor and his court were genially satirised in many of Offenbach's operettas. Napoleon III personally granted him French citizenship and the Légion d'Honneur. With the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, Offenbach found himself out of favour in Paris because of his imperial connections and his German birth. He remained successful in Vienna and London, however. He re-established himself in Paris during the 1870s, with revivals of some of his earlier favourites and a series of new works, and undertook a popular US tour. In his last years he strove to finish The Tales of Hoffmann, but died before the premiere of the opera, which has entered the standard repertory in versions completed or edited by other musicians.

Life and career

Early years

 
Offenbach in the 1840s

Offenbach was born Jacob (or Jakob[n 1]) Offenbach to a Jewish family in the German city of Cologne, which was then a part of Prussia.[11][n 2] His birthplace in the Großer Griechenmarkt was a short distance from the square that is now named after him, the Offenbachplatz.[4] He was the second son and the seventh of ten children of Isaac Juda Offenbach Eberst (1779–1850) and his wife Marianne, née Rindskopf (c. 1783–1840).[12] Isaac, who came from a musical family, had abandoned his original trade as a bookbinder and earned an itinerant living as a cantor in synagogues and playing the violin in cafés.[13] He was generally known as "der Offenbacher", after his native town, Offenbach am Main, and in 1808 he officially adopted Offenbach as a surname.[n 3] In 1816 he settled in Cologne, where he became established as a teacher, giving lessons in singing, violin, flute, and guitar, and composing both religious and secular music.[8]

When Jacob was six years old, his father taught him to play the violin; within two years the boy was composing songs and dances, and at the age of nine he took up the cello.[8] As he was by then the permanent cantor of the local synagogue, Isaac could afford to pay for his son to take lessons from the cellist Bernhard Breuer. Three years later, the biographer Gabriel Grovlez records, the boy was giving performances of his own compositions, "the technical difficulties of which terrified his master", Breuer.[15] Together with his brother Julius (violin) and sister Isabella (piano), Jacob played in a trio at local dance halls, inns and cafés, performing popular dance music and operatic arrangements.[16][n 4] In 1833, Isaac decided that the two most musically talented of his children, Julius and Jacob (then aged 18 and 14), needed to leave the provincial musical scene of Cologne to study in Paris. With generous support from local music lovers and the municipal orchestra, with whom they gave a farewell concert on 9 October, the two young musicians, accompanied by their father, made the four-day journey to Paris in November 1833.[17]

Isaac had been given letters of introduction to the director of the Paris Conservatoire, Luigi Cherubini, but he needed all his eloquence to persuade Cherubini even to give Jacob an audition. The boy's age and nationality were both obstacles to admission.[n 5] Cherubini had several years earlier refused the 12-year-old Franz Liszt admission on similar grounds,[19] but he eventually agreed to hear the young Offenbach play. He listened to his playing and stopped him, saying, "Enough, young man, you are now a pupil of this Conservatoire."[20] Julius was also admitted. Both brothers adopted French forms of their names, Julius becoming Jules and Jacob becoming Jacques.[21]

Isaac hoped to secure permanent employment in Paris but failed to do so and returned to Cologne.[20] Before leaving, he found a number of pupils for Jules; the modest earnings from those lessons, supplemented by fees earned by both brothers as members of synagogue choirs, supported them during their studies. At the conservatoire, Jules was a diligent student; he graduated and became a successful violin teacher and conductor, and led his younger brother's orchestra for several years.[22] By contrast, Jacques was bored by academic study and left after a year. The conservatoire's roll of students notes against his name "Struck off on the 2 December 1834 (left of his own free will)".[n 6]

Cello virtuoso

Having left the conservatoire, Offenbach was free from the stern academicism of Cherubini's curriculum, but as the biographer James Harding writes, "he was free, also, to starve."[25] He secured a few temporary jobs in theatre orchestras before gaining a permanent appointment in 1835 as a cellist at the Opéra-Comique. He was no more serious there than he had been at the conservatoire, and regularly had his pay docked for playing pranks during performances; on one occasion, he and the principal cellist played alternate notes of the printed score, and on another they sabotaged some of their colleagues' music stands to make them collapse in mid-performance.[1] Nevertheless, his earnings from his orchestral work enabled him to take lessons with the cellist Louis-Pierre Norblin.[26] He made a favourable impression on the composer and conductor Fromental Halévy, who gave him lessons in composition and orchestration and wrote to Isaac Offenbach in Cologne that the young man was going to be a great composer.[27] Some of Offenbach's early compositions were programmed by the conductor Louis Antoine Jullien.[28] Offenbach and another young composer Friedrich von Flotow collaborated on a series of works for cello and piano.[29] Although Offenbach's ambition was to compose for the stage, he could not gain an entrée to Parisian theatre at this point in his career; with Flotow's help, he built a reputation composing for and playing in the fashionable salons of Paris.[30]

 
Offenbach as a young cello virtuoso, drawing by Alexandre Laemlein from 1850

Among the salons at which Offenbach most frequently appeared was that of the comtesse de Vaux. There he met Hérminie d'Alcain (1827–1887), the daughter of a Carlist general.[31] They fell in love, but he was not yet in a financial position to propose marriage.[32] To extend his fame and earning power beyond Paris, he undertook tours of France and Germany. Among those with whom he performed were Anton Rubinstein and, in a concert in Offenbach's native Cologne, Liszt.[4] In 1844, probably through English family connections of Hérminie,[33] he embarked on a tour of England. There, he was immediately engaged to appear with some of the most famous musicians of the day, including Mendelssohn, Joseph Joachim, Michael Costa and Julius Benedict.[32] The Era wrote of his debut performance in London, "His execution and taste excited both wonder and pleasure, the genius he exhibited amounting to absolute inspiration."[34] The British press reported a triumphant royal command performance; The Illustrated London News wrote, "Herr Jacques Offenbach, the astonishing Violoncellist, performed on Thursday evening at Windsor before the Emperor of Russia, the King of Saxony, Queen Victoria, and Prince Albert with great success."[35][n 7] The use of "Herr" rather than "Monsieur", reflecting the fact that Offenbach remained a Prussian citizen, was common to all the British press coverage of Offenbach's 1844 tour.[37] The ambiguity of his nationality sometimes caused him difficulty in later life.[38]

Offenbach returned to Paris with his reputation and his bank balance both much enhanced. The last remaining obstacle to his marriage to Hérminie was the difference in their professed religions; he converted to Roman Catholicism, with the comtesse de Vaux acting as his sponsor. Isaac Offenbach's views on his son's conversion from Judaism are unknown.[39] The wedding took place on 14 August 1844; the bride was 17 years old, and the bridegroom was 25.[39] The marriage was lifelong, and happy, despite some extramarital dalliances on Offenbach's part.[40][n 8] After Offenbach's death, a friend said that Hérminie "gave him courage, shared his ordeals and comforted him always with tenderness and devotion".[42]

 
Offenbach caricatured in 1858 by Nadar

Returning to the familiar Paris salons, Offenbach quietly shifted the emphasis of his work from being a cellist who also composed to being a composer who played the cello.[43] He had already published many compositions, and some of them had sold well, but now he began to write, perform and produce musical burlesques as part of his salon presentations.[44] He amused the comtesse de Vaux's 200 guests with a parody of Félicien David's currently fashionable Le désert, and in April 1846 gave a concert at which seven operatic items of his own composition were premiered before an audience that included leading music critics.[44] After some encouragement and some temporary setbacks, he seemed on the verge of breaking into theatrical composition when Paris was convulsed by the 1848 revolution, which swept Louis Philippe from the throne and led to serious bloodshed in the streets of the capital.[45] Offenbach hastily took Hérminie and their recently born daughter to join his family in Cologne. He thought it politic to revert temporarily to the name Jacob.[46]

Returning to Paris in February 1849, Offenbach found the grand salons closed down. He went back to working as a cellist, and occasional conductor, at the Opéra-Comique, but was not encouraged in his aspirations to compose.[47] His talents had been noted by the director of the Comédie-Française, Arsène Houssaye, who appointed him musical director of the theatre, with a brief to enlarge and improve the orchestra.[48] Offenbach composed songs and incidental music for eleven classical and modern dramas for the Comédie-Française in the early 1850s. Some of his songs became very popular, and he gained valuable experience in writing for the theatre. Houssaye later wrote that Offenbach had done wonders for his theatre.[49] The management of the Opéra-Comique, however, remained uninterested in commissioning him to compose for its stage.[50] The composer Debussy later wrote that the musical establishment could not cope with Offenbach's irony, which exposed the "false, overblown quality" of the operas they favoured – "the great art at which one was not allowed to smile".[51]

Bouffes-Parisiens, Champs-Élysées

Between 1853 and 1855, Offenbach wrote three one-act operettas and managed to have them staged in Paris.[n 9] They were all well received, but the authorities of the Opéra-Comique remained unmoved. Offenbach found more encouragement from the composer, singer and impresario Florimond Ronger, known professionally as Hervé. At his theatre, the Folies-Nouvelles, which had opened the previous year, Hervé pioneered French light comic opera, or "opérette".[15][52] In The Musical Quarterly, Martial Teneo and Theodore Baker wrote, "Without the example set by Hervé, Offenbach might perhaps never have become the musician who penned Orphée aux Enfers, La belle Hélène, and so many other triumphant works."[53] Offenbach approached Hervé, who agreed to present a new one-act operetta with words by Jules Moinaux and music by Offenbach, called Oyayaye ou La reine des îles.[n 10] It was presented on 26 June 1855 and was well received. Offenbach's biographer Peter Gammond describes it as "a charming piece of nonsense".[57] The piece depicts a double-bass player, played by Hervé, shipwrecked on a cannibal island, who after several perilous encounters with the female chief of the cannibals makes his escape using his double-bass as a boat.[54] Offenbach pressed ahead with plans to present his works himself at his own theatre[57] and to abandon further thoughts of acceptance by the Opéra-Comique.[n 11]

 
Poster by Offenbach's friend Nadar

Offenbach had chosen his theatre, the Salle Lacaze in the Champs-Élysées.[60] The location and the timing were ideal for him. Paris was about to be filled between May and November with visitors from France and abroad for the 1855 Great Exhibition. The Salle Lacaze was next to the exhibition site. He later wrote:

In the Champs-Élysées, there was a little theatre to let, built for [the magician] Lacaze but closed for many years. I knew that the Exhibition of 1855 would bring many people into this locality. By May, I had found twenty supporters and on 15 June I secured the lease. Twenty days later, I gathered my librettists and I opened the "Théâtre des Bouffes-Parisiens".[61]

The description of the theatre as "little" was accurate: it could only hold an audience of at most 300.[n 12] It was therefore well suited to the tiny casts permitted under the prevailing licensing laws: Offenbach was limited to three speaking (or singing) characters in any piece.[n 13] With such small forces, full-length works were out of the question, and Offenbach, like Hervé, presented evenings of several one-act pieces.[64] The opening of the theatre was a frantic rush, with less than a month between the issue of the licence and the opening night on 5 July 1855.[65] During this period Offenbach had to "equip the theatre, recruit actors, orchestra and staff, find authors to write material for the opening programme – and compose the music."[64] Among those he recruited at short notice was Ludovic Halévy, the nephew of Offenbach's early mentor Fromental Halévy. Ludovic was a respectable civil servant with a passion for the theatre and a gift for dialogue and verse. While maintaining his civil service career he went on to collaborate (sometimes under discreet pseudonyms) with Offenbach in 21 works over the next 24 years.[4]

Halévy wrote the libretto for one of the pieces in the opening programme, but the most popular work of the evening had words by Moinaux. Les deux aveugles, "The Two Blind Men" is a comedy about two beggars feigning blindness. During rehearsals there had been some concern that the public might judge it to be in poor taste,[66] but it was not only the hit of the season in Paris: it was soon playing successfully in Vienna, London and elsewhere.[67] Another success that summer was Le violoneux, which made a star of Hortense Schneider in her first role for Offenbach. Aged 22, when she auditioned for him, she was engaged on the spot. From 1855 she was a key member of his companies through much of his career.[67]

The Champs-Élysées in 1855 were not yet the grand avenue laid out by Baron Haussmann in the 1860s, but an unpaved allée.[65] The public who were flocking to Offenbach's theatre in the summer and autumn of 1855 could not be expected to venture there in the depths of a Parisian winter. He cast about for a suitable venue and found the Théâtre des Jeunes Élèves, known also as the Salle Choiseul or Théâtre Comte,[15] in central Paris. He entered into partnership with its proprietor and moved the Bouffes-Parisiens there for the winter season. The company returned to the Salle Lacaze for the 1856, 1857, and 1859 summer seasons, performing at the Salle Choiseul in the winter.[68] Legislation enacted in March 1861 prevented the company from using both theatres, and appearances at the Salle Lacaze were discontinued.[69]

Salle Choiseul

Offenbach's first piece for the company's new home was Ba-ta-clan (December 1855), a well-received piece of mock-oriental frivolity, to a libretto by Halévy.[70] He followed it with 15 more one-act operettas over the next three years.[4] They were all for the small casts permitted under his licence, although at the Salle Choiseul he was granted an increase from three to four singers.[65]

 
Hortense Schneider, the first star created by Offenbach

Under Offenbach's management, the Bouffes-Parisiens staged works by many composers. These included new pieces by Leon Gastinel and Léo Delibes. When Offenbach asked Rossini's permission to revive his comedy Il signor Bruschino, Rossini replied that he was pleased to be able to do anything for "the Mozart of the Champs-Élysées".[n 14] Offenbach revered Mozart above all other composers. He had an ambition to present Mozart's neglected one-act comic opera Der Schauspieldirektor at the Bouffes-Parisiens, and he acquired the score from Vienna.[65] With a text translated and adapted by Léon Battu and Ludovic Halévy, he presented it during the Mozart centenary celebrations in May 1856 as L'impresario; it was popular with the public[79] and also greatly enhanced the critical and social standing of the Bouffes-Parisiens.[80] By command of the emperor, Napoleon III, the company performed at the Tuileries palace shortly after the first performance of the Mozart piece.[65]

In a long article in Le Figaro in July 1856, Offenbach traced the history of comic opera. He declared that the first work worthy to be called opéra-comique was Philidor's 1759 Blaise le savetier, and he described the gradual divergence of Italian and French notions of comic opera, with verve, imagination and gaiety from Italian composers, and cleverness, common sense, good taste and wit from the French composers.[n 15] He concluded that comic opera had become too grand and inflated. His disquisition was a preliminary to the announcement of an open competition for aspiring composers.[82] A jury of French composers and playwrights including Daniel Auber, Fromental Halévy, Ambroise Thomas, Charles Gounod and Eugène Scribe considered 78 entries; the five short-listed entrants were all asked to set a libretto, Le docteur miracle, written by Ludovic Halévy and Léon Battu.[83] The joint winners were Georges Bizet and Charles Lecocq. Bizet became, and remained, a devoted friend of Offenbach. Lecocq and Offenbach took a dislike to one another, and their subsequent rivalry was not altogether friendly.[82][84]

Although the Bouffes-Parisiens played to full houses, the theatre was constantly on the verge of running out of money, principally because of what his biographer Alexander Faris calls "Offenbach's incorrigible extravagance as a manager".[80] An earlier biographer, André Martinet, wrote, "Jacques spent money without counting. Whole lengths of velvet were swallowed up in the auditorium; costumes devoured width after width of satin."[n 16] Moreover, Offenbach was personally generous and liberally hospitable.[85] To boost the company's finances, a London season was organised in 1857, with half the company remaining in Paris to play at the Salle Choiseul and the other half performing at the St James's Theatre in the West End of London.[65] The visit was a success, but did not cause the sensation that Offenbach's later works did in London.[86]

Orphée aux enfers

 
Poster for a 19th-century production of Orpheus in the Underworld

In 1858, the government lifted the licensing restrictions on the number of performers, and Offenbach was able to present more ambitious works. His first full-length operetta, Orphée aux enfers ("Orpheus in the Underworld"), was presented in October 1858. Offenbach, as usual, spent freely on the production, with scenery by Gustave Doré, lavish costumes, a cast of twenty principals, and a large chorus and orchestra.[87]

As the company was particularly short of money following an abortive season in Berlin, a big success was urgently needed. At first the production seemed merely to be a modest success. It soon benefited from an outraged review by Jules Janin, the critic of the Journal des Débats; he condemned the piece for profanity and irreverence (ostensibly to Roman mythology but in reality to Napoleon and his government, generally seen as the targets of its satire).[88] Offenbach and his librettist Hector Crémieux seized on this free publicity, and joined in a lively public debate in the columns of the Parisian daily newspaper Le Figaro.[89] Janin's indignation made the public agog to see the work, and the box office takings were prodigious. Among those who wanted to see the satire of the emperor was the emperor himself, who commanded a performance in April 1860.[89] Despite many great successes during the rest of Offenbach's career, Orphée aux enfers remained his most popular. Gammond lists among the reasons for its success, "the sweeping waltzes" reminiscent of Vienna but with a new French flavour, the patter songs, and "above all else, of course, the can-can which had led a naughty life in low places since the 1830s or thereabouts and now became a polite fashion, as uninhibited as ever."[90]

In the 1859 season, the Bouffes-Parisiens presented new works by composers including Flotow, Jules Erlanger, Alphonse Varney, Léo Delibes, and Offenbach himself. Of Offenbach's new pieces, Geneviève de Brabant, though initially only a mild success, was later revised and gained much popularity where the duet of the two gendarmes became a favourite number in England and France and the basis for the Marines' Hymn in the U.S.[91]

Early 1860s

 
Offenbach with his only son, Auguste, 1865

The 1860s were Offenbach's most successful decade. At the beginning of 1860, he was granted French citizenship by the personal command of Napoleon III,[92] and the following year he was appointed a Chevalier of the Légion d’Honneur; this appointment scandalised those haughty and exclusive members of the musical establishment who resented such an honour for a composer of popular light opera.[93] Offenbach began the decade with his only stand-alone ballet, Le papillon ("The Butterfly"), produced at the Opéra in 1860. It achieved what was then a successful run of 42 performances, without, as the biographer Andrew Lamb says, "giving him any greater acceptance in more respectable circles."[4] Among other operettas in the same year, he finally had a piece presented by the Opéra-Comique, the three-act Barkouf. It was not a success; its plot revolved around a dog, and Offenbach attempted canine imitations in his music. Neither the public nor the critics were impressed, and the piece survived for only seven performances.[94]

Apart from that setback, Offenbach flourished in the 1860s, with successes greatly outnumbering failures. In 1861 he led the company in a summer season in Vienna. Encountering packed houses and enthusiastic reviews, Offenbach found Vienna much to his liking. He even reverted, for a single evening, to his old role as a cello virtuoso at a command performance before Emperor Franz Joseph.[95] That success was followed by a failure in Berlin. Offenbach, though born a Prussian citizen, observed, "Prussia never does anything to make those of our nationality happy."[n 17] He and the company hastened back to Paris.[95] Meanwhile, among his operettas that season were the full-length Le pont des soupirs and the one-act M. Choufleuri restera chez lui le....[96]

In 1862, Offenbach's only son, Auguste (died 1883), was born, the last of five children. In the same year, Offenbach resigned as director of the Bouffes-Parisiens, handing the post over to Alphonse Varney. He continued to write most of his works for the company, with the exception of occasional pieces for the summer season at Bad Ems.[n 18] Despite problems with the libretto, Offenbach completed a serious opera in 1864, Die Rheinnixen, a hotchpotch of romantic and mythological themes. The opera was presented with substantial cuts at the Vienna Court Opera and in Cologne in 1865. It was not given again until 2002, when it was finally performed in its entirety. Since then it has been given several productions.[97] It contained one number, the "Elfenchor", described by the critic Eduard Hanslick as "lovely, luring and sensuous",[98] which Ernest Guiraud later adapted as the Barcarolle in The Tales of Hoffmann.[99] After December 1864, Offenbach wrote less frequently for the Bouffes-Parisiens, and many of his new works premiered at larger theatres.[4]

Later 1860s

 
Offenbach's leading ladies (clockwise from top left): Marie Garnier in Orphée aux enfers, Zulma Bouffar in Les brigands, Léa Silly (role unidentified), and Rose Deschamps in Orphée aux enfers

Between 1864 and 1868, Offenbach wrote four of the operettas for which he is chiefly remembered: La belle Hélène (1864), La Vie parisienne (1866), La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein (1867) and La Périchole (1868). Halévy was joined as librettist for all of them by Henri Meilhac. Offenbach, who called them "Meil" and "Hal",[100] said of this trinity: "Je suis sans doute le Père, mais chacun des deux est mon Fils et plein d'Esprit,"[101] a play on words loosely translated as "I am certainly the Father, but each of them is my Son and Wholly Spirited".[n 19]

For La belle Hélène, Offenbach secured Hortense Schneider to play the title role. Since her early success in his short operas, she had become a leading star of the French musical stage. She now commanded large fees and was notoriously temperamental, but Offenbach was adamant that no other singer could match her as Hélène.[102] Rehearsals for the premiere at the Théâtre des Variétés were tempestuous, with Schneider and the principal mezzo-soprano Léa Silly feuding, the censor fretting about the satire of the imperial court, and the manager of the theatre attempting to rein in Offenbach's extravagance with production expenses.[102] Once again the success of the piece was inadvertently assured by the critic Janin; his scandalised notice was strongly countered by liberal critics and the ensuing publicity again brought the public flocking.[103]

Barbe-bleue was a success in early 1866 and was quickly reproduced elsewhere. La Vie parisienne later in the same year was a new departure for Offenbach and his librettists; for the first time in a large-scale piece they chose a modern setting, instead of disguising their satire under a classical cloak. It needed no accidental boost from Janin but was an instant and prolonged success with Parisian audiences, although its very Parisian themes made it less popular abroad. Gammond describes the libretto as "almost worthy of [W.S.] Gilbert", and Offenbach's score as "certainly his best so far".[104] The piece starred Zulma Bouffar, who began an affair with the composer that lasted until at least 1875.[105]

In 1867, Offenbach had his greatest success. The premiere of La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein, a satire on militarism,[106] took place two days after the opening of the Paris Exhibition, an even greater international draw than the 1855 exhibition which had helped him launch his composing career.[107] The Parisian public and foreign visitors flocked to the new operetta. Sovereigns who saw the piece included the King of Prussia accompanied by his chief minister, Otto von Bismarck. Halévy, with his experience as a senior civil servant, saw more clearly than most the looming threat from Prussia; he wrote in his diary, "Bismarck is helping to double our takings. This time it's war we're laughing at, and war is at our gates."[108] La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein was followed quickly by a series of successful pieces: Robinson Crusoé, Geneviève de Brabant (revised version; both 1867), Le château à Toto, Le pont des soupirs (revised version) and L'île de Tulipatan (all in 1868).[109]

In October 1868, La Périchole marked a transition in Offenbach's style, with less exuberant satire and more human romantic interest.[110] Lamb calls it Offenbach's "most charming" score.[111] There was some critical grumbling at the change, but the piece, with Schneider in the lead, did good business.[112] It was quickly produced in Europe and both North and South America.[113][114] Of the pieces that followed it at the end of the decade, Les brigands (1869) was another work that leaned more to romantic comic opera than to opéra bouffe. It was well received, but has not subsequently been revived as often as Offenbach's best-known operettas.[110]

War and aftermath

Offenbach returned hurriedly from Ems and Wiesbaden before the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in 1870. He then went to his home in Étretat and arranged for his family to move to the safety of San Sebastián in northern Spain, joining them shortly afterwards.[115][116] Having risen to fame under Napoleon III, satirised him, and been rewarded by him, Offenbach was universally associated with the old régime: he was known as "the mocking-bird of the Second Empire".[117] When the empire fell in the wake of Prussia's crushing victory at Sedan (1870), Offenbach's music was suddenly out of favour. France was swept by violently anti-German sentiments, and despite his French citizenship and Légion d'honneur, his birth and upbringing in Cologne made him suspect. His operettas were now frequently vilified as the embodiment of everything superficial and worthless in Napoleon III's régime.[38] La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein was banned in France because of its antimilitarist satire.[118]

 
Programme for the first London production of La Périchole

Although his Parisian audience deserted him, Offenbach had by now become highly popular in England. John Hollingshead of the Gaiety Theatre presented Offenbach's operettas to large and enthusiastic audiences.[119] Between 1870 and 1872, the Gaiety produced 15 of his works. At the Royalty Theatre, Richard D'Oyly Carte presented La Périchole in 1875.[120] In Vienna, too, Offenbach works were regularly produced. While the war and its aftermath ravaged Paris, the composer supervised Viennese productions and travelled to England as the guest of the Prince of Wales.[121]

By the end of 1871 life in Paris had returned to normal, and Offenbach ended his voluntary exile. His new works Le roi Carotte (1872) and La jolie parfumeuse (1873) were modestly profitable, but lavish revivals of his earlier successes did better business. He decided to go back into theatre management and took over the Théâtre de la Gaîté in July 1873.[122] His spectacular revival of Orphée aux enfers there was highly profitable; an attempt to repeat that success with a new, lavish version of Geneviève de Brabant proved less popular.[123] Along with the costs of extravagant productions, collaboration with the dramatist Victorien Sardou culminated in financial disaster. An expensive production of Sardou's La haine in 1874, with incidental music by Offenbach, failed to attract the public to the Gaîté, and Offenbach was forced to sell his interests in the Gaîté and to mortgage future royalties.[124]

In 1876 a successful tour of the United States in connection with its Centennial Exhibition enabled Offenbach to recover some of his losses and pay his debts. Beginning with a concert at Gilmore's Garden before a crowd of 8,000 people, he gave a series of more than 40 concerts in New York and Philadelphia. To circumvent a Philadelphia law forbidding entertainments on Sundays, he disguised his operetta numbers as liturgical pieces and advertised a "Grand Sacred Concert by M. Offenbach". "Dis-moi, Vénus" from La belle Hélène became a "Litanie", and other equally secular numbers were billed as "Prière" or "Hymne".[125] The local authorities were not deceived, and the concert did not take place.[126] At Booth's Theatre, New York, Offenbach conducted La vie parisienne[127] and his recent (1873) La jolie parfumeuse.[4] He returned to France in July 1876, with profits that were handsome but not spectacular.[53]

Offenbach's later operettas enjoyed renewed popularity in France, especially Madame Favart (1878), which featured a fantasy plot about the real-life French actress Marie Justine Favart, and La fille du tambour-major (1879), which was the most successful of his operettas of the 1870s.[128]

Last years

 
The Tales of Hoffmann – scene from the premiere, showing Adèle Isaac as the dead Antonia, with (l. to r.) Hippolyte Belhomme, Marguerite Ugalde, Pierre Grivot, Émile-Alexandre Taskin, and Jean-Alexandre Talazac

Profitable though La fille du tambour-major was, composing it left Offenbach less time to work on his cherished project, the creation of a successful serious opera. Since the beginning of 1877, he had been working when he could on a piece based on a stage play, Les contes fantastiques d'Hoffmann, by Jules Barbier and Michel Carré. Offenbach had suffered from gout since the 1860s, often being carried into the theatre in a chair. Now in failing health, he was conscious of his own mortality and wished passionately to live long enough to complete the opera Les contes d'Hoffmann ("The Tales of Hoffmann"). He was heard saying to Kleinzach, his dog, "I would give everything I have to be at the première".[129] However, Offenbach did not live to finish the piece. He left the vocal score substantially complete and had made a start on the orchestration. Ernest Guiraud, a family friend, assisted by Offenbach's 18-year-old son Auguste, completed the orchestration, making significant changes as well as the substantial cuts demanded by the Opéra-Comique's director, Carvalho.[130][n 20] The opera was first seen at the Opéra-Comique on 10 February 1881; Guiraud added recitatives for the Vienna premiere, in December 1881, and other versions were made later.[130]

Offenbach died in Paris in 1880 at the age of 61. His cause of death was certified as heart failure brought on by acute gout. He was given a state funeral; The Times wrote, "The crowd of distinguished men that accompanied him on his last journey amid the general sympathy of the public shows that the late composer was reckoned among the masters of his art."[131] He is buried in the Montmartre Cemetery.[132]

Works

In The Musical Times, Mark Lubbock wrote in 1957:

Offenbach's music is as individually characteristic as that of Delius, Grieg or Puccini – together with range and variety. He could write straightforward "singing" numbers like Paris' song in La Belle Hélène, "Au mont Ida trois déesses"; comic songs like General Boum's "Piff Paff Pouf" and the ridiculous ensemble at the servants' ball in La Vie Parisienne, "Votre habit a craqué dans le dos". He was a specialist at writing music that had a rapturous, hysterical quality. The famous can-can from Orphée aux Enfers has it, and so has the finale of the servants' party ... which ends with the delirious song "Tout tourne, tout danse'". Then, as a contrast, he could compose songs of a simplicity, grace and beauty like the Letter Song from La Périchole, "Chanson de Fortunio", and the Grand Duchess's tender love song to Fritz: "Dites-lui qu'on l'a remarqué distingué".[133]

Among other well-known Offenbach numbers are the Doll Song, "Les oiseaux dans la charmille" (The Tales of Hoffmann); "Voici le sabre de mon père" and "Ah! Que j'aime les militaires" (La Grande Duchesse de Gerolstein); and "Tu n'es pas beau" in La Périchole, which Lamb notes was Offenbach's last major song for Hortense Schneider.[134][n 21]

Operettas

By his own reckoning, Offenbach composed more than 100 operas.[136][n 22] Both the number and the noun are open to question: some works were so extensively revised that he evidently counted the revised versions as new, and commentators generally refer to all but a few of his stage works as operettas, rather than operas. Offenbach reserved the term opérette (English: operetta)[n 23] or opérette bouffe for some of his one-act works, more often using the term opéra bouffe for his full-length ones (though there are a number of one- and two-act examples of this type). It was only with the further development of the Operette genre in Vienna after 1870 that the French term opérette began to be used for works longer than one act.[139] Offenbach also used the term opéra-comique for at least 24 of his works in either one, two or three acts.[140]

Offenbach's earliest operettas were one-act pieces for small casts. More than 30 of these were presented before his first full-scale "opéra bouffon", Orphée aux enfers, in 1858, and he composed over 20 more of them during the rest of his career.[4][141] Lamb, following the precedent of Henseler's 1930 study of the composer, divides the one-act pieces into five categories: "(i) country idylls; (ii) urban operettas; (iii) military operettas; (iv) farces; and (v) burlesques or parodies."[142] Offenbach enjoyed his greatest success in the 1860s. His most popular operettas from the decade have remained among his best known.[4]

Texts and word setting
 
Librettists and successors: clockwise from top left, Ludovic Halévy, Henri Meilhac, Johann Strauss II, Arthur Sullivan

The first ideas for plots usually came from Offenbach, with his librettists working on lines agreed with him. Lamb writes, "In this respect Offenbach was both well served and skilful at discovering talent. Like Sullivan, and unlike Johann Strauss II, he was consistently blessed with workable subjects and genuinely witty librettos."[4] He took advantage of the rhythmic flexibility of the French language, but sometimes took this to extremes, forcing words into unnatural stresses.[143] Harding comments that he "wrought much violence on the French language".[144] A frequent characteristic of Offenbach's word setting was the nonsensical repetition of isolated syllables of words for comic effect; an example is the quintet for the kings in La belle Hélène: "Je suis l'époux de la reine/Poux de la reine/Poux de la reine" and "Le roi barbu qui s'avance/Bu qui s'avance/Bu qui s'avance."[n 24]

Musical structure

In general, Offenbach followed simple, established forms. His melodies are usually short and unvaried in their basic rhythm, rarely, in Hughes's words, escaping "the despotism of the four-bar phrase".[145] In modulation Offenbach was similarly cautious; he rarely switched a melody to a remote or unexpected key, and kept mostly to a tonicdominantsubdominant pattern.[146] Within these conventional limits, he employed greater resource in his varied use of rhythm; in a single number he would contrast rapid patter for one singer with a broad, smooth phrase for another, illustrating their different characters.[146] Similarly, he often switched quickly between major and minor keys, effectively contrasting characters or situations.[147] When he wished to, Offenbach could use unconventional techniques, such as the leitmotiv, used throughout to accompany the eponymous Docteur Ox (1877)[148] and to parody Wagner in La carnaval des revues (1860).[149]

Orchestration

In his early pieces for the Bouffes-Parisiens, the size of the orchestra pit had restricted Offenbach to an orchestra of 16 players.[150] He composed for flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, two horns, piston, trombone, timpani and percussion and a small string section of seven players.[151] After moving to the Salle Choiseul he had an orchestra of 30 players.[151] The musicologist and Offenbach specialist Jean-Christophe Keck notes that when larger orchestras were available, either in bigger Paris theatres or in Vienna or elsewhere, Offenbach would compose, or rearrange existing music, accordingly. Surviving scores show his instrumentation for additional wind and brass, and even extra percussion. When they were available he wrote for cor anglais, harp, and, exceptionally, Keck records, an ophicleide (Le Papillon), tubular bells (Le carnaval des revues), and a wind machine (Le voyage dans la lune).[151]

Hughes describes Offenbach's orchestration as "always skilful, often delicate, and occasionally subtle." He instances Pluton's song in Orphée aux enfers,[n 25] introduced by a three-bar phrase for solo clarinet and solo bassoon in octaves immediately repeated on solo flute and solo bassoon an octave higher.[152] In Keck's view, "Offenbach's orchestral scoring is full of details, elaborate counter-voices, minute interactions coloured by interjections of the woodwinds or brass, all of which establish a dialogue with the voices. His refinement of design equals that of Mozart or Rossini."[151]

Compositional method

Offenbach often composed amidst noise and distractions. According to Keck, Offenbach would first make a note of melodies a libretto suggested to him in a notebook or straight onto the librettist's manuscript. Next using full score manuscript paper he wrote down vocal parts in the centre, then a piano accompaniment at the bottom possibly with notes on orchestration. When Offenbach felt sure the work would be performed, he began full orchestration, often employing a codified system.[153]

Parody and influences
 
Offenbach by André Gill, 1866

Offenbach was well known for parodying other composers' music. Some of them saw the joke and others did not. Adam, Auber and Meyerbeer enjoyed Offenbach's parodies of their scores.[53] Meyerbeer made a point of attending all Bouffes-Parisiens productions, always seated in Offenbach's private box.[65] Among the composers who were not amused by Offenbach's parodies were Berlioz and Wagner.[154] Offenbach mocked Berlioz's "strivings after the antique",[155] and his initial light-hearted satire of Wagner's pretensions later hardened into genuine dislike.[156] Berlioz reacted by bracketing Offenbach and Wagner together as "the product of the mad German mind",[154] and Wagner, ignoring Berlioz, retaliated by writing some unflattering verses about Offenbach.[154]

In general, Offenbach's parodistic technique was simply to play the original music in unexpected and incongruous circumstances. He slipped the banned revolutionary anthem La Marseillaise into the chorus of rebellious gods in Orphée aux enfers, and quoted the aria "Che farò" from Gluck's Orfeo in the same work; in La belle Hélène he quoted the patriotic trio from Rossini's Guillaume Tell and parodied himself in the ensemble for the kings of Greece, in which the accompaniment quotes the rondeau from Orphée aux enfers. In his one act pieces, Offenbach parodied Rossini's "Largo al factotum" and familiar arias by Bellini. In Croquefer (1857), one duet consists of quotations from Halévy's La Juive and Meyerbeer's Robert le Diable and Les Huguenots.[142][157] Even in his later, less satirical period, he included a parodic quotation from Donizetti's La fille du régiment in La fille du tambour-major.[4]

Other examples of Offenbach's use of incongruity are noted by the critic Paul Taylor: "In La belle Hélène, the kings of Greece denounce Paris as 'un vil séducteur' to a waltz tempo that is itself unsuitably seductive ... the potty-sounding phrase 'L'homme à la pomme' becomes the absurd nucleus of a big cod-ensemble."[158] Another lyric set to absurdly ceremonious music is "Votre habit a craqué dans le dos" ("Your coat has split down the back") in La vie parisienne.[15] The Grand Duchess of Gérolstein's rondo "Ah! Que j'aime les militaires" is rhythmically and melodically similar to the finale of Beethoven's Seventh Symphony, but it is not clear whether the similarity is parodic or coincidental.[15]

In Offenbach's last decade, he took note of a change in public taste: a simpler, more romantic style was now preferred. Harding writes that Lecocq had successfully moved away from satire and parody, returning to "the genuine spirit of opéra-comique and its peculiarly French gaiety."[144] Offenbach followed suit in a series of 20 operettas; the conductor and musicologist Antonio de Almeida names the finest of these as La fille du tambour-major (1879).[128]

Other works

 
Dr. Miracle and Antonia in the 1881 premiere of The Tales of Hoffmann

Of Offenbach's two serious operas, Die Rheinnixen, a failure, was not revived until the 21st century.[159] His second attempt, The Tales of Hoffmann, was originally intended as a grand opera.[160] When the work was accepted by Léon Carvalho for production at the Opéra-Comique, Offenbach agreed to make it an opéra comique with spoken dialogue. It was incomplete when he died;[161] Faris speculates that, but for Georges Bizet's premature death, Bizet rather than Guiraud would have been asked to complete the piece and would have done so more satisfactorily.[162] The critic Tim Ashley writes, "Stylistically, the opera reveals a remarkable amalgam of French and German influences ... Weberian chorales preface Hoffmann's narrative. Olympia delivers a big coloratura aria straight out of French grand opera, while Antonia sings herself to death to music reminiscent of Schubert."[38]

Although he wrote ballet music for many of his operettas, Offenbach wrote only one ballet, Le papillon. The score was much praised for its orchestration, and it contained one number, the "Valse des rayons", that became an international success.[163] Between 1836 and 1875 he composed several individual waltzes and polkas, and suites of dances.[164] They include a waltz, Abendblätter ("Evening Papers") composed for Vienna with Johann Strauss's Morgenblätter ("Morning Papers") as a companion piece.[165] Other orchestral compositions include a piece in 17th-century style with cello solo, which became a standard work of the cello repertoire. Little of Offenbach's non-operatic orchestral music has been regularly performed since his death.[32]

Offenbach composed more than 50 non-operatic songs between 1838 and 1854, most of them to French texts, by authors including Alfred de Musset, Théophile Gautier and Jean de La Fontaine, and also ten to German texts. Among the most popular of these songs are "À toi" (1843), dedicated to the young Hérminie d'Alcain as an early token of his love.[166] An Ave Maria for soprano solo was recently rediscovered at the Bibliothèque nationale de France.[167]

Arrangements and editions

Although the overtures to Orphée aux enfers and La belle Hélene are well known and frequently recorded, the scores usually performed and recorded were not composed by Offenbach, but were arranged by Carl Binder and Eduard Haensch, respectively, for the Vienna premieres of the two works. Offenbach's own preludes are much shorter.[168]

In 1938, Manuel Rosenthal assembled the popular ballet Gaîté Parisienne from his own orchestral arrangements of melodies from Offenbach's stage works, and in 1953 the same composer assembled a symphonic suite, Offenbachiana, also from music by Offenbach.[169] Jean-Christophe Keck regards the 1938 work as "no more than a vulgarly orchestrated pastiche";[170] in Gammond's view, however, it does "full justice" to Offenbach.[171]

Efforts to present critical editions of Offenbach's works have been hampered by the dispersion of his autograph scores to several collections after his death, some of which do not grant access to scholars.[n 26]

 
Offenbach and Strauss, 1871 cartoon.

Legacy and reputation

Influence

The musician and author Fritz Spiegl wrote in 1980, "Without Offenbach there would have been no Savoy Opera … no Die Fledermaus or Merry Widow.[174] The two creators of the Savoy operas, the librettist, Gilbert, and the composer, Sullivan, were both indebted to Offenbach and his partners for their satiric and musical styles, even borrowing plot components.[175] For example, Faris argues that the mock-oriental Ba-ta-clan influenced The Mikado, including its character names: Offenbach's Ko-ko-ri-ko and Gilbert's Ko-Ko;[176] Faris also compares Le pont des soupirs (1861) and The Gondoliers (1889): "in both works there are choruses à la barcarolle for gondoliers and contadini [in] thirds and sixths; Offenbach has a Venetian admiral telling of his cowardice in battle; Gilbert and Sullivan have their Duke of Plaza-Toro who led his regiment from behind."[93] Offenbach's Les Géorgiennes (1864), like Gilbert and Sullivan's Princess Ida (1884), depicts a female stronghold challenged by males in disguise.[177][n 27] The best-known instance in which a Savoy opera draws on Offenbach's work is The Pirates of Penzance (1879), where both Gilbert and Sullivan follow the lead of Les brigands (1869) in their treatment of the police, plodding along ineffectually in heavy march-time.[110] Les brigands was presented in London in 1871, 1873 and 1875; for the first of these, Gilbert made an English translation of Meilhac and Halévy's libretto.[110]

However much the young Sullivan was influenced by Offenbach,[n 28] the influence was evidently not in only one direction. Hughes observes that two numbers in Offenbach's Maître Péronilla (1878) bear "an astonishing resemblance" to "My name is John Wellington Wells" from Gilbert and Sullivan's The Sorcerer (1877).[181]

 
Elegy to Offenbach by Clement Scott in the magazine Punch

It is not clear how directly Offenbach influenced Johann Strauss. He had encouraged Strauss to turn to operetta when they met in Vienna in 1864, but it was not until seven years later that Strauss did so.[182] However, Offenbach's operettas were well established in Vienna, and Strauss worked on the lines established by his French colleague; in 1870s Vienna, an operetta composer who did not do so was quickly called to order by the press.[182] In Gammond's view, the Viennese composer most influenced by Offenbach was Franz von Suppé, who studied Offenbach's works carefully and wrote many successful operettas using them as a model.[183]

In his 1957 article, Lubbock wrote, "Offenbach is undoubtedly the most significant figure in the history of the 'musical'," and traced the development of musical theatre from Offenbach to Irving Berlin and Rodgers and Hammerstein, via Franz Lehár, André Messager, Sullivan and Lionel Monckton.[133]

Reputation

During Offenbach's lifetime, and in the obituary notices in 1880, fastidious critics (dubbed "Musical Snobs Ltd" by Gammond) showed themselves at odds with public appreciation.[184] In a 1980 article in The Musical Times, George Hauger commented that those critics not only underrated Offenbach, but wrongly supposed that his music would soon be forgotten.[185] Although most critics of the time made that erroneous assumption, a few perceived Offenbach's unusual quality; in The Times, Francis Hueffer wrote, "none of his numerous Parisian imitators has ever been able to rival Offenbach at his best."[186] Nevertheless, the paper joined in the general prediction: "It is very doubtful whether any of his works will survive."[186] The New York Times shared this view: "That he had the gift of melody in a very extraordinary degree is not to be denied, but he wrote currente calamo,[n 29] and the lack of development of his choicest inspirations will, it is to be feared, keep them from reaching even the next generation".[187] After the posthumous production of The Tales of Hoffmann, The Times partially reconsidered its judgment, writing, "Les Contes de Hoffmann [will] confirm the opinion of those who regard him as a great composer in every sense of the word". It then lapsed into what Gammond calls "Victorian sanctimoniousness"[188] by taking it for granted that the opera "will uphold Offenbach's fame long after his lighter compositions have passed out of memory."[189]

The critic Sacheverell Sitwell compared Offenbach's lyrical and comic gifts to those of Mozart and Rossini.[190] Friedrich Nietzsche called Offenbach both an "artistic genius" and a "clown", but wrote that "nearly every one" of Offenbach's works achieves half a dozen "moments of wanton perfection". Émile Zola commented on Offenbach and his work in a novel (Nana)[191] and an essay, "La féerie et l'opérette IV/V".[192] While granting that Offenbach's best operettas are full of grace, charm and wit, Zola blames Offenbach for what others have made out of the genre. Zola calls operetta a "public enemy" and a "monstrous beast". While some critics saw the satire in Offenbach's works as a social protest, an attack against the establishment, Zola saw the works as a homage to the social system in the Second Empire.[192]

Otto Klemperer was an admirer; late in life he reflected: "At the Kroll we did La Périchole. That's a really delightful score. So is Orpheus in the Underworld and Belle Hélène. Those who called him 'The Mozart of the Boulevards' were not much mistaken".[193] Debussy, Bizet, Mussorgsky and Rimsky-Korsakov loved Offenbach's operettas.[194] Debussy rated them higher than The Tales of Hoffmann: "The one work in which [Offenbach] tried to be serious met with no success."[n 30] A London critic wrote, on Offenbach's death:

I somewhere read that some of Offenbach's latest work shows him to be capable of more ambitious work. I, for one, am glad he did what he did, and only wish he had done more of the same.[198]

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ Biographers are divided on the original form of his given name: Faris (1980),[1] Pourvoyeur (1994),[2] Yon (2000),[3] and Lamb (Grove's Dictionary, 2007)[4] give it as "Jacob"; Henseler (1930),[5] Kracauer (1938),[6] Almeida (1976)[7] Gammond (1980),[8] and Harding (1980)[9] give it as "Jakob". Gammond reproduces the title page of Offenbach's Opus 1 (1833), where his name is printed as "Jacob Offenbach".[10]
  2. ^ From 1815 the western German province of Jülich-Cleves-Berg, of which Cologne was the capital city, was part of the kingdom of Prussia.
  3. ^ Gammond and Almeida state that Isaac was already using the surname Offenbach by the time of his marriage in 1805. Yon states that the formal adoption of the surname in 1808 was in compliance with a Napoleonic decree requiring Jewish surnames to be regularised.[14]
  4. ^ Offenbach was accustomed to giving the year of his birth as 1821, possibly a legacy of his days as a child prodigy, when his age was routinely understated for effect.[8][15]
  5. ^ Yon notes that although foreign nationality was a barrier to entry for the Conservatoire's prestigious competitions, it was not such an obstacle to enrolment as a student.[18]
  6. ^ "a quitté voluntairement".[23] Harding gives the date as 24 December.[24]
  7. ^ Other British publications including The Times and The Manchester Guardian reported on this command performance, but the biographer Peter Gammond was told by the royal archivist that no reference to a performance by Offenbach on the date in question could be found in the official archives.[36]
  8. ^ In addition to a long affair with Zulma Bouffar, Offenbach was known to have had shorter affairs with the singers Marie Cico and Louise Valtesse.[41]
  9. ^ They were Le trésor à Mathurin, Pépito, and Luc et Lucette.[4]
  10. ^ The authorities spelling the name as "Oyayaye" include Faris,[54] Lamb,[4] Pourvoyeur,[55] and Yon;[56] Gammond,[57] Harding,[58] and Kracauer[59] spell the name as "Oyayaie".
  11. ^ According to his friend, the photographer Nadar, Offenbach had made 3,997 visits to the various directors of the Opéra-Comique.[31]
  12. ^ Andre Lamb gives the capacity of the Salle Lacaze as 300; Peter Gammond gives it as 50.[4][62]
  13. ^ Offenbach was licensed to put on "harlequinades, pantomimes, comic scenes, conjuring tricks, dances, shadow shows, puppet plays and songs" – subject to the maximum of three singers or actors stipulated.[63]
  14. ^ Rossini wrote a short piano work dedicated to Offenbach: the Petit caprice (style Offenbach) in can-can rhythm, in which the performer is directed to use only the index and little finger of each hand.[71] The biographers who identify Rossini as the originator of the "Mozart of the Champs-Élysées" tag include Faris,[72] Gammond,[73] Harding,[74] Kracauer,[75] and Yon.[76] Wagner is also thought by some to have used this nickname for Offenbach,[77] although for most of his life Offenbach's music was anathema to him; it was only in the last year of his life that Wagner wrote, "Look at Offenbach. He writes like the divine Mozart".[78]
  15. ^ "Où l'Italien donnait carrière à sa verve et à son imagination, le Français s'est piqué de malice, de bon sens et de bon goût; où son modèle sacrifiait exclusivement à la gaité, il a sacrifié surtout à l'esprit."[81]
  16. ^ "Des pièces de velours se sont englouties dans le salle, les costumes ont dévoré des lés de satin."[85] The English translation is given in Faris.[80]
  17. ^ "La prusse ne ferait jamais le bonheur de nos nationaux".[95]
  18. ^ The Bad Ems pieces were, Les bavards (1862), Il signor Fagotto (1863), Lischen et Fritzchen (1863), Le fifre enchanté, ou Le soldat (1864), Jeanne qui pleure et Jean qui rit (1864), Coscoletto, ou Le lazzarone (1865), and La permission de dix heures (1867). Most of them were played at the Bouffes-Parisiens in the winter season after their premieres.[4]
  19. ^ Literally, "No doubt I am the Father; each of the two is my Son and Full of Verve" – "esprit" meaning both "[Holy] Spirit" and "wit", and "Plein d'Esprit" rhyming with "Saint Esprit".
  20. ^ Guiraud added recitatives in place of spoken dialogue for the Vienna premiere. According to Keck, the rehearsal on 1 February lasted four and a half hours, and Carvalho decided to cut the Venice act, redistributing some of its music.[130] The orchestral parts were destroyed in the Opéra-Comique fire of 1887. Using surviving manuscripts, and with the researches of Almeida and others, a score closer to Offenbach's conception has been possible, but, in Lamb's phrase, "there can never be a definitive score of a work that Offenbach never quite completed".[4]
  21. ^ The Offenbach expert Antonio de Almeida included the following less well-known numbers in his selection of Offenbach's best work: "Chanson de Fortunio" (from the piece of the same title); Sérénade (Pont des soupirs); Rondo – "Depuis la rose nouvelle" (Barbe-bleue); "Ronde des carabiniers" (Les brigands); Rondeau – "J'en prendrai un, deux, trois" (Pomme d'Api); "Couplets du petit bonhomme" and "Couplets de l'alphabet" (Madame l'archiduc); and the valse "Monde charmant que l'on ignore" (Le voyage dans le lune).[135]
  22. ^ In 1911, The Musical Times cited Offenbach as the seventh most prolific operatic composer, with 103 operas (one more than Sir Henry Bishop and six fewer than Baldassare Galuppi). The most prolific was said to be Wenzel Müller with 166.[137]
  23. ^ The term opérette was first used in 1856 for Jules Bovéry's Madame Mascarille.[7] Gammond categorises Cigarette, a work premiered in London, with the English term "operetta"; Grove does not mention it.[4][138]
  24. ^ In English, "I am the husband of the queen" and "The bearded king who comes forward", in which the second syllables of "époux" (husband) and "barbu" (bearded) are nonsensically repeated. Lamb instances a variant of such wordplay in La Périchole:
    Aux maris ré,
    Aux maris cal,
    Aux maris ci,
    Aux maris trants,
    Aux maris récalcitrants. ("Husbands who are re– , husbands who are cal– , husbands who are ci– , husbands who are trant, husbands who are recalcitrant...")[4]
  25. ^ In the 1874 revision this number is a duet for Pluton and Euridice.
  26. ^ Although Auguste catalogued the sketches and manuscripts after his father's death, when his widow died the surviving daughters battled over the papers.[172] Many of his papers were involved in the collapse of the city archives in Cologne in 2009.[173]
  27. ^ Gilbert's plot line, unlike that of Offenbach's librettist Jules Moinaux, was based on an 1847 Tennyson poem, "The Princess".[178]
  28. ^ In 1875, two of Sullivan's short operettas, The Zoo and Trial by Jury were playing in London as companion pieces to longer Offenbach works, Les Géorgiennes and La Périchole.[179] Trial by Jury was written specifically as an afterpiece for that production of La Périchole.[180]
  29. ^ Latin, literally, "with the pen running on" – meaning "extempore; without deliberation or hesitation." (Oxford English Dictionary)
  30. ^ Debussy wrote this in 1903, when The Tales of Hoffmann, after initial success, with 101 performances in its first year, had become neglected.[195] A production by Thomas Beecham at His Majesty's Theatre, London, in 1910 restored the work to the mainstream operatic repertoire, where it has remained.[196][197]

References

  1. ^ a b Faris, p. 21
  2. ^ Pourvoyeur, p. 28
  3. ^ Yon, p. 49
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Lamb, Andrew. "Offenbach, Jacques (Jacob)", Grove Music Online, Oxford Music Online, 2007, accessed 8 July 2011 (subscription required)
  5. ^ Henseler, title page et passim
  6. ^ Kracauer, p. 38
  7. ^ a b Almeida, p. iv
  8. ^ a b c d Gammond, p. 15
  9. ^ Harding, pp. 9–11
  10. ^ Gammond, p. 14
  11. ^ Gammond, p. 13
  12. ^ Faris, p. 14
  13. ^ Faris, p. 17
  14. ^ Gammond, p. 13, Almeida, p. ix, and Yon, p. 10
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Sources

External links

  • Les folies Offenbach
  • Offenbach Edition Keck
  • Boosey and Hawkes Offenbach pages
  • List of works by Offenbach at the Index to Opera and Ballet Sources Online
  • Offenbach at the Musicals101 site
  • Jacques Offenbach at the Internet Broadway Database
  • The Jacques Offenbach Society (UK)

Sheet music

jacques, offenbach, ɑː, also, ɔː, french, ʒak, ɔfɛnbak, german, ˈʔɔfn, listen, june, 1819, october, 1880, german, born, french, composer, cellist, impresario, romantic, period, remembered, nearly, operettas, 1850s, 1870s, uncompleted, opera, tales, hoffmann, p. Jacques Offenbach ˈ ɒ f en b ɑː x also US ˈ ɔː f French ʒak ɔfɛnbak German ˈʔɔfn bax listen 20 June 1819 5 October 1880 was a German born French composer cellist and impresario of the Romantic period He is remembered for his nearly 100 operettas of the 1850s to the 1870s and his uncompleted opera The Tales of Hoffmann He was a powerful influence on later composers of the operetta genre particularly Johann Strauss Jr and Arthur Sullivan His best known works were continually revived during the 20th century and many of his operettas continue to be staged in the 21st The Tales of Hoffmann remains part of the standard opera repertory Offenbach in the 1860s Born in Cologne the son of a synagogue cantor Offenbach showed early musical talent At the age of 14 he was accepted as a student at the Paris Conservatoire but found academic study unfulfilling and left after a year From 1835 to 1855 he earned his living as a cellist achieving international fame and as a conductor His ambition however was to compose comic pieces for the musical theatre Finding the management of Paris Opera Comique company uninterested in staging his works in 1855 he leased a small theatre in the Champs Elysees There he presented a series of his own small scale pieces many of which became popular In 1858 Offenbach produced his first full length operetta Orphee aux enfers Orpheus in the Underworld which was exceptionally well received and has remained one of his most played works During the 1860s he produced at least 18 full length operettas as well as more one act pieces His works from this period included La belle Helene 1864 La Vie parisienne 1866 La Grande Duchesse de Gerolstein 1867 and La Perichole 1868 The risque humour often about sexual intrigue and mostly gentle satiric barbs in these pieces together with Offenbach s facility for melody made them internationally known and translated versions were successful in Vienna London and elsewhere in Europe Offenbach became associated with the Second French Empire of Napoleon III the emperor and his court were genially satirised in many of Offenbach s operettas Napoleon III personally granted him French citizenship and the Legion d Honneur With the outbreak of the Franco Prussian War in 1870 Offenbach found himself out of favour in Paris because of his imperial connections and his German birth He remained successful in Vienna and London however He re established himself in Paris during the 1870s with revivals of some of his earlier favourites and a series of new works and undertook a popular US tour In his last years he strove to finish The Tales of Hoffmann but died before the premiere of the opera which has entered the standard repertory in versions completed or edited by other musicians Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early years 1 2 Cello virtuoso 1 3 Bouffes Parisiens Champs Elysees 1 4 Salle Choiseul 1 5 Orphee aux enfers 1 6 Early 1860s 1 7 Later 1860s 1 8 War and aftermath 1 9 Last years 2 Works 2 1 Operettas 2 2 Other works 2 3 Arrangements and editions 3 Legacy and reputation 3 1 Influence 3 2 Reputation 4 Notes and references 4 1 Notes 4 2 References 4 3 Sources 5 External links 5 1 Sheet musicLife and career EditEarly years Edit Offenbach in the 1840sOffenbach was born Jacob or Jakob n 1 Offenbach to a Jewish family in the German city of Cologne which was then a part of Prussia 11 n 2 His birthplace in the Grosser Griechenmarkt was a short distance from the square that is now named after him the Offenbachplatz 4 He was the second son and the seventh of ten children of Isaac Juda Offenbach ne Eberst 1779 1850 and his wife Marianne nee Rindskopf c 1783 1840 12 Isaac who came from a musical family had abandoned his original trade as a bookbinder and earned an itinerant living as a cantor in synagogues and playing the violin in cafes 13 He was generally known as der Offenbacher after his native town Offenbach am Main and in 1808 he officially adopted Offenbach as a surname n 3 In 1816 he settled in Cologne where he became established as a teacher giving lessons in singing violin flute and guitar and composing both religious and secular music 8 When Jacob was six years old his father taught him to play the violin within two years the boy was composing songs and dances and at the age of nine he took up the cello 8 As he was by then the permanent cantor of the local synagogue Isaac could afford to pay for his son to take lessons from the cellist Bernhard Breuer Three years later the biographer Gabriel Grovlez records the boy was giving performances of his own compositions the technical difficulties of which terrified his master Breuer 15 Together with his brother Julius violin and sister Isabella piano Jacob played in a trio at local dance halls inns and cafes performing popular dance music and operatic arrangements 16 n 4 In 1833 Isaac decided that the two most musically talented of his children Julius and Jacob then aged 18 and 14 needed to leave the provincial musical scene of Cologne to study in Paris With generous support from local music lovers and the municipal orchestra with whom they gave a farewell concert on 9 October the two young musicians accompanied by their father made the four day journey to Paris in November 1833 17 Isaac had been given letters of introduction to the director of the Paris Conservatoire Luigi Cherubini but he needed all his eloquence to persuade Cherubini even to give Jacob an audition The boy s age and nationality were both obstacles to admission n 5 Cherubini had several years earlier refused the 12 year old Franz Liszt admission on similar grounds 19 but he eventually agreed to hear the young Offenbach play He listened to his playing and stopped him saying Enough young man you are now a pupil of this Conservatoire 20 Julius was also admitted Both brothers adopted French forms of their names Julius becoming Jules and Jacob becoming Jacques 21 Early influences Luigi Cherubini and Fromental Halevy top Louis Pierre Norblin and Friedrich von Flotow below Isaac hoped to secure permanent employment in Paris but failed to do so and returned to Cologne 20 Before leaving he found a number of pupils for Jules the modest earnings from those lessons supplemented by fees earned by both brothers as members of synagogue choirs supported them during their studies At the conservatoire Jules was a diligent student he graduated and became a successful violin teacher and conductor and led his younger brother s orchestra for several years 22 By contrast Jacques was bored by academic study and left after a year The conservatoire s roll of students notes against his name Struck off on the 2 December 1834 left of his own free will n 6 Cello virtuoso Edit Having left the conservatoire Offenbach was free from the stern academicism of Cherubini s curriculum but as the biographer James Harding writes he was free also to starve 25 He secured a few temporary jobs in theatre orchestras before gaining a permanent appointment in 1835 as a cellist at the Opera Comique He was no more serious there than he had been at the conservatoire and regularly had his pay docked for playing pranks during performances on one occasion he and the principal cellist played alternate notes of the printed score and on another they sabotaged some of their colleagues music stands to make them collapse in mid performance 1 Nevertheless his earnings from his orchestral work enabled him to take lessons with the cellist Louis Pierre Norblin 26 He made a favourable impression on the composer and conductor Fromental Halevy who gave him lessons in composition and orchestration and wrote to Isaac Offenbach in Cologne that the young man was going to be a great composer 27 Some of Offenbach s early compositions were programmed by the conductor Louis Antoine Jullien 28 Offenbach and another young composer Friedrich von Flotow collaborated on a series of works for cello and piano 29 Although Offenbach s ambition was to compose for the stage he could not gain an entree to Parisian theatre at this point in his career with Flotow s help he built a reputation composing for and playing in the fashionable salons of Paris 30 Offenbach as a young cello virtuoso drawing by Alexandre Laemlein from 1850 Among the salons at which Offenbach most frequently appeared was that of the comtesse de Vaux There he met Herminie d Alcain 1827 1887 the daughter of a Carlist general 31 They fell in love but he was not yet in a financial position to propose marriage 32 To extend his fame and earning power beyond Paris he undertook tours of France and Germany Among those with whom he performed were Anton Rubinstein and in a concert in Offenbach s native Cologne Liszt 4 In 1844 probably through English family connections of Herminie 33 he embarked on a tour of England There he was immediately engaged to appear with some of the most famous musicians of the day including Mendelssohn Joseph Joachim Michael Costa and Julius Benedict 32 The Era wrote of his debut performance in London His execution and taste excited both wonder and pleasure the genius he exhibited amounting to absolute inspiration 34 The British press reported a triumphant royal command performance The Illustrated London News wrote Herr Jacques Offenbach the astonishing Violoncellist performed on Thursday evening at Windsor before the Emperor of Russia the King of Saxony Queen Victoria and Prince Albert with great success 35 n 7 The use of Herr rather than Monsieur reflecting the fact that Offenbach remained a Prussian citizen was common to all the British press coverage of Offenbach s 1844 tour 37 The ambiguity of his nationality sometimes caused him difficulty in later life 38 Offenbach returned to Paris with his reputation and his bank balance both much enhanced The last remaining obstacle to his marriage to Herminie was the difference in their professed religions he converted to Roman Catholicism with the comtesse de Vaux acting as his sponsor Isaac Offenbach s views on his son s conversion from Judaism are unknown 39 The wedding took place on 14 August 1844 the bride was 17 years old and the bridegroom was 25 39 The marriage was lifelong and happy despite some extramarital dalliances on Offenbach s part 40 n 8 After Offenbach s death a friend said that Herminie gave him courage shared his ordeals and comforted him always with tenderness and devotion 42 Offenbach caricatured in 1858 by Nadar Returning to the familiar Paris salons Offenbach quietly shifted the emphasis of his work from being a cellist who also composed to being a composer who played the cello 43 He had already published many compositions and some of them had sold well but now he began to write perform and produce musical burlesques as part of his salon presentations 44 He amused the comtesse de Vaux s 200 guests with a parody of Felicien David s currently fashionable Le desert and in April 1846 gave a concert at which seven operatic items of his own composition were premiered before an audience that included leading music critics 44 After some encouragement and some temporary setbacks he seemed on the verge of breaking into theatrical composition when Paris was convulsed by the 1848 revolution which swept Louis Philippe from the throne and led to serious bloodshed in the streets of the capital 45 Offenbach hastily took Herminie and their recently born daughter to join his family in Cologne He thought it politic to revert temporarily to the name Jacob 46 Returning to Paris in February 1849 Offenbach found the grand salons closed down He went back to working as a cellist and occasional conductor at the Opera Comique but was not encouraged in his aspirations to compose 47 His talents had been noted by the director of the Comedie Francaise Arsene Houssaye who appointed him musical director of the theatre with a brief to enlarge and improve the orchestra 48 Offenbach composed songs and incidental music for eleven classical and modern dramas for the Comedie Francaise in the early 1850s Some of his songs became very popular and he gained valuable experience in writing for the theatre Houssaye later wrote that Offenbach had done wonders for his theatre 49 The management of the Opera Comique however remained uninterested in commissioning him to compose for its stage 50 The composer Debussy later wrote that the musical establishment could not cope with Offenbach s irony which exposed the false overblown quality of the operas they favoured the great art at which one was not allowed to smile 51 Bouffes Parisiens Champs Elysees Edit Between 1853 and 1855 Offenbach wrote three one act operettas and managed to have them staged in Paris n 9 They were all well received but the authorities of the Opera Comique remained unmoved Offenbach found more encouragement from the composer singer and impresario Florimond Ronger known professionally as Herve At his theatre the Folies Nouvelles which had opened the previous year Herve pioneered French light comic opera or operette 15 52 In The Musical Quarterly Martial Teneo and Theodore Baker wrote Without the example set by Herve Offenbach might perhaps never have become the musician who penned Orphee aux Enfers La belle Helene and so many other triumphant works 53 Offenbach approached Herve who agreed to present a new one act operetta with words by Jules Moinaux and music by Offenbach called Oyayaye ou La reine des iles n 10 It was presented on 26 June 1855 and was well received Offenbach s biographer Peter Gammond describes it as a charming piece of nonsense 57 The piece depicts a double bass player played by Herve shipwrecked on a cannibal island who after several perilous encounters with the female chief of the cannibals makes his escape using his double bass as a boat 54 Offenbach pressed ahead with plans to present his works himself at his own theatre 57 and to abandon further thoughts of acceptance by the Opera Comique n 11 Poster by Offenbach s friend Nadar Offenbach had chosen his theatre the Salle Lacaze in the Champs Elysees 60 The location and the timing were ideal for him Paris was about to be filled between May and November with visitors from France and abroad for the 1855 Great Exhibition The Salle Lacaze was next to the exhibition site He later wrote In the Champs Elysees there was a little theatre to let built for the magician Lacaze but closed for many years I knew that the Exhibition of 1855 would bring many people into this locality By May I had found twenty supporters and on 15 June I secured the lease Twenty days later I gathered my librettists and I opened the Theatre des Bouffes Parisiens 61 The description of the theatre as little was accurate it could only hold an audience of at most 300 n 12 It was therefore well suited to the tiny casts permitted under the prevailing licensing laws Offenbach was limited to three speaking or singing characters in any piece n 13 With such small forces full length works were out of the question and Offenbach like Herve presented evenings of several one act pieces 64 The opening of the theatre was a frantic rush with less than a month between the issue of the licence and the opening night on 5 July 1855 65 During this period Offenbach had to equip the theatre recruit actors orchestra and staff find authors to write material for the opening programme and compose the music 64 Among those he recruited at short notice was Ludovic Halevy the nephew of Offenbach s early mentor Fromental Halevy Ludovic was a respectable civil servant with a passion for the theatre and a gift for dialogue and verse While maintaining his civil service career he went on to collaborate sometimes under discreet pseudonyms with Offenbach in 21 works over the next 24 years 4 Halevy wrote the libretto for one of the pieces in the opening programme but the most popular work of the evening had words by Moinaux Les deux aveugles The Two Blind Men is a comedy about two beggars feigning blindness During rehearsals there had been some concern that the public might judge it to be in poor taste 66 but it was not only the hit of the season in Paris it was soon playing successfully in Vienna London and elsewhere 67 Another success that summer was Le violoneux which made a star of Hortense Schneider in her first role for Offenbach Aged 22 when she auditioned for him she was engaged on the spot From 1855 she was a key member of his companies through much of his career 67 The Champs Elysees in 1855 were not yet the grand avenue laid out by Baron Haussmann in the 1860s but an unpaved allee 65 The public who were flocking to Offenbach s theatre in the summer and autumn of 1855 could not be expected to venture there in the depths of a Parisian winter He cast about for a suitable venue and found the Theatre des Jeunes Eleves known also as the Salle Choiseul or Theatre Comte 15 in central Paris He entered into partnership with its proprietor and moved the Bouffes Parisiens there for the winter season The company returned to the Salle Lacaze for the 1856 1857 and 1859 summer seasons performing at the Salle Choiseul in the winter 68 Legislation enacted in March 1861 prevented the company from using both theatres and appearances at the Salle Lacaze were discontinued 69 Salle Choiseul Edit Offenbach s first piece for the company s new home was Ba ta clan December 1855 a well received piece of mock oriental frivolity to a libretto by Halevy 70 He followed it with 15 more one act operettas over the next three years 4 They were all for the small casts permitted under his licence although at the Salle Choiseul he was granted an increase from three to four singers 65 Hortense Schneider the first star created by Offenbach Under Offenbach s management the Bouffes Parisiens staged works by many composers These included new pieces by Leon Gastinel and Leo Delibes When Offenbach asked Rossini s permission to revive his comedy Il signor Bruschino Rossini replied that he was pleased to be able to do anything for the Mozart of the Champs Elysees n 14 Offenbach revered Mozart above all other composers He had an ambition to present Mozart s neglected one act comic opera Der Schauspieldirektor at the Bouffes Parisiens and he acquired the score from Vienna 65 With a text translated and adapted by Leon Battu and Ludovic Halevy he presented it during the Mozart centenary celebrations in May 1856 as L impresario it was popular with the public 79 and also greatly enhanced the critical and social standing of the Bouffes Parisiens 80 By command of the emperor Napoleon III the company performed at the Tuileries palace shortly after the first performance of the Mozart piece 65 In a long article in Le Figaro in July 1856 Offenbach traced the history of comic opera He declared that the first work worthy to be called opera comique was Philidor s 1759 Blaise le savetier and he described the gradual divergence of Italian and French notions of comic opera with verve imagination and gaiety from Italian composers and cleverness common sense good taste and wit from the French composers n 15 He concluded that comic opera had become too grand and inflated His disquisition was a preliminary to the announcement of an open competition for aspiring composers 82 A jury of French composers and playwrights including Daniel Auber Fromental Halevy Ambroise Thomas Charles Gounod and Eugene Scribe considered 78 entries the five short listed entrants were all asked to set a libretto Le docteur miracle written by Ludovic Halevy and Leon Battu 83 The joint winners were Georges Bizet and Charles Lecocq Bizet became and remained a devoted friend of Offenbach Lecocq and Offenbach took a dislike to one another and their subsequent rivalry was not altogether friendly 82 84 Although the Bouffes Parisiens played to full houses the theatre was constantly on the verge of running out of money principally because of what his biographer Alexander Faris calls Offenbach s incorrigible extravagance as a manager 80 An earlier biographer Andre Martinet wrote Jacques spent money without counting Whole lengths of velvet were swallowed up in the auditorium costumes devoured width after width of satin n 16 Moreover Offenbach was personally generous and liberally hospitable 85 To boost the company s finances a London season was organised in 1857 with half the company remaining in Paris to play at the Salle Choiseul and the other half performing at the St James s Theatre in the West End of London 65 The visit was a success but did not cause the sensation that Offenbach s later works did in London 86 Orphee aux enfers Edit Poster for a 19th century production of Orpheus in the Underworld In 1858 the government lifted the licensing restrictions on the number of performers and Offenbach was able to present more ambitious works His first full length operetta Orphee aux enfers Orpheus in the Underworld was presented in October 1858 Offenbach as usual spent freely on the production with scenery by Gustave Dore lavish costumes a cast of twenty principals and a large chorus and orchestra 87 As the company was particularly short of money following an abortive season in Berlin a big success was urgently needed At first the production seemed merely to be a modest success It soon benefited from an outraged review by Jules Janin the critic of the Journal des Debats he condemned the piece for profanity and irreverence ostensibly to Roman mythology but in reality to Napoleon and his government generally seen as the targets of its satire 88 Offenbach and his librettist Hector Cremieux seized on this free publicity and joined in a lively public debate in the columns of the Parisian daily newspaper Le Figaro 89 Janin s indignation made the public agog to see the work and the box office takings were prodigious Among those who wanted to see the satire of the emperor was the emperor himself who commanded a performance in April 1860 89 Despite many great successes during the rest of Offenbach s career Orphee aux enfers remained his most popular Gammond lists among the reasons for its success the sweeping waltzes reminiscent of Vienna but with a new French flavour the patter songs and above all else of course the can can which had led a naughty life in low places since the 1830s or thereabouts and now became a polite fashion as uninhibited as ever 90 In the 1859 season the Bouffes Parisiens presented new works by composers including Flotow Jules Erlanger Alphonse Varney Leo Delibes and Offenbach himself Of Offenbach s new pieces Genevieve de Brabant though initially only a mild success was later revised and gained much popularity where the duet of the two gendarmes became a favourite number in England and France and the basis for the Marines Hymn in the U S 91 Early 1860s Edit Offenbach with his only son Auguste 1865 The 1860s were Offenbach s most successful decade At the beginning of 1860 he was granted French citizenship by the personal command of Napoleon III 92 and the following year he was appointed a Chevalier of the Legion d Honneur this appointment scandalised those haughty and exclusive members of the musical establishment who resented such an honour for a composer of popular light opera 93 Offenbach began the decade with his only stand alone ballet Le papillon The Butterfly produced at the Opera in 1860 It achieved what was then a successful run of 42 performances without as the biographer Andrew Lamb says giving him any greater acceptance in more respectable circles 4 Among other operettas in the same year he finally had a piece presented by the Opera Comique the three act Barkouf It was not a success its plot revolved around a dog and Offenbach attempted canine imitations in his music Neither the public nor the critics were impressed and the piece survived for only seven performances 94 Apart from that setback Offenbach flourished in the 1860s with successes greatly outnumbering failures In 1861 he led the company in a summer season in Vienna Encountering packed houses and enthusiastic reviews Offenbach found Vienna much to his liking He even reverted for a single evening to his old role as a cello virtuoso at a command performance before Emperor Franz Joseph 95 That success was followed by a failure in Berlin Offenbach though born a Prussian citizen observed Prussia never does anything to make those of our nationality happy n 17 He and the company hastened back to Paris 95 Meanwhile among his operettas that season were the full length Le pont des soupirs and the one act M Choufleuri restera chez lui le 96 In 1862 Offenbach s only son Auguste died 1883 was born the last of five children In the same year Offenbach resigned as director of the Bouffes Parisiens handing the post over to Alphonse Varney He continued to write most of his works for the company with the exception of occasional pieces for the summer season at Bad Ems n 18 Despite problems with the libretto Offenbach completed a serious opera in 1864 Die Rheinnixen a hotchpotch of romantic and mythological themes The opera was presented with substantial cuts at the Vienna Court Opera and in Cologne in 1865 It was not given again until 2002 when it was finally performed in its entirety Since then it has been given several productions 97 It contained one number the Elfenchor described by the critic Eduard Hanslick as lovely luring and sensuous 98 which Ernest Guiraud later adapted as the Barcarolle in The Tales of Hoffmann 99 After December 1864 Offenbach wrote less frequently for the Bouffes Parisiens and many of his new works premiered at larger theatres 4 Later 1860s Edit Offenbach s leading ladies clockwise from top left Marie Garnier in Orphee aux enfers Zulma Bouffar in Les brigands Lea Silly role unidentified and Rose Deschamps in Orphee aux enfers Between 1864 and 1868 Offenbach wrote four of the operettas for which he is chiefly remembered La belle Helene 1864 La Vie parisienne 1866 La Grande Duchesse de Gerolstein 1867 and La Perichole 1868 Halevy was joined as librettist for all of them by Henri Meilhac Offenbach who called them Meil and Hal 100 said of this trinity Je suis sans doute le Pere mais chacun des deux est mon Fils et plein d Esprit 101 a play on words loosely translated as I am certainly the Father but each of them is my Son and Wholly Spirited n 19 For La belle Helene Offenbach secured Hortense Schneider to play the title role Since her early success in his short operas she had become a leading star of the French musical stage She now commanded large fees and was notoriously temperamental but Offenbach was adamant that no other singer could match her as Helene 102 Rehearsals for the premiere at the Theatre des Varietes were tempestuous with Schneider and the principal mezzo soprano Lea Silly feuding the censor fretting about the satire of the imperial court and the manager of the theatre attempting to rein in Offenbach s extravagance with production expenses 102 Once again the success of the piece was inadvertently assured by the critic Janin his scandalised notice was strongly countered by liberal critics and the ensuing publicity again brought the public flocking 103 Barbe bleue was a success in early 1866 and was quickly reproduced elsewhere La Vie parisienne later in the same year was a new departure for Offenbach and his librettists for the first time in a large scale piece they chose a modern setting instead of disguising their satire under a classical cloak It needed no accidental boost from Janin but was an instant and prolonged success with Parisian audiences although its very Parisian themes made it less popular abroad Gammond describes the libretto as almost worthy of W S Gilbert and Offenbach s score as certainly his best so far 104 The piece starred Zulma Bouffar who began an affair with the composer that lasted until at least 1875 105 In 1867 Offenbach had his greatest success The premiere of La Grande Duchesse de Gerolstein a satire on militarism 106 took place two days after the opening of the Paris Exhibition an even greater international draw than the 1855 exhibition which had helped him launch his composing career 107 The Parisian public and foreign visitors flocked to the new operetta Sovereigns who saw the piece included the King of Prussia accompanied by his chief minister Otto von Bismarck Halevy with his experience as a senior civil servant saw more clearly than most the looming threat from Prussia he wrote in his diary Bismarck is helping to double our takings This time it s war we re laughing at and war is at our gates 108 La Grande Duchesse de Gerolstein was followed quickly by a series of successful pieces Robinson Crusoe Genevieve de Brabant revised version both 1867 Le chateau a Toto Le pont des soupirs revised version and L ile de Tulipatan all in 1868 109 In October 1868 La Perichole marked a transition in Offenbach s style with less exuberant satire and more human romantic interest 110 Lamb calls it Offenbach s most charming score 111 There was some critical grumbling at the change but the piece with Schneider in the lead did good business 112 It was quickly produced in Europe and both North and South America 113 114 Of the pieces that followed it at the end of the decade Les brigands 1869 was another work that leaned more to romantic comic opera than to opera bouffe It was well received but has not subsequently been revived as often as Offenbach s best known operettas 110 War and aftermath Edit Offenbach returned hurriedly from Ems and Wiesbaden before the outbreak of the Franco Prussian War in 1870 He then went to his home in Etretat and arranged for his family to move to the safety of San Sebastian in northern Spain joining them shortly afterwards 115 116 Having risen to fame under Napoleon III satirised him and been rewarded by him Offenbach was universally associated with the old regime he was known as the mocking bird of the Second Empire 117 When the empire fell in the wake of Prussia s crushing victory at Sedan 1870 Offenbach s music was suddenly out of favour France was swept by violently anti German sentiments and despite his French citizenship and Legion d honneur his birth and upbringing in Cologne made him suspect His operettas were now frequently vilified as the embodiment of everything superficial and worthless in Napoleon III s regime 38 La Grande Duchesse de Gerolstein was banned in France because of its antimilitarist satire 118 Programme for the first London production of La Perichole Although his Parisian audience deserted him Offenbach had by now become highly popular in England John Hollingshead of the Gaiety Theatre presented Offenbach s operettas to large and enthusiastic audiences 119 Between 1870 and 1872 the Gaiety produced 15 of his works At the Royalty Theatre Richard D Oyly Carte presented La Perichole in 1875 120 In Vienna too Offenbach works were regularly produced While the war and its aftermath ravaged Paris the composer supervised Viennese productions and travelled to England as the guest of the Prince of Wales 121 By the end of 1871 life in Paris had returned to normal and Offenbach ended his voluntary exile His new works Le roi Carotte 1872 and La jolie parfumeuse 1873 were modestly profitable but lavish revivals of his earlier successes did better business He decided to go back into theatre management and took over the Theatre de la Gaite in July 1873 122 His spectacular revival of Orphee aux enfers there was highly profitable an attempt to repeat that success with a new lavish version of Genevieve de Brabant proved less popular 123 Along with the costs of extravagant productions collaboration with the dramatist Victorien Sardou culminated in financial disaster An expensive production of Sardou s La haine in 1874 with incidental music by Offenbach failed to attract the public to the Gaite and Offenbach was forced to sell his interests in the Gaite and to mortgage future royalties 124 In 1876 a successful tour of the United States in connection with its Centennial Exhibition enabled Offenbach to recover some of his losses and pay his debts Beginning with a concert at Gilmore s Garden before a crowd of 8 000 people he gave a series of more than 40 concerts in New York and Philadelphia To circumvent a Philadelphia law forbidding entertainments on Sundays he disguised his operetta numbers as liturgical pieces and advertised a Grand Sacred Concert by M Offenbach Dis moi Venus from La belle Helene became a Litanie and other equally secular numbers were billed as Priere or Hymne 125 The local authorities were not deceived and the concert did not take place 126 At Booth s Theatre New York Offenbach conducted La vie parisienne 127 and his recent 1873 La jolie parfumeuse 4 He returned to France in July 1876 with profits that were handsome but not spectacular 53 Offenbach s later operettas enjoyed renewed popularity in France especially Madame Favart 1878 which featured a fantasy plot about the real life French actress Marie Justine Favart and La fille du tambour major 1879 which was the most successful of his operettas of the 1870s 128 Last years Edit The Tales of Hoffmann scene from the premiere showing Adele Isaac as the dead Antonia with l to r Hippolyte Belhomme Marguerite Ugalde Pierre Grivot Emile Alexandre Taskin and Jean Alexandre Talazac Profitable though La fille du tambour major was composing it left Offenbach less time to work on his cherished project the creation of a successful serious opera Since the beginning of 1877 he had been working when he could on a piece based on a stage play Les contes fantastiques d Hoffmann by Jules Barbier and Michel Carre Offenbach had suffered from gout since the 1860s often being carried into the theatre in a chair Now in failing health he was conscious of his own mortality and wished passionately to live long enough to complete the opera Les contes d Hoffmann The Tales of Hoffmann He was heard saying to Kleinzach his dog I would give everything I have to be at the premiere 129 However Offenbach did not live to finish the piece He left the vocal score substantially complete and had made a start on the orchestration Ernest Guiraud a family friend assisted by Offenbach s 18 year old son Auguste completed the orchestration making significant changes as well as the substantial cuts demanded by the Opera Comique s director Carvalho 130 n 20 The opera was first seen at the Opera Comique on 10 February 1881 Guiraud added recitatives for the Vienna premiere in December 1881 and other versions were made later 130 Offenbach died in Paris in 1880 at the age of 61 His cause of death was certified as heart failure brought on by acute gout He was given a state funeral The Times wrote The crowd of distinguished men that accompanied him on his last journey amid the general sympathy of the public shows that the late composer was reckoned among the masters of his art 131 He is buried in the Montmartre Cemetery 132 Works EditMain article List of compositions by Jacques Offenbach In The Musical Times Mark Lubbock wrote in 1957 Offenbach s music is as individually characteristic as that of Delius Grieg or Puccini together with range and variety He could write straightforward singing numbers like Paris song in La Belle Helene Au mont Ida trois deesses comic songs like General Boum s Piff Paff Pouf and the ridiculous ensemble at the servants ball in La Vie Parisienne Votre habit a craque dans le dos He was a specialist at writing music that had a rapturous hysterical quality The famous can can from Orphee aux Enfers has it and so has the finale of the servants party which ends with the delirious song Tout tourne tout danse Then as a contrast he could compose songs of a simplicity grace and beauty like the Letter Song from La Perichole Chanson de Fortunio and the Grand Duchess s tender love song to Fritz Dites lui qu on l a remarque distingue 133 Among other well known Offenbach numbers are the Doll Song Les oiseaux dans la charmille The Tales of Hoffmann Voici le sabre de mon pere and Ah Que j aime les militaires La Grande Duchesse de Gerolstein and Tu n es pas beau in La Perichole which Lamb notes was Offenbach s last major song for Hortense Schneider 134 n 21 Operettas Edit Main article List of operettas by Jacques Offenbach By his own reckoning Offenbach composed more than 100 operas 136 n 22 Both the number and the noun are open to question some works were so extensively revised that he evidently counted the revised versions as new and commentators generally refer to all but a few of his stage works as operettas rather than operas Offenbach reserved the term operette English operetta n 23 or operette bouffe for some of his one act works more often using the term opera bouffe for his full length ones though there are a number of one and two act examples of this type It was only with the further development of the Operette genre in Vienna after 1870 that the French term operette began to be used for works longer than one act 139 Offenbach also used the term opera comique for at least 24 of his works in either one two or three acts 140 Offenbach s earliest operettas were one act pieces for small casts More than 30 of these were presented before his first full scale opera bouffon Orphee aux enfers in 1858 and he composed over 20 more of them during the rest of his career 4 141 Lamb following the precedent of Henseler s 1930 study of the composer divides the one act pieces into five categories i country idylls ii urban operettas iii military operettas iv farces and v burlesques or parodies 142 Offenbach enjoyed his greatest success in the 1860s His most popular operettas from the decade have remained among his best known 4 Texts and word setting Librettists and successors clockwise from top left Ludovic Halevy Henri Meilhac Johann Strauss II Arthur Sullivan The first ideas for plots usually came from Offenbach with his librettists working on lines agreed with him Lamb writes In this respect Offenbach was both well served and skilful at discovering talent Like Sullivan and unlike Johann Strauss II he was consistently blessed with workable subjects and genuinely witty librettos 4 He took advantage of the rhythmic flexibility of the French language but sometimes took this to extremes forcing words into unnatural stresses 143 Harding comments that he wrought much violence on the French language 144 A frequent characteristic of Offenbach s word setting was the nonsensical repetition of isolated syllables of words for comic effect an example is the quintet for the kings in La belle Helene Je suis l epoux de la reine Poux de la reine Poux de la reine and Le roi barbu qui s avance Bu qui s avance Bu qui s avance n 24 Musical structureIn general Offenbach followed simple established forms His melodies are usually short and unvaried in their basic rhythm rarely in Hughes s words escaping the despotism of the four bar phrase 145 In modulation Offenbach was similarly cautious he rarely switched a melody to a remote or unexpected key and kept mostly to a tonic dominant subdominant pattern 146 Within these conventional limits he employed greater resource in his varied use of rhythm in a single number he would contrast rapid patter for one singer with a broad smooth phrase for another illustrating their different characters 146 Similarly he often switched quickly between major and minor keys effectively contrasting characters or situations 147 When he wished to Offenbach could use unconventional techniques such as the leitmotiv used throughout to accompany the eponymous Docteur Ox 1877 148 and to parody Wagner in La carnaval des revues 1860 149 OrchestrationIn his early pieces for the Bouffes Parisiens the size of the orchestra pit had restricted Offenbach to an orchestra of 16 players 150 He composed for flute oboe clarinet bassoon two horns piston trombone timpani and percussion and a small string section of seven players 151 After moving to the Salle Choiseul he had an orchestra of 30 players 151 The musicologist and Offenbach specialist Jean Christophe Keck notes that when larger orchestras were available either in bigger Paris theatres or in Vienna or elsewhere Offenbach would compose or rearrange existing music accordingly Surviving scores show his instrumentation for additional wind and brass and even extra percussion When they were available he wrote for cor anglais harp and exceptionally Keck records an ophicleide Le Papillon tubular bells Le carnaval des revues and a wind machine Le voyage dans la lune 151 Hughes describes Offenbach s orchestration as always skilful often delicate and occasionally subtle He instances Pluton s song in Orphee aux enfers n 25 introduced by a three bar phrase for solo clarinet and solo bassoon in octaves immediately repeated on solo flute and solo bassoon an octave higher 152 In Keck s view Offenbach s orchestral scoring is full of details elaborate counter voices minute interactions coloured by interjections of the woodwinds or brass all of which establish a dialogue with the voices His refinement of design equals that of Mozart or Rossini 151 Compositional methodOffenbach often composed amidst noise and distractions According to Keck Offenbach would first make a note of melodies a libretto suggested to him in a notebook or straight onto the librettist s manuscript Next using full score manuscript paper he wrote down vocal parts in the centre then a piano accompaniment at the bottom possibly with notes on orchestration When Offenbach felt sure the work would be performed he began full orchestration often employing a codified system 153 Parody and influences Offenbach by Andre Gill 1866 Offenbach was well known for parodying other composers music Some of them saw the joke and others did not Adam Auber and Meyerbeer enjoyed Offenbach s parodies of their scores 53 Meyerbeer made a point of attending all Bouffes Parisiens productions always seated in Offenbach s private box 65 Among the composers who were not amused by Offenbach s parodies were Berlioz and Wagner 154 Offenbach mocked Berlioz s strivings after the antique 155 and his initial light hearted satire of Wagner s pretensions later hardened into genuine dislike 156 Berlioz reacted by bracketing Offenbach and Wagner together as the product of the mad German mind 154 and Wagner ignoring Berlioz retaliated by writing some unflattering verses about Offenbach 154 In general Offenbach s parodistic technique was simply to play the original music in unexpected and incongruous circumstances He slipped the banned revolutionary anthem La Marseillaise into the chorus of rebellious gods in Orphee aux enfers and quoted the aria Che faro from Gluck s Orfeo in the same work in La belle Helene he quoted the patriotic trio from Rossini s Guillaume Tell and parodied himself in the ensemble for the kings of Greece in which the accompaniment quotes the rondeau from Orphee aux enfers In his one act pieces Offenbach parodied Rossini s Largo al factotum and familiar arias by Bellini In Croquefer 1857 one duet consists of quotations from Halevy s La Juive and Meyerbeer s Robert le Diable and Les Huguenots 142 157 Even in his later less satirical period he included a parodic quotation from Donizetti s La fille du regiment in La fille du tambour major 4 Other examples of Offenbach s use of incongruity are noted by the critic Paul Taylor In La belle Helene the kings of Greece denounce Paris as un vil seducteur to a waltz tempo that is itself unsuitably seductive the potty sounding phrase L homme a la pomme becomes the absurd nucleus of a big cod ensemble 158 Another lyric set to absurdly ceremonious music is Votre habit a craque dans le dos Your coat has split down the back in La vie parisienne 15 The Grand Duchess of Gerolstein s rondo Ah Que j aime les militaires is rhythmically and melodically similar to the finale of Beethoven s Seventh Symphony but it is not clear whether the similarity is parodic or coincidental 15 In Offenbach s last decade he took note of a change in public taste a simpler more romantic style was now preferred Harding writes that Lecocq had successfully moved away from satire and parody returning to the genuine spirit of opera comique and its peculiarly French gaiety 144 Offenbach followed suit in a series of 20 operettas the conductor and musicologist Antonio de Almeida names the finest of these as La fille du tambour major 1879 128 Other works Edit Dr Miracle and Antonia in the 1881 premiere of The Tales of Hoffmann Of Offenbach s two serious operas Die Rheinnixen a failure was not revived until the 21st century 159 His second attempt The Tales of Hoffmann was originally intended as a grand opera 160 When the work was accepted by Leon Carvalho for production at the Opera Comique Offenbach agreed to make it an opera comique with spoken dialogue It was incomplete when he died 161 Faris speculates that but for Georges Bizet s premature death Bizet rather than Guiraud would have been asked to complete the piece and would have done so more satisfactorily 162 The critic Tim Ashley writes Stylistically the opera reveals a remarkable amalgam of French and German influences Weberian chorales preface Hoffmann s narrative Olympia delivers a big coloratura aria straight out of French grand opera while Antonia sings herself to death to music reminiscent of Schubert 38 Although he wrote ballet music for many of his operettas Offenbach wrote only one ballet Le papillon The score was much praised for its orchestration and it contained one number the Valse des rayons that became an international success 163 Between 1836 and 1875 he composed several individual waltzes and polkas and suites of dances 164 They include a waltz Abendblatter Evening Papers composed for Vienna with Johann Strauss s Morgenblatter Morning Papers as a companion piece 165 Other orchestral compositions include a piece in 17th century style with cello solo which became a standard work of the cello repertoire Little of Offenbach s non operatic orchestral music has been regularly performed since his death 32 Offenbach composed more than 50 non operatic songs between 1838 and 1854 most of them to French texts by authors including Alfred de Musset Theophile Gautier and Jean de La Fontaine and also ten to German texts Among the most popular of these songs are A toi 1843 dedicated to the young Herminie d Alcain as an early token of his love 166 An Ave Maria for soprano solo was recently rediscovered at the Bibliotheque nationale de France 167 Arrangements and editions Edit Although the overtures to Orphee aux enfers and La belle Helene are well known and frequently recorded the scores usually performed and recorded were not composed by Offenbach but were arranged by Carl Binder and Eduard Haensch respectively for the Vienna premieres of the two works Offenbach s own preludes are much shorter 168 In 1938 Manuel Rosenthal assembled the popular ballet Gaite Parisienne from his own orchestral arrangements of melodies from Offenbach s stage works and in 1953 the same composer assembled a symphonic suite Offenbachiana also from music by Offenbach 169 Jean Christophe Keck regards the 1938 work as no more than a vulgarly orchestrated pastiche 170 in Gammond s view however it does full justice to Offenbach 171 Efforts to present critical editions of Offenbach s works have been hampered by the dispersion of his autograph scores to several collections after his death some of which do not grant access to scholars n 26 Offenbach and Strauss 1871 cartoon Legacy and reputation EditInfluence Edit The musician and author Fritz Spiegl wrote in 1980 Without Offenbach there would have been no Savoy Opera no Die Fledermaus or Merry Widow 174 The two creators of the Savoy operas the librettist Gilbert and the composer Sullivan were both indebted to Offenbach and his partners for their satiric and musical styles even borrowing plot components 175 For example Faris argues that the mock oriental Ba ta clan influenced The Mikado including its character names Offenbach s Ko ko ri ko and Gilbert s Ko Ko 176 Faris also compares Le pont des soupirs 1861 and The Gondoliers 1889 in both works there are choruses a la barcarolle for gondoliers and contadini in thirds and sixths Offenbach has a Venetian admiral telling of his cowardice in battle Gilbert and Sullivan have their Duke of Plaza Toro who led his regiment from behind 93 Offenbach s Les Georgiennes 1864 like Gilbert and Sullivan s Princess Ida 1884 depicts a female stronghold challenged by males in disguise 177 n 27 The best known instance in which a Savoy opera draws on Offenbach s work is The Pirates of Penzance 1879 where both Gilbert and Sullivan follow the lead of Les brigands 1869 in their treatment of the police plodding along ineffectually in heavy march time 110 Les brigands was presented in London in 1871 1873 and 1875 for the first of these Gilbert made an English translation of Meilhac and Halevy s libretto 110 However much the young Sullivan was influenced by Offenbach n 28 the influence was evidently not in only one direction Hughes observes that two numbers in Offenbach s Maitre Peronilla 1878 bear an astonishing resemblance to My name is John Wellington Wells from Gilbert and Sullivan s The Sorcerer 1877 181 Elegy to Offenbach by Clement Scott in the magazine Punch It is not clear how directly Offenbach influenced Johann Strauss He had encouraged Strauss to turn to operetta when they met in Vienna in 1864 but it was not until seven years later that Strauss did so 182 However Offenbach s operettas were well established in Vienna and Strauss worked on the lines established by his French colleague in 1870s Vienna an operetta composer who did not do so was quickly called to order by the press 182 In Gammond s view the Viennese composer most influenced by Offenbach was Franz von Suppe who studied Offenbach s works carefully and wrote many successful operettas using them as a model 183 In his 1957 article Lubbock wrote Offenbach is undoubtedly the most significant figure in the history of the musical and traced the development of musical theatre from Offenbach to Irving Berlin and Rodgers and Hammerstein via Franz Lehar Andre Messager Sullivan and Lionel Monckton 133 Reputation Edit During Offenbach s lifetime and in the obituary notices in 1880 fastidious critics dubbed Musical Snobs Ltd by Gammond showed themselves at odds with public appreciation 184 In a 1980 article in The Musical Times George Hauger commented that those critics not only underrated Offenbach but wrongly supposed that his music would soon be forgotten 185 Although most critics of the time made that erroneous assumption a few perceived Offenbach s unusual quality in The Times Francis Hueffer wrote none of his numerous Parisian imitators has ever been able to rival Offenbach at his best 186 Nevertheless the paper joined in the general prediction It is very doubtful whether any of his works will survive 186 The New York Times shared this view That he had the gift of melody in a very extraordinary degree is not to be denied but he wrote currente calamo n 29 and the lack of development of his choicest inspirations will it is to be feared keep them from reaching even the next generation 187 After the posthumous production of The Tales of Hoffmann The Times partially reconsidered its judgment writing Les Contes de Hoffmann will confirm the opinion of those who regard him as a great composer in every sense of the word It then lapsed into what Gammond calls Victorian sanctimoniousness 188 by taking it for granted that the opera will uphold Offenbach s fame long after his lighter compositions have passed out of memory 189 The critic Sacheverell Sitwell compared Offenbach s lyrical and comic gifts to those of Mozart and Rossini 190 Friedrich Nietzsche called Offenbach both an artistic genius and a clown but wrote that nearly every one of Offenbach s works achieves half a dozen moments of wanton perfection Emile Zola commented on Offenbach and his work in a novel Nana 191 and an essay La feerie et l operette IV V 192 While granting that Offenbach s best operettas are full of grace charm and wit Zola blames Offenbach for what others have made out of the genre Zola calls operetta a public enemy and a monstrous beast While some critics saw the satire in Offenbach s works as a social protest an attack against the establishment Zola saw the works as a homage to the social system in the Second Empire 192 Otto Klemperer was an admirer late in life he reflected At the Kroll we did La Perichole That s a really delightful score So is Orpheus in the Underworld and Belle Helene Those who called him The Mozart of the Boulevards were not much mistaken 193 Debussy Bizet Mussorgsky and Rimsky Korsakov loved Offenbach s operettas 194 Debussy rated them higher than The Tales of Hoffmann The one work in which Offenbach tried to be serious met with no success n 30 A London critic wrote on Offenbach s death I somewhere read that some of Offenbach s latest work shows him to be capable of more ambitious work I for one am glad he did what he did and only wish he had done more of the same 198 Notes and references EditNotes Edit Biographers are divided on the original form of his given name Faris 1980 1 Pourvoyeur 1994 2 Yon 2000 3 and Lamb Grove s Dictionary 2007 4 give it as Jacob Henseler 1930 5 Kracauer 1938 6 Almeida 1976 7 Gammond 1980 8 and Harding 1980 9 give it as Jakob Gammond reproduces the title page of Offenbach s Opus 1 1833 where his name is printed as Jacob Offenbach 10 From 1815 the western German province of Julich Cleves Berg of which Cologne was the capital city was part of the kingdom of Prussia Gammond and Almeida state that Isaac was already using the surname Offenbach by the time of his marriage in 1805 Yon states that the formal adoption of the surname in 1808 was in compliance with a Napoleonic decree requiring Jewish surnames to be regularised 14 Offenbach was accustomed to giving the year of his birth as 1821 possibly a legacy of his days as a child prodigy when his age was routinely understated for effect 8 15 Yon notes that although foreign nationality was a barrier to entry for the Conservatoire s prestigious competitions it was not such an obstacle to enrolment as a student 18 a quitte voluntairement 23 Harding gives the date as 24 December 24 Other British publications including The Times and The Manchester Guardian reported on this command performance but the biographer Peter Gammond was told by the royal archivist that no reference to a performance by Offenbach on the date in question could be found in the official archives 36 In addition to a long affair with Zulma Bouffar Offenbach was known to have had shorter affairs with the singers Marie Cico and Louise Valtesse 41 They were Le tresor a Mathurin Pepito and Luc et Lucette 4 The authorities spelling the name as Oyayaye include Faris 54 Lamb 4 Pourvoyeur 55 and Yon 56 Gammond 57 Harding 58 and Kracauer 59 spell the name as Oyayaie According to his friend the photographer Nadar Offenbach had made 3 997 visits to the various directors of the Opera Comique 31 Andre Lamb gives the capacity of the Salle Lacaze as 300 Peter Gammond gives it as 50 4 62 Offenbach was licensed to put on harlequinades pantomimes comic scenes conjuring tricks dances shadow shows puppet plays and songs subject to the maximum of three singers or actors stipulated 63 Rossini wrote a short piano work dedicated to Offenbach the Petit caprice style Offenbach in can can rhythm in which the performer is directed to use only the index and little finger of each hand 71 The biographers who identify Rossini as the originator of the Mozart of the Champs Elysees tag include Faris 72 Gammond 73 Harding 74 Kracauer 75 and Yon 76 Wagner is also thought by some to have used this nickname for Offenbach 77 although for most of his life Offenbach s music was anathema to him it was only in the last year of his life that Wagner wrote Look at Offenbach He writes like the divine Mozart 78 Ou l Italien donnait carriere a sa verve et a son imagination le Francais s est pique de malice de bon sens et de bon gout ou son modele sacrifiait exclusivement a la gaite il a sacrifie surtout a l esprit 81 Des pieces de velours se sont englouties dans le salle les costumes ont devore des les de satin 85 The English translation is given in Faris 80 La prusse ne ferait jamais le bonheur de nos nationaux 95 The Bad Ems pieces were Les bavards 1862 Il signor Fagotto 1863 Lischen et Fritzchen 1863 Le fifre enchante ou Le soldat 1864 Jeanne qui pleure et Jean qui rit 1864 Coscoletto ou Le lazzarone 1865 and La permission de dix heures 1867 Most of them were played at the Bouffes Parisiens in the winter season after their premieres 4 Literally No doubt I am the Father each of the two is my Son and Full of Verve esprit meaning both Holy Spirit and wit and Plein d Esprit rhyming with Saint Esprit Guiraud added recitatives in place of spoken dialogue for the Vienna premiere According to Keck the rehearsal on 1 February lasted four and a half hours and Carvalho decided to cut the Venice act redistributing some of its music 130 The orchestral parts were destroyed in the Opera Comique fire of 1887 Using surviving manuscripts and with the researches of Almeida and others a score closer to Offenbach s conception has been possible but in Lamb s phrase there can never be a definitive score of a work that Offenbach never quite completed 4 The Offenbach expert Antonio de Almeida included the following less well known numbers in his selection of Offenbach s best work Chanson de Fortunio from the piece of the same title Serenade Pont des soupirs Rondo Depuis la rose nouvelle Barbe bleue Ronde des carabiniers Les brigands Rondeau J en prendrai un deux trois Pomme d Api Couplets du petit bonhomme and Couplets de l alphabet Madame l archiduc and the valse Monde charmant que l on ignore Le voyage dans le lune 135 In 1911 The Musical Times cited Offenbach as the seventh most prolific operatic composer with 103 operas one more than Sir Henry Bishop and six fewer than Baldassare Galuppi The most prolific was said to be Wenzel Muller with 166 137 The term operette was first used in 1856 for Jules Bovery s Madame Mascarille 7 Gammond categorises Cigarette a work premiered in London with the English term operetta Grove does not mention it 4 138 In English I am the husband of the queen and The bearded king who comes forward in which the second syllables of epoux husband and barbu bearded are nonsensically repeated Lamb instances a variant of such wordplay in La Perichole Aux maris re Aux maris cal Aux maris ci Aux maris trants Aux maris recalcitrants Husbands who are re husbands who are cal husbands who are ci husbands who are trant husbands who are recalcitrant 4 In the 1874 revision this number is a duet for Pluton and Euridice Although Auguste catalogued the sketches and manuscripts after his father s death when his widow died the surviving daughters battled over the papers 172 Many of his papers were involved in the collapse of the city archives in Cologne in 2009 173 Gilbert s plot line unlike that of Offenbach s librettist Jules Moinaux was based on an 1847 Tennyson poem The Princess 178 In 1875 two of Sullivan s short operettas The Zoo and Trial by Jury were playing in London as companion pieces to longer Offenbach works Les Georgiennes and La Perichole 179 Trial by Jury was written specifically as an afterpiece for that production of La Perichole 180 Latin literally with the pen running on meaning extempore without deliberation or hesitation Oxford English Dictionary Debussy wrote this in 1903 when The Tales of Hoffmann after initial success with 101 performances in its first year had become neglected 195 A production by Thomas Beecham at His Majesty s Theatre London in 1910 restored the work to the mainstream operatic repertoire where it has remained 196 197 References Edit a b Faris p 21 Pourvoyeur p 28 Yon p 49 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Lamb Andrew Offenbach Jacques Jacob Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online 2007 accessed 8 July 2011 subscription required Henseler title page et passim Kracauer p 38 a b Almeida p iv a b c d Gammond p 15 Harding pp 9 11 Gammond p 14 Gammond p 13 Faris p 14 Faris p 17 Gammond p 13 Almeida p ix and Yon p 10 a b c d e f Grovlez Gabriel Jacques Offenbach A Centennial Sketch Archived 9 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Musical Quarterly Vol 5 No 3 July 1919 pp 329 337 subscription required Faris p 18 Faris p 19 Yon p 23 Faris p 20 a b Gammond p 17 Harding p 19 Gammond p 18 Faris p 224 Harding p 20 Harding p 21 Gammond p 19 Gammond pp 19 20 Harding p 27 Faris pp 23 and 257 Faris p 23 and Gammond pp 22 23 a b Faris p 28 a b c Gammond p 28 Harding p 39 Madame Puzzi s Concert The Era 19 May 1844 p 5 The Illustrated London News 8 June 1844 p 370 Gammond pp 28 29 Varieties The Manchester Guardian 12 June 1844 p 5 and Madame Dulcken s Concert The Times 12 June 1844 p 7 a b c Ashley Tim The cursed opera Archived 8 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Guardian 9 January 2004 a b Harding p 40 Harding p 52 and Faris p 103 Yon pp 214 393 and 407 De Joncieres Victorin quoted in Gammond p 30 Gammond p 30 a b Gammond p 32 Horne pp 225 226 Gammond p 35 Gammond p 34 Harding p 51 Harding p 54 Gammond pp 35 36 Debussy quoted in Faris p 28 Huebner Steven Review Herve Un Musicien paradoxal 1825 1892 Archived 15 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine Notes Second Series Vol 50 No 3 March 1994 pp 972 973 subscription required Harding pp 59 61 and Kracauer pp 138 139 a b c Teneo Martial and Theodore Baker Jacques Offenbach His Centenary Archived 15 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Musical Quarterly Vol 6 No 1 January 1920 pp 98 117 subscription required a b Faris p 49 Pourvoyeur p 241 Yon p 141 a b c Gammond p 36 Harding p 61 Kracauer pp 139 140 Yon p 111 Offenbach quoted in Gammond p 37 and Bekker pp 18 19 Various editions of Gammond give the spelling as Lacaza and Lazaca Bekker gives it as Lacaze Gammond p 37 Harding p 63 a b Faris pp 49 51 a b c d e f g Faris Alexander The birth of the Bouffes Parisiens The Times 11 October 1980 p 6 Harding p 66 a b Gammond p 39 Yon pp 760 762 Levin p 401 Harding p 253 Ragni Sergio Rossini Complete Piano Edition Volume 2 Archived 21 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Chandos Records accessed 16 July 2011 Faris p 66 Gammond p 45 Harding p 82 Kracauer p 164 Yon p 175 Pourvoyeur p 180 Faris p 27 Yon p 179 a b c Faris p 58 Offenbach Jacques Concours pour une operette en un acte Archived 15 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine Le Figaro 17 July 1856 a b Curtiss Mina Bizet Offenbach and Rossini Archived 21 December 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Musical Quarterly Vol 40 No 3 July 1954 pp 350 359 subscription required Gammond p 42 Gammond p 43 a b Martinet p 44 Gammond p 46 Harding p 110 Faris p 71 a b Gammond p 54 Gammond p 56 Gammond p 57 Kracauer p 209 a b Faris p 84 Gammond p 63 a b c Gammond p 70 Ganzl Kurt Jacques Offenbach Archived 27 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Operetta Research Center 27 February 2010 accessed 25 July 2011 OEK Dokumentation 2002 2006 Jacques Offenbach Les Fees du Rhin Archived 11 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine Boosey amp Hawkes Bote Bock in German 2006 p 59 Gammond p 78 Faris p 24 Faris p 51 1864 Et puis Offenbach vint Archived 3 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Theatre des Varietes Paris in French accessed 9 July 2011 a b Gammond p 80 Gammond p 81 Gammond p 87 Harding p 141 Gammond p 89 Harding pp 165 168 Harding p 172 Lamb Andrew Pont des soupirs Le New Grove Dictionary of Opera Oxford Music Online Oxford University Press accessed 23 June 2013 subscription required Le Pont de soupirs and Gammond pp 93 94 Robinson Crusoe Genevieve de Brabant Le chateau a Toto and L ile de Tulipatan a b c d Gammond p 97 Lamb Andrew La Perichole in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera Macmillan London amp New York 1997 Yon p 374 La Perichole L Avant Scene Opera No 66 August 1984 La Perichole at the IBDB database Yon p 396 Faris p 164 Canning Hugh I love Paris Archived 8 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Sunday Times 5 November 2000 Clements Andrew Offenbach La Grande Duchesse de Gerolstein Archived 28 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine The Guardian 14 October 2005 Gammond p 100 Young pp 105 106 Gammond p 102 Gammond p 104 Harding p 198 Harding pp 199 200 and Yon p 502 O Connor Patrick The Embodiment of Success The Times Literary Supplement 10 October 1980 p 1128 Gammond p 116 Amusements The Opera Bouffe Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times 13 June 1876 a b Almeida p xxi Faris p 192 a b c Keck J C Genese et legendes In L Avant Scene Opera Les Contes d Hoffmann Editions Premieres Loges Paris No 235 2006 France The Times 8 October 1880 p 3 Cimetiere de Montmartre Archived 3 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Parisinfo Site officiel de l Office du Tourisme et des Congres accessed 23 June 2013 a b Lubbock Mark The Music of Musicals Archived 31 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Musical Times Vol 98 No 1375 September 1957 pp 483 485 subscription required Lamb Andrew Perichole La The New Grove Dictionary of Opera Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online accessed 26 August 2011 subscription required Almeida pp v and vi Offenbach s hundred operas The Era 11 February 1877 p 5 Towers John Who composed the greatest number of operas The Musical Times 1 August 1911 p 527 subscription required Archived 10 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Gammond p 147 Lamb Andrew Operetta Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online accessed 28 April 2018 subscription required Gammond pp 145 156 Gammond pp 156 157 a b Lamb Andrew Offenbach in One Act Archived 14 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Musical Times Vol 121 No 1652 October 1980 pp 615 617 subscription required Hughes p 43 a b Harding p 208 Hughes p 46 a b Hughes p 48 Hughes p 51 Hughes p 39 Gammond p 59 Faris p 39 a b c d Keck Jean Christophe The need for an authentic Offenbach Archived 21 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Offenbach Edition Keck Boosey and Hawkes accessed 16 July 2011 Hughes p 45 Keck Jean Christophe translated by John Taylor Tuttle Offenbach an oeuvre boasting more than 600 works Booklet essay for Ballade Symphonique CD 476 8999 Universal Classics France 2006 a b c Gammond pp 59 63 and 73 Henseler quoted in Hughes p 46 Gammond pp 59 and 127 Scherer Barrymore Laurence Gilbert amp Sullivan Parody s Patresfamilias Archived 24 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine The Wall Street Journal 23 June 2011 Taylor Paul The judgement of Paris France Archived 8 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Independent 28 November 1995 Milnes R One Long Hymn to Pacifism Opera October 2009 pp 1202 1206 Faris pp 203 204 Traubner p 643 Faris p 190 Gammond p 127 128 Faris p 195 Gammond p 62 Gammond p 159 Gammond pp 75 76 Gammond p 26 Ave Maria solo de Soprano bnf fr 1865 Retrieved 14 January 2020 Gammond p 69 Salter Lionel Offenbach Rosenthal Gaite Parisienne Offenbachiana Gramophone November 1999 p 72 Keck Jean Christophe Offenbach Edition Keck Archived 21 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Offenbach Edition Keck Boosey and Hawkes accessed 16 July 2011 Gammond p 135 Der Krimi geht weiter Archived 25 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine Opernwelt Mai 2012 p 68 cited in full on Operetta Research Center Archived 25 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine Boris Kehrmann Gehort Offenbach nicht allen Auch Jean Christophe Kecks Offenbach Edition lasst Fragen offen 30 January 2013 accessed 25 May 2014 Collapsed Cologne Archives Show Challenge of Preserving History Archived 25 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine Deutsche Welle accessed 25 May 2014 Spiegl Fritz Less than serious The Times Literary Supplement 10 October 1980 p 1128 Gammond pp 87 and 138 Faris p 53 Faris p 111 Fidler David Princess Ida From Tennyson to Gilbert Archived 8 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive 8 August 2005 Gammond p 113 Ainger pp 101 109 Hughes p 40 a b Gammond pp 76 77 Gammond p 77 Gammond p 137 Hauger George Offenbach English Obituaries and Realities Archived 6 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Musical Times Vol 121 No 1652 October 1980 pp 619 621 subscription required a b Obituary The Times 6 October 1880 p 3 Jacques Offenbach dead The end of the great composer of opera bouffe Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times 6 October 1880 Gammond p 138 France The Times 14 February 1881 p 5 Ardoin John The Tales of Offenbach Archived 28 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine San Francisco Opera 1996 accessed 31 July 2011 Zola Emile Nana translated with an introduction by George Holden Penguin Classics London 1972 a b Zola Emile La feerie et l operette IV V in Le naturalisme au theatre Archived 17 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine 1881 e book in French accessed 31 July 2011 Otto Klemperer talks to Alan Blyth Gramophone May 1970 p 1748 and 1751 Almeida p xii and Faris p 195 Faris p 219 His Majesty s Theatre Thomas Beecham Opera Season The Times 13 May 1910 p 10 Faris p 221 The Only Jones Judy 13 October 1880 p 172 Sources Edit Ainger Michael 2002 Gilbert and Sullivan A Dual Biography Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 514769 8 Almeida Antonio de 1976 Offenbach s songs from the great operettas New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 23341 3 Bekker Paul 1909 Jacques Offenbach in German Berlin Marquardt OCLC 458390878 Faris Alexander 1980 Jacques Offenbach London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 11147 3 Gammond Peter 1980 Offenbach London Omnibus Press ISBN 978 0 7119 0257 2 Harding James 1980 Jacques Offenbach A Biography London John Calder ISBN 978 0 7145 3835 8 Henseler Anton 1930 Jakob Offenbach in German Berlin M Hesse OCLC 559680953 Horne Alistair 2003 Seven Ages of Paris London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 72577 1 Kracauer Siegfried 2002 1938 Orpheus in Paris Offenbach and the Paris of his time New York Zone Books ISBN 978 1 890951 30 6 Hughes Gervase 1962 Composers of Operetta London Macmillan OCLC 460660877 Levin Alicia C 2009 A Documentary Overview of Musical Theaters in Paris 1830 1900 In Fauser Annegret Everist Mark eds Music Theater and Cultural Transfer Chicago The University of Chicago Press pp 379 402 ISBN 978 0 226 23926 2 Martinet Andre 1887 Offenbach Sa vie et son oeuvre in French Paris Dentu OCLC 3574954 Pourvoyeur Robert 1994 Offenbach in French Paris Editions du Seuil ISBN 978 2 02 014433 9 Traubner Richard 2001 Offenbach Jacques In Holden Amanda ed The New Penguin Opera Guide London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 051475 9 Yon Jean Claude 2000 Jacques Offenbach in French Paris Gallimard ISBN 978 2 07 074775 7 Young Percy M 1971 Sir Arthur Sullivan London J M Dent ISBN 978 0 460 03934 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jacques Offenbach Wikisource has original works by or about Jacques Offenbach Les folies Offenbach Offenbach Edition Keck Boosey and Hawkes Offenbach pages List of works by Offenbach at the Index to Opera and Ballet Sources Online Offenbach at the Musicals101 site Jacques Offenbach at the Internet Broadway Database The Jacques Offenbach Society UK Sheet music Edit Free scores by Jacques Offenbach in the Choral Public Domain Library ChoralWiki Free scores by Jacques Offenbach at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Works by Jacques Offenbach at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Jacques Offenbach at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jacques Offenbach amp oldid 1130613302, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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