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Le cœur et la main

Le cœur et la main (French for 'The Heart and the Hand') is a three-act opéra comique with music by Charles Lecocq and words by Charles Nuitter and Alexandre Beaume. It was first performed on 19 October 1882 at the Théâtre de Nouveautés, Paris.

Poster for first production, 1882

The plot revolves around an arranged royal marriage and the determination of the reluctant bridegroom to subvert it. He eventually finds that his royal bride is in fact the woman he has fallen in love with while unaware of her real identity.

Background edit

During the 1870s Lecocq had supplanted Jacques Offenbach as Paris's favourite composer of comic operas.[1] He had been chiefly associated with the Théâtre de la Renaissance, where his Giroflé-Girofla (1874), La petite mariée (1875) and Le petit duc (1878) were particularly successful.[1] Having quarrelled with the director of the Renaissance, Victor Koning, Lecocq had transferred his allegiance to the Théâtre de Nouveautés, where in 1881 he had a box-office hit with Le jour et la nuit[2] Le cœur et la main was written to succeed it. The librettists, both new partners for the composer, were experienced, particularly Nuitter, who had collaborated extensively with Offenbach in the 1860s and 1870s.[3] They continued with the theme, familiar from earlier Lecocq operas, of thwarted and confused wedding nights with a happy ending.[4]

First production edit

The opera opened on 19 October 1882, as the run of Le jour et la nuit was coming towards its end.[4] Lecocq took the unusual step of writing the hero's part for a baritone rather than the customary tenor. The role was played by Eugène Vauthier. He and Jean-François Berthelier, who had starred in Le jour et la nuit, were well known to Parisian audiences. The leading female role, Micaëla, was played by Marguerite Vaillant-Couturier, a newcomer.[4]

Original cast edit

 
Marguerite Vaillant-Couturier as Micaëla, 1882
  • The King of Aragon – Jean-François Berthelier
  • Princess Micaëla, his daughter – Marguerite Vaillant-Couturier
  • Doña Inésilla Vittoria Scholastica Nepomucena, her duenna – Mme Felcourt
  • Don Gaëtan, Duke of Madeira – Eugène Vauthier
  • Don Mosquitos, a colonel of the King's army – Scipion
  • Moralès, a soldier – Edouard Montaubry
  • Joséfa, a royal gardener – Élise Clary
  • Baldomèro, a brigadier – M. Charvet

Source: Gänzl's Book of the Musical Theatre.[5]

Synopsis edit

The action takes place in an imaginary kingdom, at an unspecified period.

Act I
The Royal Park

A marriage has been arranged between Micaëla, the King's daughter, and Don Gaëtan, Crown Prince of a neighbouring country. Micaëla is not enamoured of palace life and escapes when possible to join her friend Joséfa, the gardener. Gaëtan arrives, angry at being forced into an arranged marriage. He is of a romantic disposition and wants a love-match. He escapes the discreet supervision to which he is subject; the King orders that he be sought and found promptly.

Gaëtan evades those looking for him and emerges from his hiding place. He meets Micaëla who, wearing Joséfa's clothes, passes for a gardener. They are immediately attracted to each other. Gaëtan tells Micaëla that he is doomed to marry the princess for reasons of state, but will not even look at her during the whole ceremony. There are noises off, and Gaëtan has only time to declare his love to Micaëla. She flees and the King appears, pleased to have tracked down his future son-in-law.

Act II
A Great Hall of the Royal Palace

 
Scene from original production, 1882

It is the day of the wedding. On the same day Joséfa has married her lover, Moralès. Faithful to his promise, Gaëtan declines to look at Micaëla during the service or to dance with her afterwards. He cannot escape from the palace as all doors are guarded, but he is determined not to consummate his marriage. Trying to cause a scandal to wreck the marriage he makes a pass at Micaëla's formidable duenna, expecting her to make a tremendous fuss, and he is horrified when she responds eagerly. He evades her.

Joséfa's wedding night seems to be as unpromising as Gaëtan's. Her new husband, Moralès, is in charge of the palace guard, and cannot leave the premises to join his bride. Finding Micaëla's and Gaëtan's nuptial chamber unoccupied Joséfa and Moralès yield to the temptation to put it to use themselves. The King, snooping in the hope of hearing evidence that the royal marriage is proceeding as he hoped, overhears Micaëla's and Gaëtan's billing and cooing and happily assumes that his plans are succeeding.

Gaëtan returns and meets Micaela, once again disguised as a gardener. Their encounter rapidly becomes amorous and they embrace.

Act III
A camp, Gaëtan's headquarters

During a grand military manoeuvre, Micaëla and her suite have retired to a nearby convent. She frequently absents herself to be with Gaëtan, who still thinks she is a gardener. The King comes to tell Gaëtan that the princess is pregnant. Gaëtan is puzzled. Moralès apologises to him for having, on the wedding night, used the nuptial chamber for personal purposes, and Gaëtan now thinks he knows who is the father of the future Crown Prince. Everything becomes clear when Micaëla enters, no longer in disguise. Gaëtan realises he has unknowingly married the women he loves. The soldiers fire a salute to the unborn heir and the opera ends in general rejoicing.

Source: Académie Nationale de l'Opérette.[4]

Musical numbers edit

Act I:

 
Eugène Vauthier as Gaëtan, 1882
  • Chorus "C'est demain le mariage" (Tomorrow is the wedding)
  • Couplets "Au mariage des Princesses" (At the wedding of the Princesses – Joséfa)
  • Chorus of guards "C'est nous les gardes du palais" (We are the guards of the palace)
  • Chorus "C'est l'heure de la promenade" (It's time for the walk)
  • Mélodie "M'y voici, mais pourrai-je?" (Here I am, but can I? – Micaëla)
  • Couplets "Vlan! J'ai perdu mon gendre" (Damn! I've lost my son-in-law – King)
  • Couplets "Au soldat, après la parade" (To the soldier, after the parade – Morales)
  • Rondeau "Ah que de mal on a" (Oh that's wrong – Micaëla)
  • Round "Ma fille, c'est un mari" (My daughter, he's a husband – Micaëla)
  • Couplets "Par toi divine créature" (By you divine creature – Gaëtan, Micaëla)
  • Final: Chorus des Bombardiers "Notre vigilance" (Our vigilance), couplets "Je suis un prince un peu fantasque" (I'm quite a whimsical prince – Gaëtan) et stretto "on n'a jamais vu çà" (We've never seen that – all)

Act II:

  • Entracte
  • Introduction "La Princesse qui nous marie" (The Princess who marries us)
  • Chorus "Dans l'almanach de Gotha" (In the Almanach de Gotha)
  • Sextet "Il me regarde à peine" (He's just looking at me)
  • Dance "La vive cadence" (The brisk pace – Gaëtan)
  • Couplets "Y'avait un jour dans l'infanterie" (Helmet couplets – There was a day in the infantry – all)
  • Chorus "Bientôt à la cathédrale" (Soon to the cathedral)
  • Couplets "Ma Micaëla, ma chère" (My Micaëla, my dear – king)
  • Couplets "Au fond de l'alcôve blottie" (Snuggled at the bottom of the alcove – Micaëla)
  • Couplets "C'est-là leur chambre nuptiale" (This is their nuptial room – Joséfa, Moralès)
  • Grand duo "Mon devoir ailleurs me rappelle" (My duty elsewhere calls me – Micaëla, Gaëtan) and Boléro "Un soir, José le capitaine" (One evening, Captain José – Micaëla, Gaétan)

Act III:

  • Entracte
  • Chorus of soldiers "Il a l'épaulette" (He has the epaulette)
  • Couplets "Près du couvent, dans la plaine" (Near the convent, in the plain – Micaëla)
  • Romance "Ah j'enviais les hirondelles" (Ah I envy the swallows – Micaëla)
  • Ensemble "Le parlementaire a sur les yeux un bandeau" (The parliamentarian wears a blindfold)
  • Chorus of peasants "Ah! Sire, exaucez nos prières" (Ah! Sire, hear our prayers), et couplets "Ne craignez rien, les belles filles" (Fear nothing, lovely girls – king)
  • Couplets "Depuis notre hymen" (Since our marriage – Gaëtan)
  • Couplets "Monsieur me croit infidèle" (Monsieur thinks me unfaithful –Joséfa)
  • Finale "Je suis Princesse et votre épouse" (I am the princess and your wife – Micaëla, all).

Source: Vocal score.[6]

Revivals and adaptations edit

Two rival productions of the opera were seen in New York in February 1883, under the titles Hand and Heart and Micaëla. There were two further revivals in New York in 1883 and 1884.[5] The work was not seen in London until ten years after its Paris premiere. It was presented in a heavily revised form as Incognita in October 1892. F. C. Burnand revised the book, Harry Greenbank wrote new lyrics, and there were musical contributions from Isaac Albéniz in Act II, and Hamilton Clarke, Alfred Moul and the conductor of the production, Herbert Bunning, in Act III.[7]

In their 1988 study of musical theatre Kurt Gänzl and Andrew Lamb record no further performances of the piece, in Paris or anywhere else.[5] Lamb, writing in Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, counts it the last of Lecocq's real successes.[1]

Critical response edit

Lecocq's view of Le cœur et la main was:

A nice piece whose first two acts are the best. The third has never satisfied me. The success was very great, and Madame Vaillant-Couturier, an excellent singer, a very pretty woman, who was making her debut in operetta, made an excellent impression. All the roles were well played, the staging admirable, and I count this work among my most successful. In spite of the excellent box-office takings, the director of the theatre, for administrative reasons known to him, abruptly interrupted the run after the hundredth performance to stage another piece.[4]

According to the critical consensus, at the time and subsequently, Le cœur et la main is too noticeably similar to its predecessors, musically and dramatically. In his survey of operetta (2016), Richard Traubner concurs with the composer's view that the third act is weak, and remarks on "a tendency to bawdiness" that had not marred Lecocq's previous works, and a lack of the composer's earlier "melodic sparkle".[8]

References and sources edit

References
  1. ^ a b c Lamb, Andrew. "Lecocq, (Alexandre) Charles", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2001. Retrieved 9 November 2011 (subscription required)
  2. ^ "Le jour et la nuit", Opérette – Théâtre Musical, Académie Nationale de l'Opérette. Retrieved 9 November 2018
  3. ^ Cooper, Geoffrey. "Nuitter (Truinet) Charles-Louis-Etienne", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2001. Retrieved 9 November 2018 (subscription required)
  4. ^ a b c d e "Le cœur et la main", Opérette – Théâtre Musical, Académie Nationale de l'Opérette. Retrieved 9 November 2018
  5. ^ a b c Gänzl and Lamb, p. 394
  6. ^ Lecocq, introductory page
  7. ^ Clark, p. 85
  8. ^ Traubner, p. 79
Sources
  • Clark, Walter Aaron (2007). Isaac Albéniz: Portrait of a Romantic. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-925052-3.
  • Gänzl, Kurt; Andrew Lamb (1988). Gänzl's Book of the Musical Theatre. London: The Bodley Head. OCLC 966051934.
  • Lecocq, Charles (1882). Le coeur et la main vocal score. Paris: Joubert. OCLC 606171246.
  • Traubner, Richard (2016). Operetta: A Theatrical History. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-13892-6.

cœur, main, french, heart, hand, three, opéra, comique, with, music, charles, lecocq, words, charles, nuitter, alexandre, beaume, first, performed, october, 1882, théâtre, nouveautés, paris, poster, first, production, 1882the, plot, revolves, around, arranged,. Le cœur et la main French for The Heart and the Hand is a three act opera comique with music by Charles Lecocq and words by Charles Nuitter and Alexandre Beaume It was first performed on 19 October 1882 at the Theatre de Nouveautes Paris Poster for first production 1882The plot revolves around an arranged royal marriage and the determination of the reluctant bridegroom to subvert it He eventually finds that his royal bride is in fact the woman he has fallen in love with while unaware of her real identity Contents 1 Background 2 First production 3 Original cast 4 Synopsis 5 Musical numbers 6 Revivals and adaptations 7 Critical response 8 References and sourcesBackground editDuring the 1870s Lecocq had supplanted Jacques Offenbach as Paris s favourite composer of comic operas 1 He had been chiefly associated with the Theatre de la Renaissance where his Girofle Girofla 1874 La petite mariee 1875 and Le petit duc 1878 were particularly successful 1 Having quarrelled with the director of the Renaissance Victor Koning Lecocq had transferred his allegiance to the Theatre de Nouveautes where in 1881 he had a box office hit with Le jour et la nuit 2 Le cœur et la main was written to succeed it The librettists both new partners for the composer were experienced particularly Nuitter who had collaborated extensively with Offenbach in the 1860s and 1870s 3 They continued with the theme familiar from earlier Lecocq operas of thwarted and confused wedding nights with a happy ending 4 First production editThe opera opened on 19 October 1882 as the run of Le jour et la nuit was coming towards its end 4 Lecocq took the unusual step of writing the hero s part for a baritone rather than the customary tenor The role was played by Eugene Vauthier He and Jean Francois Berthelier who had starred in Le jour et la nuit were well known to Parisian audiences The leading female role Micaela was played by Marguerite Vaillant Couturier a newcomer 4 Original cast edit nbsp Marguerite Vaillant Couturier as Micaela 1882The King of Aragon Jean Francois Berthelier Princess Micaela his daughter Marguerite Vaillant Couturier Dona Inesilla Vittoria Scholastica Nepomucena her duenna Mme Felcourt Don Gaetan Duke of Madeira Eugene Vauthier Don Mosquitos a colonel of the King s army Scipion Morales a soldier Edouard Montaubry Josefa a royal gardener Elise Clary Baldomero a brigadier M CharvetSource Ganzl s Book of the Musical Theatre 5 Synopsis editThe action takes place in an imaginary kingdom at an unspecified period Act I The Royal ParkA marriage has been arranged between Micaela the King s daughter and Don Gaetan Crown Prince of a neighbouring country Micaela is not enamoured of palace life and escapes when possible to join her friend Josefa the gardener Gaetan arrives angry at being forced into an arranged marriage He is of a romantic disposition and wants a love match He escapes the discreet supervision to which he is subject the King orders that he be sought and found promptly Gaetan evades those looking for him and emerges from his hiding place He meets Micaela who wearing Josefa s clothes passes for a gardener They are immediately attracted to each other Gaetan tells Micaela that he is doomed to marry the princess for reasons of state but will not even look at her during the whole ceremony There are noises off and Gaetan has only time to declare his love to Micaela She flees and the King appears pleased to have tracked down his future son in law Act II A Great Hall of the Royal Palace nbsp Scene from original production 1882It is the day of the wedding On the same day Josefa has married her lover Morales Faithful to his promise Gaetan declines to look at Micaela during the service or to dance with her afterwards He cannot escape from the palace as all doors are guarded but he is determined not to consummate his marriage Trying to cause a scandal to wreck the marriage he makes a pass at Micaela s formidable duenna expecting her to make a tremendous fuss and he is horrified when she responds eagerly He evades her Josefa s wedding night seems to be as unpromising as Gaetan s Her new husband Morales is in charge of the palace guard and cannot leave the premises to join his bride Finding Micaela s and Gaetan s nuptial chamber unoccupied Josefa and Morales yield to the temptation to put it to use themselves The King snooping in the hope of hearing evidence that the royal marriage is proceeding as he hoped overhears Micaela s and Gaetan s billing and cooing and happily assumes that his plans are succeeding Gaetan returns and meets Micaela once again disguised as a gardener Their encounter rapidly becomes amorous and they embrace Act III A camp Gaetan s headquartersDuring a grand military manoeuvre Micaela and her suite have retired to a nearby convent She frequently absents herself to be with Gaetan who still thinks she is a gardener The King comes to tell Gaetan that the princess is pregnant Gaetan is puzzled Morales apologises to him for having on the wedding night used the nuptial chamber for personal purposes and Gaetan now thinks he knows who is the father of the future Crown Prince Everything becomes clear when Micaela enters no longer in disguise Gaetan realises he has unknowingly married the women he loves The soldiers fire a salute to the unborn heir and the opera ends in general rejoicing Source Academie Nationale de l Operette 4 dd Musical numbers editAct I nbsp Eugene Vauthier as Gaetan 1882Chorus C est demain le mariage Tomorrow is the wedding Couplets Au mariage des Princesses At the wedding of the Princesses Josefa Chorus of guards C est nous les gardes du palais We are the guards of the palace Chorus C est l heure de la promenade It s time for the walk Melodie M y voici mais pourrai je Here I am but can I Micaela Couplets Vlan J ai perdu mon gendre Damn I ve lost my son in law King Couplets Au soldat apres la parade To the soldier after the parade Morales Rondeau Ah que de mal on a Oh that s wrong Micaela Round Ma fille c est un mari My daughter he s a husband Micaela Couplets Par toi divine creature By you divine creature Gaetan Micaela Final Chorus des Bombardiers Notre vigilance Our vigilance couplets Je suis un prince un peu fantasque I m quite a whimsical prince Gaetan et stretto on n a jamais vu ca We ve never seen that all Act II Entracte Introduction La Princesse qui nous marie The Princess who marries us Chorus Dans l almanach de Gotha In the Almanach de Gotha Sextet Il me regarde a peine He s just looking at me Dance La vive cadence The brisk pace Gaetan Couplets Y avait un jour dans l infanterie Helmet couplets There was a day in the infantry all Chorus Bientot a la cathedrale Soon to the cathedral Couplets Ma Micaela ma chere My Micaela my dear king Couplets Au fond de l alcove blottie Snuggled at the bottom of the alcove Micaela Couplets C est la leur chambre nuptiale This is their nuptial room Josefa Morales Grand duo Mon devoir ailleurs me rappelle My duty elsewhere calls me Micaela Gaetan and Bolero Un soir Jose le capitaine One evening Captain Jose Micaela Gaetan Act III Entracte Chorus of soldiers Il a l epaulette He has the epaulette Couplets Pres du couvent dans la plaine Near the convent in the plain Micaela Romance Ah j enviais les hirondelles Ah I envy the swallows Micaela Ensemble Le parlementaire a sur les yeux un bandeau The parliamentarian wears a blindfold Chorus of peasants Ah Sire exaucez nos prieres Ah Sire hear our prayers et couplets Ne craignez rien les belles filles Fear nothing lovely girls king Couplets Depuis notre hymen Since our marriage Gaetan Couplets Monsieur me croit infidele Monsieur thinks me unfaithful Josefa Finale Je suis Princesse et votre epouse I am the princess and your wife Micaela all Source Vocal score 6 Revivals and adaptations editTwo rival productions of the opera were seen in New York in February 1883 under the titles Hand and Heart and Micaela There were two further revivals in New York in 1883 and 1884 5 The work was not seen in London until ten years after its Paris premiere It was presented in a heavily revised form as Incognita in October 1892 F C Burnand revised the book Harry Greenbank wrote new lyrics and there were musical contributions from Isaac Albeniz in Act II and Hamilton Clarke Alfred Moul and the conductor of the production Herbert Bunning in Act III 7 In their 1988 study of musical theatre Kurt Ganzl and Andrew Lamb record no further performances of the piece in Paris or anywhere else 5 Lamb writing in Grove s Dictionary of Music and Musicians counts it the last of Lecocq s real successes 1 Critical response editLecocq s view of Le cœur et la main was A nice piece whose first two acts are the best The third has never satisfied me The success was very great and Madame Vaillant Couturier an excellent singer a very pretty woman who was making her debut in operetta made an excellent impression All the roles were well played the staging admirable and I count this work among my most successful In spite of the excellent box office takings the director of the theatre for administrative reasons known to him abruptly interrupted the run after the hundredth performance to stage another piece 4 According to the critical consensus at the time and subsequently Le cœur et la main is too noticeably similar to its predecessors musically and dramatically In his survey of operetta 2016 Richard Traubner concurs with the composer s view that the third act is weak and remarks on a tendency to bawdiness that had not marred Lecocq s previous works and a lack of the composer s earlier melodic sparkle 8 References and sources editReferences a b c Lamb Andrew Lecocq Alexandre Charles Grove Music Online Oxford University Press 2001 Retrieved 9 November 2011 subscription required Le jour et la nuit Operette Theatre Musical Academie Nationale de l Operette Retrieved 9 November 2018 Cooper Geoffrey Nuitter Truinet Charles Louis Etienne Grove Music Online Oxford University Press 2001 Retrieved 9 November 2018 subscription required a b c d e Le cœur et la main Operette Theatre Musical Academie Nationale de l Operette Retrieved 9 November 2018 a b c Ganzl and Lamb p 394 Lecocq introductory page Clark p 85 Traubner p 79 SourcesClark Walter Aaron 2007 Isaac Albeniz Portrait of a Romantic Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 925052 3 Ganzl Kurt Andrew Lamb 1988 Ganzl s Book of the Musical Theatre London The Bodley Head OCLC 966051934 Lecocq Charles 1882 Le coeur et la mainvocal score Paris Joubert OCLC 606171246 Traubner Richard 2016 Operetta A Theatrical History London Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 13892 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Le cœur et la main amp oldid 1182535102, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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