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La fille du régiment

La fille du régiment (The Daughter of the Regiment) is an opéra comique in two acts by Gaetano Donizetti, set to a French libretto by Jules-Henri Vernoy de Saint-Georges and Jean-François Bayard. It was first performed on 11 February 1840 by the Paris Opéra-Comique at the Salle de la Bourse.

La fille du régiment
Opéra comique by Gaetano Donizetti
Euphrasie Borghèse as Marie and François-Louis Henry as Sulpice in the premiere[1]
Librettist
LanguageFrench
Premiere
11 February 1840 (1840-02-11)

Donizetti wrote the opera while living in Paris between 1838 and 1840 and preparing a revised version of his then-unperformed Italian opera, Poliuto, as Les martyrs for the Paris Opéra. Since Martyrs was delayed, the composer had time to write the music for La fille du régiment, his first opera set to a French text, and to stage the French version of Lucia di Lammermoor, Lucie de Lammermoor.

La fille du régiment quickly became a popular success partly because of the famous aria "Ah! mes amis, quel jour de fête!", which requires the tenor to sing no fewer than eight high Cs – a frequently sung ninth is not written.[2] La figlia del reggimento, a slightly different Italian-language version (in translation by Calisto Bassi), was adapted to the tastes of the Italian public.

Performance history

Opéra-Comique premiere

 
Mécène Marié de l'Isle sang Tonio.
 
Marie–Julie Halligner sang The Marquise of Berkenfield.

The opening night was "a barely averted disaster."[3] Apparently the lead tenor was frequently off pitch.[4] The noted French tenor Gilbert Duprez, who was present, later observed in his Souvenirs d'un chanteur: "Donizetti often swore to me how his self-esteem as a composer had suffered in Paris. He was never treated there according to his merits. I myself saw the unsuccess, almost the collapse, of La fille du régiment."[5][6]

It received a highly negative review from the French critic and composer Hector Berlioz (Journal des débats, 16 February 1840), who claimed it could not be taken seriously by the public or its composer, although Berlioz conceded that some of the music, "the little waltz that serves as the entr'acte and the trio dialogué ... lack neither vivacity nor freshness."[6] The source of Berlioz's hostility is revealed later in his review:

What, two major scores for the Opéra, Les martyrs and Le duc d'Albe, two others at the Théâtre de la Renaissance, Lucie de Lammermoor and L'ange de Nisida, two at the Opéra-Comique, La fille du régiment and another whose title is still unknown, and yet another for the Théâtre-Italien, will have been written or transcribed in one year by the same composer! M[onsieur] Donizetti seems to treat us like a conquered country; it is a veritable invasion. One can no longer speak of the opera houses of Paris, but only of the opera houses of M[onsieur] Donizetti.[6]

The critic and poet Théophile Gautier, who was not a rival composer, had a somewhat different point of view: "Donizetti is capable of paying with music that is beautiful and worthy for the cordial hospitality which France offers him in all her theatres, subsidized or not."[7]

Despite its bumpy start, the opera soon became hugely popular at the Opéra-Comique. During its first 80 years, it reached its 500th performance at the theatre in 1871 and its 1,000th in 1908.[8]

Outside France

The opera was first performed in Italy at La Scala, Milan, on 3 October 1840, in Italian with recitatives by Donizetti replacing the spoken dialogue.[9] It was thought "worthless" and received only six performances. Only in 1928, when Toti Dal Monte sang Marie, did the opera begin to be appreciated in Italy.[10]

La fille du régiment received its first performance in America on 7 March 1843 at the Théâtre d'Orléans in New Orleans.[11] The New Orleans company premiered the work in New York City on 19 July 1843 with Julie Calvé as Marie.[12] The Spirit of the Times (22 July) counted it a great success, reporting that, though the score was "thin" and not up to the level of Anna Bolena or L'elisir d'amore, some of Donizetti's "gems" were to be found in it.[13] The Herald (21 July) was highly enthusiastic, especially in its praise of Calvé: "Applause is an inadequate term, ... vehement cheering rewarded this talented prima donna."[14] Subsequently the opera was performed frequently in New York, the role of Marie being a favorite with Jenny Lind, Henriette Sontag, Pauline Lucca, Anna Thillon and Adelina Patti.[15]

First given in England in Italian, it appeared on 27 May 1847 at Her Majesty's Theatre in London (with Jenny Lind and Luigi Lablache). Later—on 21 December 1847 in English—it was presented at the Surrey Theatre in London.[16]

W. S. Gilbert wrote a burlesque adaptation of the opera, La Vivandière, in 1867.

20th century and beyond

 
1910 poster for the opera by Emile Finot

The Metropolitan Opera gave the first performances with Marcella Sembrich and Charles Gilibert (Sulpice) during the 1902/03 season. These were followed by performances at the Manhattan Opera House in 1909 with Luisa Tetrazzini, John McCormack, and Charles Gilibert, and again with Frieda Hempel and Antonio Scotti in the same roles at the Met on 17 December 1917.[17]

It was revived at the Royal Opera, London, in 1966 for Joan Sutherland. On 13 February 1970, in concert at Carnegie Hall, Beverly Sills sang the first performance in New York since Lily Pons performed it at the Metropolitan Opera House in 1943.[18][19]

This opera is famous for the aria "Ah! mes amis, quel jour de fête!" (sometimes called "Pour mon âme"), which has been called the "Mount Everest" for tenors. It features eight high Cs (a ninth, frequently inserted, is not written). Luciano Pavarotti broke through to stardom via his 1972 performance alongside Sutherland at the Met, when he "leapt over the 'Becher's Brook' of the string of high Cs with an aplomb that left everyone gasping."[20]

At a 20 February 2007 performance of the opera at La Scala, Juan Diego Flórez sang "Ah! mes amis", and then, on popular demand, repeated it,[21][22] breaking a tradition against encores at La Scala that had lasted nearly 75 years.[21] Flórez repeated this feat on 21 April 2008, the opening night of Laurent Pelly's production (which had been originally staged in 2007 at Covent Garden in London) at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, with Natalie Dessay as Marie.[23][24][25][26][27] A live performance of this Met production, without an encore of "Ah! mes amis", was cinecast via Metropolitan Opera Live in HD to movie theaters worldwide on 26 April 2008. On 3 March 2019, Mexican tenor Javier Camarena also sang an encore of the aria at the Met, singing 18 high Cs in a performance broadcast live worldwide via Metropolitan Opera radio and cinecast worldwide via Metropolitan Opera Live in HD.[28]

As a non-singing role, the Duchess of Crakenthorp is often played by non-operatic celebrities, including actresses such as Dawn French, Bea Arthur, Hermione Gingold, and Kathleen Turner, or by retired opera greats such as Kiri Te Kanawa and Montserrat Caballé. In 2016, US Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a lifelong opera fan, played the Duchess on opening night of the Washington National Opera's production.[29]

Today, the opera has become part of the standard repertoire.[30]

Films

The opera was filmed in a silent film in 1929; a sound film with Anny Ondra in 1933 in German and separately in French; in 1953; and in 1962 with John van Kesteren as Tonio.[31]

Roles

 
Final curtain call of the Metropolitan Opera's performance of 24 December 2011 with (l to r) Lawrence Brownlee (Tonio), Nino Machaidze (Marie), and Ann Murray (Marquise)
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 11 February 1840
(Conductor: Gaetano Donizetti)[32]
Marie, a vivandière coloratura soprano Euphrasie Borghèse[33][34]
Tonio, a young Tyrolean tenor Mécène Marié de l'Isle
Sergeant Sulpice bass François-Louis Henry ("Henri")[33]
The Marquise of Berkenfield contralto Marie-Julie Halligner ("Boulanger")
Hortensius, a butler bass Edmond-Jules Delaunay-Ricquier
A corporal bass Georges-Marie-Vincent Palianti
A peasant tenor Henry Blanchard
The Duchess of Crakentorp spoken role Marguerite Blanchard
A notary spoken role Léon
French soldiers, Tyrolean people, domestic servants of the Duchess

Synopsis

Time: The Napoleonic Wars, early 19th century
Place: The Swiss Tyrol[35]

Act 1

War is raging in the Tyrols and the Marquise of Berkenfield, traveling in the area, is alarmed to the point of needing smelling salts to be administered by her faithful steward, Hortensius. While a chorus of villagers express their fear, the Marquise does the same: Pour une femme de mon nom / "For a lady of my family, what a time, alas, is wartime". As the French are seen moving away, all express relief. Suddenly, provoking the fear of the remaining women, who scatter, Sergeant Sulpice of the Twenty-First Regiment of the French army (in the Italian version it is the Eleventh) arrives and assures everyone that the regiment will restore order.

Marie, the vivandière (canteen girl) of the Regiment enters, and Sulpice is happy to see her (duet: Sulpice and Marie: Mais, qui vient? Tiens, Marie, notre fille / "But who is this? Well, well, if it isn't our daughter Marie"). After he questions her about a young man she has been seen with, she identifies him as Tonio, a Tyrolean (in the Italian version: Swiss). At that moment, Tonio is brought in as a prisoner because he has been seen prowling around the camp. Marie saves him from the soldiers, who demand that he die, by explaining that he saved her life when she nearly fell while mountain-climbing. All toast Tonio, who pledges allegiance to France, and Marie is encouraged to sing the regimental song (aria: Chacun le sait, chacun le dit / "Everyone knows it, everyone says it"). Sulpice leads the soldiers off, taking Tonio with them, but he runs back to join her. She quickly tells him that he must gain the approval of her "fathers": the soldiers of the Regiment, who found her on the battlefield as an abandoned baby and adopted her. He proclaims his love for her (aria, then love duet with Marie: Depuis l'instant où, dans mes bras / "Ever since that moment when you fell and / I caught you, all trembling in my arms"), and the couple express their love for each other.

At that point, Sulpice returns, surprising the young couple, who leave. The Marquise arrives with Hortensius. Initially afraid of the soldier, she is calmed by him. The Marquise explains that they are trying to return to her castle and asks for an escort. Hearing the name Berkenfield, Sulpice immediately recognizes it from a letter found with Marie as an infant. It is discovered that Marie is actually the Marquise's long-lost niece. Marie returns and is surprised to be introduced to her aunt. The Marquise commands that Marie accompany her and learn to be a proper lady. Marie bids farewell to her beloved regiment just as Tonio enters announcing that he has enlisted in their ranks (aria: Ah! mes amis, quel jour de fête / "Ah, my friends, what an exciting day"). When he proclaims his love for Marie, the soldiers are horrified, but agree to his pleading for her hand. However, they tell him that she is about to leave with her aunt (Marie, aria: Il faut partir / "I must leave you!"). In a choral finale, she leaves with the Marquise and Tonio is enraged.

Act 2

Marie has been living in the Marquise's castle for several months. In a conversation with Sulpice, the Marquise describes how she has sought to modify Marie's military manners and make her a lady of fashion, suitable to be married to her nephew, the Duke of Crakenthorp. Although reluctant, Marie has agreed and Sulpice is asked to encourage her. Marie enters and is asked to play the piano, but appears to prefer more martial music when encouraged by Sulpice and sings the regimental song. The Marquise sits down at the piano and attempts to work through the piece with Marie, who becomes more and more distracted and, along with Sulpice, takes up the regimental song.

Marie is left alone (aria: Par le rang et par l'opulence / "They have tried in vain to dazzle me"). As she is almost reconciled to her fate, she hears martial music and is joyously happy (cabaletta: Oh! transport! oh! douce ivresse / "Oh bliss! oh ectasy!"), and the regiment arrives. With it is Tonio, now an officer. The soldiers express their joy at seeing Marie, and Marie, Tonio and Sulpice are joyfully reunited (trio, Marie, Sulpice, Tonio: Tous les trois réunis / "We three are reunited"). Tonio says he has just learned a secret, via his uncle the burgermeister, that he cannot reveal.

The Marquise enters, horrified to see soldiers. Tonio asks for Marie's hand, explaining that he risked his life for her (aria, Tonio: Pour me rapprocher de Marie, je m'enrôlai, pauvre soldat / "In order to woo Marie, I enlisted in the ranks"), but she dismisses him scornfully. Tonio reveals that he knows that the Marquise never had a niece. She orders him to leave and Marie to return to her chambers; after they leave, the Marquise confesses the truth to Sulpice: Marie is her own illegitimate daughter. Under the circumstances, Sulpice promises that Marie will agree to her mother's wishes.

The Duchess of Crakenthorp, her son the groom-to-be, and the wedding entourage arrive at the Marquise's castle. Marie enters with Sulpice, who has told her that the Marquise is her mother. Marie embraces her and decides she must obey. But at the last minute the soldiers of the Regiment storm in (chorus: soldiers, then Tonio: Au secours de notre fille / "Our daughter needs our help") and reveal that Marie was a canteen girl. The wedding guests are offended by that, but then impressed when Marie sings of her debt to the soldiers (aria, Marie: Quand le destin, au milieu de la guerre / "When fate, in the confusion of war, threw me, a baby, into their arms"). The Marquise is deeply moved, admits she is Marie's mother, and gives her consent to Marie and Tonio's marriage, amid universal rejoicing (final chorus: Salut à la France! / "Hurrah for France! For happy times!").[36]

Recordings

Year Cast
(Marie, Tonio,
Sulpice, La Marquise)
Conductor,
Opera house and orchestra
Label[37]
1950 Lina Pagliughi,
Cesare Valletti,
Sesto Bruscantini,
Rina Corsi
Mario Rossi
RAI Milan orchestra and chorus
CD: Aura Music
Cat: LRC 1115
1960 Anna Moffo,
Giuseppe Campora,
Giulio Fioravanti,
Iolande Gardino
Franco Mannino
RAI Milan orchestra and chorus
CD: GALA
Cat: 100713
1967 Joan Sutherland,
Luciano Pavarotti,
Spiro Malas,
Monica Sinclair
Richard Bonynge
Royal Opera House orchestra and chorus
CD: Decca Originals
Cat: 478 1366
1970 Beverly Sills,
Grayson Hirst,
Fernando Corena,
Muriel Costa-Greenspon
Roland Gagnon
American Opera Society
Carnegie Hall
CD: Opera d'Oro
Cat: B000055X2G
1986 June Anderson,
Alfredo Kraus,
Michel Trempont,
Hélia T'Hézan
Bruno Campanella
Opéra National de Paris orchestra and chorus
VHS Video: Bel Canto Society
Cat: 628
1995 Edita Gruberová,
Deon van der Walt,
Philippe Fourcade,
Rosa Laghezza,
Philippe Fourcade,
Francois Castel,
Heidi Steinhaus,
Andrea Raschèr,
Hans-Werner Bunz
Marcello Panni
Munich Radio Orchestra
Chor des Bayerischer Rundfunk
CD: Nightingale
Cat: NC 070566-2
2007 Natalie Dessay,
Juan Diego Flórez,
Alessandro Corbelli,
Felicity Palmer,
Duchess: Dawn French
Bruno Campanella
Royal Opera House orchestra and chorus
(Live recording on 27 January)[38]
DVD: Virgin Classics
Cat: 5099951900298
2007 Natalie Dessay,
Juan Diego Flórez,
Carlos Álvarez,
Janina Baechle,
Duchess: Montserrat Caballé
Yves Abel
Vienna State Opera orchestra and chorus
CD: Unitel
Cat: A04001502[39]
2008 Natalie Dessay,
Juan Diego Flórez,
Alessandro Corbelli,
Felicity Palmer
Marco Armiliato
Metropolitan Opera
Streaming HD video:
Met Opera on Demand[40]
2019 Pretty Yende,
Javier Camarena,
Maurizio Muraro,
Stephanie Blythe
Enrique Mazzola
Metropolitan Opera
Streaming HD video:
Met Opera on Demand[41]

References

Notes

  1. ^ See the "Notice bibliographique" at the Bibliothèque nationale de France.
  2. ^ "Tenor on top of the high C’s in Donizetti opera" by Mike Silverman, AP News, 5 February 2019
  3. ^ Ashbrook 1982, p. 146.
  4. ^ Ashbrook 1982, p. 651, note 45.
  5. ^ Gilbert Duprez, Souvenirs d'un chanteur, 1880, p. 95 (at the Internet Archive).
  6. ^ a b c Quoted and translated by Ashbrook 1982, p. 146.
  7. ^ Ashbrook 1982, p. 651, note 46.
  8. ^ Wolff, S. Un demi-siècle d'opéra-comique (1900–1950). Paris: André Bonne, 1953, pp. 76–77
  9. ^ Ashbrook 1982, p. 568; Warrack & West 1992, p. 243 (recitatives by Donizetti); Loewenberg 1978, column 804, has 30 October 1840 for Milan.
  10. ^ Ashbrook 1982, p. 651, note 50.
  11. ^ Loewenberg 1978, column 805; Warrack & West 1992, p. 243.
  12. ^ Loewenberg 1978, column 805.
  13. ^ Lawrence, 1988, p. 215.
  14. ^ Quoted in Lawrence, 1988, p. 215.
  15. ^ Kobbé 1919, p. 355; Lawrence 1995, p. 226 (Anna Thillon).
  16. ^ Loewenberg 1978, column 805 (both London performances); Warrack & West 1992, p. 243 (Her Majesty's in London with Lind and Lablache).
  17. ^ Kobbé 1919, p. 355.
  18. ^ "Beverly Sills – beverlysillsonline.com – Biography, Discography, Annals, Pictures, Articles, News". www.beverlysillsonline.com.
  19. ^ Metropolitan Opera archives database
  20. ^ James Naughtie, "Goodbye Pavarotti: Forget the Pavarotti with Hankies. He was Better Younger", The Times (London), 7 September 2007. Retrieved 22 April 2008
  21. ^ a b "Peruvian tenor breaks La Scala encore taboo". CBC News. 23 February 2007. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  22. ^ "Show-Stopping Aria Encored at the Met". NPR. 23 April 2008. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  23. ^ "Peruvian tenor Juan Diego Florez wows crowd at Met with 18 high Cs". New York Daily News. Associated Press. 22 April 2008. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  24. ^ Bernheimer, Martin (23 April 2008). "La fille du régiment, Metropolitan Opera, New York". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  25. ^ Waleson, Heidi (1 May 2008). "The Place to Be if You Like Hearing High C's". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
  26. ^ Kirshnit, Fred (23 April 2008). "The Met's New La Fille du Régiment". New York Sun. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  27. ^ Hoelterhoff, Manuela (22 April 200). . Bloomberg.com. Archived version retrieved 7 June 2019.
  28. ^ Salazar, Francisco (3 March 2019). "Javier Camarena Makes Met Opera HD History". OperaWire. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  29. ^ "Standing ovation greets Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg cameo in DC opera". The Guardian. 14 November 2016. Retrieved 15 November 2016.
  30. ^ Report of performances from 1 January 2012 forward on operabase.com Retrieved 9 May 2014
  31. ^ Die Regimentstochter (1962) at IMDb
  32. ^ Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Premiere details". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  33. ^ a b See the "Notice de spectacle" at the BnF.
  34. ^ "Euphrasie Borghèse". Artlyriquefr.fr. Retrieved 2022-02-28.
  35. ^ Osborne, p. 273
  36. ^ Synopsis 3 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine in part from the Metropolitan Opera as well as the booklet accompanying the 1967 Decca recording.
  37. ^ Source for recording information: Recording(s) of La fille du régiment on operadis-opera-discography.org.uk
  38. ^ La Fille Du Régiment / Dessay, Flórez
  39. ^ G.: La fille du regiment (Vienna State Opera, 2007)
  40. ^ La fille du regiment, 26 April 2008 (Met Opera on Demand).
  41. ^ La fille du regiment, 2 March 2019 (Met Opera on Demand).

Cited sources

Other sources

  • Allitt, John Stewart (1991). Donizetti: in the light of Romanticism and the teaching of Johann Simon Mayr, Shaftesbury: Element Books, Ltd; Rockport, MA: Element, Inc.
  • Ashbrook, William; Hibberd, Sarah (2001). "Gaetano Donizetti", pp. 224–247 in The New Penguin Opera Guide, edited by Amanda Holden. New York: Penguin Putnam. ISBN 0-14-029312-4.
  • Black, John (1982). Donizetti's Operas in Naples, 1822–1848. London: The Donizetti Society. OCLC 871846923
  • Lawrence, Vera Brodsky (1995). Strong on Music: The New York Music Scene in the Days of George Templeton Strong. Volume II. Reverberations, 1850–1856. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-47011-5.
  • Melitz, Leo (2015) [1921]. The Opera Goer's Complete Guide. ISBN 978-1330999813 OCLC 982924886. (Source of synopsis)
  • Sadie, Stanley, (Ed.); John Tyrell (Exec. Ed.) (2004). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. 2nd edition. London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-19-517067-2 (hardcover). ISBN 0-19-517067-9 OCLC 419285866 (eBook).
  • Weinstock, Herbert (1963). Donizetti and the World of Opera in Italy, Paris, and Vienna in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century, New York: Pantheon Books. LCCN 63-13703.

External links

  • Donizetti Society (London) website
  • La fille du régiment: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  •   French Wikisource has original text related to this article: Libretto
  • Libretto (with some portions of the score) from archive.org (in Italian and English)
  • La fille du régiment : opéra comique en deux actes, 1840 publication, French and German, digitized by BYU on archive.org

fille, régiment, daughter, regiment, opéra, comique, acts, gaetano, donizetti, french, libretto, jules, henri, vernoy, saint, georges, jean, françois, bayard, first, performed, february, 1840, paris, opéra, comique, salle, bourse, opéra, comique, gaetano, doni. La fille du regiment The Daughter of the Regiment is an opera comique in two acts by Gaetano Donizetti set to a French libretto by Jules Henri Vernoy de Saint Georges and Jean Francois Bayard It was first performed on 11 February 1840 by the Paris Opera Comique at the Salle de la Bourse La fille du regimentOpera comique by Gaetano DonizettiEuphrasie Borghese as Marie and Francois Louis Henry as Sulpice in the premiere 1 LibrettistJules Henri Vernoy de Saint Georges Jean Francois BayardLanguageFrenchPremiere11 February 1840 1840 02 11 Salle de la Bourse ParisDonizetti wrote the opera while living in Paris between 1838 and 1840 and preparing a revised version of his then unperformed Italian opera Poliuto as Les martyrs for the Paris Opera Since Martyrs was delayed the composer had time to write the music for La fille du regiment his first opera set to a French text and to stage the French version of Lucia di Lammermoor Lucie de Lammermoor La fille du regiment quickly became a popular success partly because of the famous aria Ah mes amis quel jour de fete which requires the tenor to sing no fewer than eight high Cs a frequently sung ninth is not written 2 La figlia del reggimento a slightly different Italian language version in translation by Calisto Bassi was adapted to the tastes of the Italian public Contents 1 Performance history 1 1 Opera Comique premiere 1 2 Outside France 1 3 20th century and beyond 1 4 Films 2 Roles 3 Synopsis 3 1 Act 1 3 2 Act 2 4 Recordings 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Cited sources 5 3 Other sources 6 External linksPerformance history EditOpera Comique premiere Edit Mecene Marie de l Isle sang Tonio Marie Julie Halligner sang The Marquise of Berkenfield The opening night was a barely averted disaster 3 Apparently the lead tenor was frequently off pitch 4 The noted French tenor Gilbert Duprez who was present later observed in his Souvenirs d un chanteur Donizetti often swore to me how his self esteem as a composer had suffered in Paris He was never treated there according to his merits I myself saw the unsuccess almost the collapse of La fille du regiment 5 6 It received a highly negative review from the French critic and composer Hector Berlioz Journal des debats 16 February 1840 who claimed it could not be taken seriously by the public or its composer although Berlioz conceded that some of the music the little waltz that serves as the entr acte and the trio dialogue lack neither vivacity nor freshness 6 The source of Berlioz s hostility is revealed later in his review What two major scores for the Opera Les martyrs and Le duc d Albe two others at the Theatre de la Renaissance Lucie de Lammermoor and L ange de Nisida two at the Opera Comique La fille du regiment and another whose title is still unknown and yet another for the Theatre Italien will have been written or transcribed in one year by the same composer M onsieur Donizetti seems to treat us like a conquered country it is a veritable invasion One can no longer speak of the opera houses of Paris but only of the opera houses of M onsieur Donizetti 6 The critic and poet Theophile Gautier who was not a rival composer had a somewhat different point of view Donizetti is capable of paying with music that is beautiful and worthy for the cordial hospitality which France offers him in all her theatres subsidized or not 7 Despite its bumpy start the opera soon became hugely popular at the Opera Comique During its first 80 years it reached its 500th performance at the theatre in 1871 and its 1 000th in 1908 8 Outside France Edit The opera was first performed in Italy at La Scala Milan on 3 October 1840 in Italian with recitatives by Donizetti replacing the spoken dialogue 9 It was thought worthless and received only six performances Only in 1928 when Toti Dal Monte sang Marie did the opera begin to be appreciated in Italy 10 La fille du regiment received its first performance in America on 7 March 1843 at the Theatre d Orleans in New Orleans 11 The New Orleans company premiered the work in New York City on 19 July 1843 with Julie Calve as Marie 12 The Spirit of the Times 22 July counted it a great success reporting that though the score was thin and not up to the level of Anna Bolena or L elisir d amore some of Donizetti s gems were to be found in it 13 The Herald 21 July was highly enthusiastic especially in its praise of Calve Applause is an inadequate term vehement cheering rewarded this talented prima donna 14 Subsequently the opera was performed frequently in New York the role of Marie being a favorite with Jenny Lind Henriette Sontag Pauline Lucca Anna Thillon and Adelina Patti 15 First given in England in Italian it appeared on 27 May 1847 at Her Majesty s Theatre in London with Jenny Lind and Luigi Lablache Later on 21 December 1847 in English it was presented at the Surrey Theatre in London 16 W S Gilbert wrote a burlesque adaptation of the opera La Vivandiere in 1867 20th century and beyond Edit 1910 poster for the opera by Emile Finot The Metropolitan Opera gave the first performances with Marcella Sembrich and Charles Gilibert Sulpice during the 1902 03 season These were followed by performances at the Manhattan Opera House in 1909 with Luisa Tetrazzini John McCormack and Charles Gilibert and again with Frieda Hempel and Antonio Scotti in the same roles at the Met on 17 December 1917 17 It was revived at the Royal Opera London in 1966 for Joan Sutherland On 13 February 1970 in concert at Carnegie Hall Beverly Sills sang the first performance in New York since Lily Pons performed it at the Metropolitan Opera House in 1943 18 19 This opera is famous for the aria Ah mes amis quel jour de fete sometimes called Pour mon ame which has been called the Mount Everest for tenors It features eight high Cs a ninth frequently inserted is not written Luciano Pavarotti broke through to stardom via his 1972 performance alongside Sutherland at the Met when he leapt over the Becher s Brook of the string of high Cs with an aplomb that left everyone gasping 20 At a 20 February 2007 performance of the opera at La Scala Juan Diego Florez sang Ah mes amis and then on popular demand repeated it 21 22 breaking a tradition against encores at La Scala that had lasted nearly 75 years 21 Florez repeated this feat on 21 April 2008 the opening night of Laurent Pelly s production which had been originally staged in 2007 at Covent Garden in London at the Metropolitan Opera in New York with Natalie Dessay as Marie 23 24 25 26 27 A live performance of this Met production without an encore of Ah mes amis was cinecast via Metropolitan Opera Live in HD to movie theaters worldwide on 26 April 2008 On 3 March 2019 Mexican tenor Javier Camarena also sang an encore of the aria at the Met singing 18 high Cs in a performance broadcast live worldwide via Metropolitan Opera radio and cinecast worldwide via Metropolitan Opera Live in HD 28 As a non singing role the Duchess of Crakenthorp is often played by non operatic celebrities including actresses such as Dawn French Bea Arthur Hermione Gingold and Kathleen Turner or by retired opera greats such as Kiri Te Kanawa and Montserrat Caballe In 2016 US Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg a lifelong opera fan played the Duchess on opening night of the Washington National Opera s production 29 Today the opera has become part of the standard repertoire 30 Films Edit The opera was filmed in a silent film in 1929 a sound film with Anny Ondra in 1933 in German and separately in French in 1953 and in 1962 with John van Kesteren as Tonio 31 Roles Edit Final curtain call of the Metropolitan Opera s performance of 24 December 2011 with l to r Lawrence Brownlee Tonio Nino Machaidze Marie and Ann Murray Marquise Role Voice type Premiere cast 11 February 1840 Conductor Gaetano Donizetti 32 Marie a vivandiere coloratura soprano Euphrasie Borghese 33 34 Tonio a young Tyrolean tenor Mecene Marie de l IsleSergeant Sulpice bass Francois Louis Henry Henri 33 The Marquise of Berkenfield contralto Marie Julie Halligner Boulanger Hortensius a butler bass Edmond Jules Delaunay RicquierA corporal bass Georges Marie Vincent PaliantiA peasant tenor Henry BlanchardThe Duchess of Crakentorp spoken role Marguerite BlanchardA notary spoken role LeonFrench soldiers Tyrolean people domestic servants of the DuchessSynopsis EditTime The Napoleonic Wars early 19th century Place The Swiss Tyrol 35 Act 1 Edit Le beau vingt et unieme source source performed by l Atelier Vocal des Herbiers and piano accompaniment Problems playing this file See media help War is raging in the Tyrols and the Marquise of Berkenfield traveling in the area is alarmed to the point of needing smelling salts to be administered by her faithful steward Hortensius While a chorus of villagers express their fear the Marquise does the same Pour une femme de mon nom For a lady of my family what a time alas is wartime As the French are seen moving away all express relief Suddenly provoking the fear of the remaining women who scatter Sergeant Sulpice of the Twenty First Regiment of the French army in the Italian version it is the Eleventh arrives and assures everyone that the regiment will restore order Marie the vivandiere canteen girl of the Regiment enters and Sulpice is happy to see her duet Sulpice and Marie Mais qui vient Tiens Marie notre fille But who is this Well well if it isn t our daughter Marie After he questions her about a young man she has been seen with she identifies him as Tonio a Tyrolean in the Italian version Swiss At that moment Tonio is brought in as a prisoner because he has been seen prowling around the camp Marie saves him from the soldiers who demand that he die by explaining that he saved her life when she nearly fell while mountain climbing All toast Tonio who pledges allegiance to France and Marie is encouraged to sing the regimental song aria Chacun le sait chacun le dit Everyone knows it everyone says it Sulpice leads the soldiers off taking Tonio with them but he runs back to join her She quickly tells him that he must gain the approval of her fathers the soldiers of the Regiment who found her on the battlefield as an abandoned baby and adopted her He proclaims his love for her aria then love duet with Marie Depuis l instant ou dans mes bras Ever since that moment when you fell and I caught you all trembling in my arms and the couple express their love for each other At that point Sulpice returns surprising the young couple who leave The Marquise arrives with Hortensius Initially afraid of the soldier she is calmed by him The Marquise explains that they are trying to return to her castle and asks for an escort Hearing the name Berkenfield Sulpice immediately recognizes it from a letter found with Marie as an infant It is discovered that Marie is actually the Marquise s long lost niece Marie returns and is surprised to be introduced to her aunt The Marquise commands that Marie accompany her and learn to be a proper lady Marie bids farewell to her beloved regiment just as Tonio enters announcing that he has enlisted in their ranks aria Ah mes amis quel jour de fete Ah my friends what an exciting day When he proclaims his love for Marie the soldiers are horrified but agree to his pleading for her hand However they tell him that she is about to leave with her aunt Marie aria Il faut partir I must leave you In a choral finale she leaves with the Marquise and Tonio is enraged Act 2 Edit Marie has been living in the Marquise s castle for several months In a conversation with Sulpice the Marquise describes how she has sought to modify Marie s military manners and make her a lady of fashion suitable to be married to her nephew the Duke of Crakenthorp Although reluctant Marie has agreed and Sulpice is asked to encourage her Marie enters and is asked to play the piano but appears to prefer more martial music when encouraged by Sulpice and sings the regimental song The Marquise sits down at the piano and attempts to work through the piece with Marie who becomes more and more distracted and along with Sulpice takes up the regimental song Marie is left alone aria Par le rang et par l opulence They have tried in vain to dazzle me As she is almost reconciled to her fate she hears martial music and is joyously happy cabaletta Oh transport oh douce ivresse Oh bliss oh ectasy and the regiment arrives With it is Tonio now an officer The soldiers express their joy at seeing Marie and Marie Tonio and Sulpice are joyfully reunited trio Marie Sulpice Tonio Tous les trois reunis We three are reunited Tonio says he has just learned a secret via his uncle the burgermeister that he cannot reveal The Marquise enters horrified to see soldiers Tonio asks for Marie s hand explaining that he risked his life for her aria Tonio Pour me rapprocher de Marie je m enrolai pauvre soldat In order to woo Marie I enlisted in the ranks but she dismisses him scornfully Tonio reveals that he knows that the Marquise never had a niece She orders him to leave and Marie to return to her chambers after they leave the Marquise confesses the truth to Sulpice Marie is her own illegitimate daughter Under the circumstances Sulpice promises that Marie will agree to her mother s wishes The Duchess of Crakenthorp her son the groom to be and the wedding entourage arrive at the Marquise s castle Marie enters with Sulpice who has told her that the Marquise is her mother Marie embraces her and decides she must obey But at the last minute the soldiers of the Regiment storm in chorus soldiers then Tonio Au secours de notre fille Our daughter needs our help and reveal that Marie was a canteen girl The wedding guests are offended by that but then impressed when Marie sings of her debt to the soldiers aria Marie Quand le destin au milieu de la guerre When fate in the confusion of war threw me a baby into their arms The Marquise is deeply moved admits she is Marie s mother and gives her consent to Marie and Tonio s marriage amid universal rejoicing final chorus Salut a la France Hurrah for France For happy times 36 Recordings EditYear Cast Marie Tonio Sulpice La Marquise Conductor Opera house and orchestra Label 37 1950 Lina Pagliughi Cesare Valletti Sesto Bruscantini Rina Corsi Mario RossiRAI Milan orchestra and chorus CD Aura MusicCat LRC 11151960 Anna Moffo Giuseppe Campora Giulio Fioravanti Iolande Gardino Franco ManninoRAI Milan orchestra and chorus CD GALACat 1007131967 Joan Sutherland Luciano Pavarotti Spiro Malas Monica Sinclair Richard BonyngeRoyal Opera House orchestra and chorus CD Decca OriginalsCat 478 13661970 Beverly Sills Grayson Hirst Fernando Corena Muriel Costa Greenspon Roland GagnonAmerican Opera SocietyCarnegie Hall CD Opera d Oro Cat B000055X2G1986 June Anderson Alfredo Kraus Michel Trempont Helia T Hezan Bruno CampanellaOpera National de Paris orchestra and chorus VHS Video Bel Canto SocietyCat 6281995 Edita Gruberova Deon van der Walt Philippe Fourcade Rosa Laghezza Philippe Fourcade Francois Castel Heidi Steinhaus Andrea Rascher Hans Werner Bunz Marcello PanniMunich Radio OrchestraChor des Bayerischer Rundfunk CD NightingaleCat NC 070566 22007 Natalie Dessay Juan Diego Florez Alessandro Corbelli Felicity Palmer Duchess Dawn French Bruno CampanellaRoyal Opera House orchestra and chorus Live recording on 27 January 38 DVD Virgin ClassicsCat 50999519002982007 Natalie Dessay Juan Diego Florez Carlos Alvarez Janina Baechle Duchess Montserrat Caballe Yves AbelVienna State Opera orchestra and chorus CD UnitelCat A04001502 39 2008 Natalie Dessay Juan Diego Florez Alessandro Corbelli Felicity Palmer Marco ArmiliatoMetropolitan Opera Streaming HD video Met Opera on Demand 40 2019 Pretty Yende Javier Camarena Maurizio Muraro Stephanie Blythe Enrique MazzolaMetropolitan Opera Streaming HD video Met Opera on Demand 41 References EditNotes Edit See the Notice bibliographique at the Bibliotheque nationale de France Tenor on top of the high C s in Donizetti opera by Mike Silverman AP News 5 February 2019 Ashbrook 1982 p 146 Ashbrook 1982 p 651 note 45 Gilbert Duprez Souvenirs d un chanteur 1880 p 95 at the Internet Archive a b c Quoted and translated by Ashbrook 1982 p 146 Ashbrook 1982 p 651 note 46 Wolff S Un demi siecle d opera comique 1900 1950 Paris Andre Bonne 1953 pp 76 77 Ashbrook 1982 p 568 Warrack amp West 1992 p 243 recitatives by Donizetti Loewenberg 1978 column 804 has 30 October 1840 for Milan Ashbrook 1982 p 651 note 50 Loewenberg 1978 column 805 Warrack amp West 1992 p 243 Loewenberg 1978 column 805 Lawrence 1988 p 215 Quoted in Lawrence 1988 p 215 Kobbe 1919 p 355 Lawrence 1995 p 226 Anna Thillon Loewenberg 1978 column 805 both London performances Warrack amp West 1992 p 243 Her Majesty s in London with Lind and Lablache Kobbe 1919 p 355 Beverly Sills beverlysillsonline com Biography Discography Annals Pictures Articles News www beverlysillsonline com Metropolitan Opera archives database James Naughtie Goodbye Pavarotti Forget the Pavarotti with Hankies He was Better Younger The Times London 7 September 2007 Retrieved 22 April 2008 a b Peruvian tenor breaks La Scala encore taboo CBC News 23 February 2007 Retrieved 3 March 2019 Show Stopping Aria Encored at the Met NPR 23 April 2008 Retrieved 3 March 2019 Peruvian tenor Juan Diego Florez wows crowd at Met with 18 high Cs New York Daily News Associated Press 22 April 2008 Retrieved 5 March 2019 Bernheimer Martin 23 April 2008 La fille du regiment Metropolitan Opera New York Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Retrieved 5 March 2019 Waleson Heidi 1 May 2008 The Place to Be if You Like Hearing High C s Wall Street Journal Retrieved 5 March 2019 Kirshnit Fred 23 April 2008 The Met s New La Fille du Regiment New York Sun Retrieved 3 March 2019 Hoelterhoff Manuela 22 April 200 Lederhosen and Laughs as Met Tenor Struts His High C Bloomberg com Archived version retrieved 7 June 2019 Salazar Francisco 3 March 2019 Javier Camarena Makes Met Opera HD History OperaWire Retrieved 3 March 2019 Standing ovation greets Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg cameo in DC opera The Guardian 14 November 2016 Retrieved 15 November 2016 Report of performances from 1 January 2012 forward on operabase com Retrieved 9 May 2014 Die Regimentstochter 1962 at IMDb Casaglia Gherardo 2005 Premiere details L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian a b See the Notice de spectacle at the BnF Euphrasie Borghese Artlyriquefr fr Retrieved 2022 02 28 Osborne p 273 Synopsis Archived 3 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine in part from the Metropolitan Opera as well as the booklet accompanying the 1967 Decca recording Source for recording information Recording s of La fille du regiment on operadis opera discography org uk La Fille Du Regiment Dessay Florez G La fille du regiment Vienna State Opera 2007 La fille du regiment 26 April 2008 Met Opera on Demand La fille du regiment 2 March 2019 Met Opera on Demand Cited sources Edit Ashbrook William 1982 Donizetti and His Operas Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 23526 X Kobbe Gustav 1919 The Complete Opera Book first English edition London amp New York G P Putnam s Sons View at the Internet Archive Lawrence Vera Brodsky 1988 Strong on Music The New York Music Scene in the Days of George Templeton Strong 1836 1875 Volume I Resonances 1836 1850 New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 504199 6 Loewenberg Alfred 1978 Annals of Opera 1597 1940 third edition revised Totowa NJ Rowman and Littlefield ISBN 978 0 87471 851 5 Osborne Charles 1994 The Bel Canto Operas of Rossini Donizetti and Bellini Portland OR Amadeus Press ISBN 0 931340 71 3 Warrack John West Ewan 1992 The Oxford Dictionary of Opera Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 869164 5 Other sources Edit Allitt John Stewart 1991 Donizetti in the light of Romanticism and the teaching of Johann Simon Mayr Shaftesbury Element Books Ltd Rockport MA Element Inc Ashbrook William Hibberd Sarah 2001 Gaetano Donizetti pp 224 247 in The New Penguin Opera Guide edited by Amanda Holden New York Penguin Putnam ISBN 0 14 029312 4 Black John 1982 Donizetti s Operas in Naples 1822 1848 London The Donizetti Society OCLC 871846923 Lawrence Vera Brodsky 1995 Strong on Music The New York Music Scene in the Days of George Templeton Strong Volume II Reverberations 1850 1856 Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 47011 5 Melitz Leo 2015 1921 The Opera Goer s Complete Guide ISBN 978 1330999813 OCLC 982924886 Source of synopsis Sadie Stanley Ed John Tyrell Exec Ed 2004 The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd edition London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 19 517067 2 hardcover ISBN 0 19 517067 9 OCLC 419285866 eBook Weinstock Herbert 1963 Donizetti and the World of Opera in Italy Paris and Vienna in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century New York Pantheon Books LCCN 63 13703 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to La fille du regiment Donizetti Society London website La fille du regiment Scores at the International Music Score Library Project French Wikisource has original text related to this article Libretto Libretto with some portions of the score from archive org in Italian and English La fille du regiment opera comique en deux actes 1840 publication French and German digitized by BYU on archive org Portal Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title La fille du regiment amp oldid 1137560383, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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