fbpx
Wikipedia

The Cunning Little Vixen

The Cunning Little Vixen (original title Příhody lišky Bystroušky or Tales of Vixen Sharp-Ears in English), is a three-act Czech-language opera by Leoš Janáček completed in 1923 to a libretto the composer himself adapted from a novella by Rudolf Těsnohlídek.

The Cunning Little Vixen
Opera by Leoš Janáček
Relief of the composer by Julius Pelikán
Native title
Czech: Příhody lišky Bystroušky
LibrettistLeoš Janáček
LanguageCzech
Based onserialized novella by Rudolf Těsnohlídek and Stanislav Lolek
Premiere
6 November 1924 (1924-11-06)

Name

The opera's libretto was adapted by the composer from a 1920 serialized novella, Liška Bystrouška, by Rudolf Těsnohlídek, which was first published in the newspaper Lidové noviny (with illustrations by Stanislav Lolek).[1] For the title of the opera, Příhody means tales; lišky is the genitive of vixen. Bystroušky, still genitive, is the pun sharp, having the double meaning of pointed, like fox ears, and clever. The opera first became familiar outside Czechoslovakia in a 1927 German adaptation by Max Brod who provided the new name Das schlaue Füchslein, by which Germans still know it and which in English means The Cunning Little Vixen.

Composition

When Janáček discovered Těsnohlídek's comic-strip-inspired story and decided to turn it into an opera, in 1921, he began work by meeting with the author and studying the animals. With this understanding of the characters involved, his own 70 years of life experience, and an undying, unrequited love for the much younger, married Kamila Stösslová, he began work on the opera. He transformed the originally comedic cartoon into a philosophical reflection on the cycle of life by ending with the death of the titular Vixen; as with other operas by elderly composers, this one depicts life leading to a return to simplicity. Work was completed in 1922-23[2] and the first edition was published the next year in Vienna by Universal Edition. The premiere took place on 6 November 1924 in National Theatre Brno conducted by František Neumann, with Ota Zítek as director and Eduard Milén as stage designer.

The opera incorporates Moravian folk music and rhythms as it recounts the life of a clever (alternative reading: sharp-eared) fox and accompanying wildlife, as well as a few humans, and their small adventures while traversing their lifecycles.[3][4] Described as a comic opera,[5] it has nonetheless been noted to contain a serious theme.[6] Interpretations of the work remain varied, ranging from children's entertainment to tragedy.[4]

Performance history

The first non-Czech performance took place in Mainz, Germany, in 1927 in an adaptation by Max Brod under the title Das schlaue Füchslein. Brod described the opera as a "dream of the eternity of nature and love-lust", but his version substantially changed the story-line. It was not successful. In 1956 Walter Felsenstein created a performing version closer to the original, which was successfully performed at the Komische Oper in Berlin.[2] In 1965, Felsenstein made this a Deutscher Fernsehfunk movie with Irmgard Arnold in the title role, but retaining Brod's Das schlaue Füchslein title.

The opera received its Italian premiere at La Scala in 1958 with Mariella Adani in the title role. The work was first staged in England in 1961 by the Sadler's Wells Opera Company (now the English National Opera) with June Bronhill in the title, albeit with a tenor Fox (Kevin Miller); the director was Colin Graham, with conductor Colin Davis, and scenery and costume designs by Barry Kay.[7] A production by David Pountney was mounted by the three UK national companies in the 1980s, first being seen with Scottish Opera at the 1980 Edinburgh Festival, then Welsh National Opera in London the following year and finally with English National Opera in June 1988;[8] nearly 40 years on Pountney supervised a revival by Welsh National Opera in Cardiff and on tour.[9] In 1981, the New York City Opera mounted a production in English based on images created by Maurice Sendak and conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas in his company debut. It starred soprano Gianna Rolandi as Vixen Sharp-Ears and baritone Richard Cross as the Forester. Glyndebourne Festival Opera staged it in 2012, directed by Melly Still, and a revival was included in the Glyndebourne Festival for 2016 with Christopher Purves as the Forester and Elena Tsallagova as the Vixen, conductor Jakub Hrůša and the London Philharmonic Orchestra. In May 2014 the Cleveland Orchestra, conducted by Franz Welser-Möst, performed an innovative version directed by Yuval Sharon. This production returned the opera to its roots by utilizing animation and hand drawn video sets by the artists Bill Barminski and Christopher Louie of Walter Robot Studios. The production featured the use of hole-in-the-wall carnival cutouts to place the singers' heads on the animated bodies of the animal characters.

Roles

 
Monument of Bystrouška, Janáček's opera The Cunning Little Vixen at Hukvaldy, Janáček's hometown
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 6 November 1924
(Conductor: František Neumann)
Sharp-Ears (Bystrouška) the Vixen soprano Hana Hrdličková-Zavřelová
Gold-Stripe (Zlatohřbítek) the Fox soprano or mezzo-soprano Božena Snopková
Forester (Revírník) baritone Arnold Flögl
Parson bass
Schoolmaster tenor Antonín Pelc
Harašta, a poultry dealer bass Ferdinand Pour
Supporting roles:
Forester's wife contralto
Lapák, a dog mezzo-soprano Marta Dobruská
Chocholka, a hen soprano Vlasta Kubiková
Rooster soprano
Bit roles:
Pepík, Forester's grandson soprano Bozena Polaková
Frantík, Pepík's friend soprano Milada Rabasová
Pásek, an innkeeper tenor Bedřich Zavadil
Mrs. Páskova, Pásek's wife soprano Jelena Jezicová
Young Vixen Bystrouška child soprano
Cricket child soprano
Young Frog child soprano
Grasshopper child soprano
Jay soprano
Owl contralto
Woodpecker contralto
Mosquito tenor
Badger bass
Chorus roles:
Hens women's chorus (SA)
Forest Creatures women's chorus (SA)
Voice of the Forest mixed chorus (SAATTBB)
Fox Cubs [children's] chorus
Ballet roles:
Blue Dragonfly, Midges, Apparition of the Vixen as a girl, Hedgehog, Squirrels, a Young Vixen, Forest Creatures

According to instructions in the score, four pairs of roles may be performed by the same singer: Parson/Badger, Schoolmaster/Mosquito, Forester's Wife/Owl, and Rooster/Jay. Janácek later required that Lapák, Rooster, and Chocholka be sung by "girls approximately fifteen years old."

Synopsis

Act 1

In the forest, the animals and insects are playing and dancing. The forester enters and lies down against a tree for a nap. A curious vixen cub (often sung by a young girl), inquisitively chases a frog right into the lap of the surprised forester who forcibly takes the vixen home as a pet. Time passes (in the form of an orchestral interlude) and we see the vixen, now grown up into a young adult (and sung by a soprano) tied up in the forester's yard with the conservative old dachshund. Fed up with life in confinement, the vixen chews through her rope, attacks the rooster and hen, kills the other chickens, jumps over the fence and runs off to freedom.

Act 2

The vixen takes over a badger's home and kicks him out. At the inn, the parson, the forester, and the schoolmaster drink and talk about their mutual infatuation with the gypsy girl Terynka. The drunken schoolmaster leaves the inn and mistakes a sunflower behind which the vixen is hiding for Terynka, professing his devotion to her. The forester, also on his way home, sees the vixen and fires two shots at her, sending her running. Later, the vixen, coming into her adulthood, meets a charming boy fox, and they retire to the badger's home. An unexpected pregnancy and a forest full of gossipy creatures necessitate their marriage, which rounds out the act.

Act 3

The poacher Harašta is engaged to Terynka and is out hunting in preparation for their marriage. He sets a fox trap, which the numerous fox and vixen cubs mock. Harašta, watching from a distance, shoots and kills the vixen, sending her children running. At Harašta's wedding, the forester sees the vixen's fur, which Harašta gave to Terynka as a wedding present, and flees to the forest to reflect. He returns to the place where he met the vixen, and sits at the tree, grieving the loss of both the vixen and Terynka. His grief grows until, just as in the beginning of the opera, a frog unexpectedly jumps in his lap, the grandson of the one who did so in Act 1. This reassurance of the cycle of death bringing new life gives his heart a deep peace.

Music

Apart from The Excursions of Mr. Brouček, this is Janáček's lightest opera, and, despite the titular vixen's death at the end of the work, it stands in contrast to the often brutally serious nature of operas such as Jenůfa and Káťa Kabanová. In The Cunning Little Vixen, the composer moved away from the more conversational style of previous and subsequent operas in favor of a more folk-like style, and wove into its fabric some of his most experimental opera concepts (ballet, mime, and orchestral interludes).

Janáček based The Cunning Little Vixen's tonality on modes (similarly to much output during his last decade), expanding the music's harmonic range through the utilisation of the seventh and ninth chords.[10] The composition makes frequent use of folk-influenced rhythms and "sčasovka" (personally-coined term for a short motif), while it has been noted to contain similarities to the music of French composer Claude Debussy.[10]

At Janáček's request, the final scene from The Cunning Little Vixen was performed at his funeral in 1928.

Recordings

  • Prague National Theatre Chorus and Orchestra/Bohumil Gregor (Supraphon SU 3071-2612)
  • Royal Opera House Chorus and Orchestra/Simon Rattle, recorded 1991 (Chandos 3101(2), sung in English)
  • Wiener Staatsopernchor & Philharmoniker/Charles Mackerras, recorded 1981 (Decca 417 129-2)
  • Orchestre de Paris/Charles Mackerras, video recorded 1995 (Kultur D4544, OCLC 698051148; Medici Arts, OCLC 698051148)
  • London Symphony Orchestra/Simon Rattle, 2020 (LSO Live, LSO0850)

Arrangements

  • Orchestral suite of the opera by Václav Talich, performed by Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, conductor Václav Talich
  • Orchestral suite of the opera by Václav Talich, performed by Boston Symphony Orchestra, conductor Erich Leinsdorf
  • Orchestral suite of the opera by Václav Talich, performed by Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, conductor Charles Mackerras
  • Entr'actes from the opera, arrangement by František Jílek, performed by Brno Philharmonic Orchestra, conductor Jakub Hrůša
  • Music from the opera for brass quintet, arrangement by František Jílek, performed by Brno Brass Quintet, ar Vlastimil Bialas
  • Cut version of the opera for an animated film, arrangement by Kent Nagano, in English, texted Geoff Dunbar, performed by soloists, Berlin German Symphony Orchestra, conductor Kent Nagano

Films

  • In 1965, Walter Felsenstein directed a filmed version in German (Das schlaue Füchslein).
  • In 2003, an animated version was produced by the BBC.[11]

Adaptations

Ursula Dubosarsky's 2018 novel for children, Brindabella, is based on Rudolf Těsnohlídek's Vixen Sharp Ears, the source story of the Cunning Little Vixen,[12] relocated in the Australian bush, with the role of the Vixen played by a kangaroo.[13][14]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Osborne, Charles (1983). The Dictionary of the Opera. Simon & Schuster. p. 87. ISBN 0-671-49218-7.
  2. ^ a b Tyrell, John (2002). "Cunning Little Vixen, The [Přihody Lišky Bystroušky ('The Adventures of the Vixen Bystrouška')]". Grove Dictionary of Music. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O008664.
  3. ^ Cheek 2004, p. 6
  4. ^ a b Zemanová 2002[page needed]
  5. ^ "Leoš Janáček | Czech composer". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  6. ^ Rupert Christiansen, "The Cunning Little Vixen, Glyndebourne, review", The Telegraph (London), 12 May 2012
  7. ^ Shawe-Taylor, D. Opera Diary : The Cunning Little Vixen. Sadler's Wells, 24 March and 6 April. Opera, May 1961, p338-341.
  8. ^ Max Loppert. The Cunning Little Vixen. English National Opera at the London Coliseum, 9 June. Opera, August 1988, p994-96.
  9. ^ Rian Evans. The Cunning Little Vixen. Welsh National Opera at the Wales Millenium Centre, 4 October. Opera, December 2019, p1587.
  10. ^ a b Zemanová 2002, p. 178
  11. ^ The Cunning Little Vixen (2003) at IMDb
  12. ^ "Opera at Peabody - The Adventures of Sharp-Ears the Vixen". www.peabodyopera.org. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  13. ^ "Brindabella - Ursula Dubosarsky, illustrated by Andrew Joyner - 9781760112042 - Allen & Unwin - Australia". www.allenandunwin.com. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  14. ^ "Ursula Dubosarsky". Ursula Dubosarsky. Retrieved 11 July 2019.

Sources

External links

cunning, little, vixen, original, title, příhody, lišky, bystroušky, tales, vixen, sharp, ears, english, three, czech, language, opera, leoš, janáček, completed, 1923, libretto, composer, himself, adapted, from, novella, rudolf, těsnohlídek, opera, leoš, janáč. The Cunning Little Vixen original title Prihody lisky Bystrousky or Tales of Vixen Sharp Ears in English is a three act Czech language opera by Leos Janacek completed in 1923 to a libretto the composer himself adapted from a novella by Rudolf Tesnohlidek The Cunning Little VixenOpera by Leos JanacekRelief of the composer by Julius PelikanNative titleCzech Prihody lisky BystrouskyLibrettistLeos JanacekLanguageCzechBased onserialized novella by Rudolf Tesnohlidek and Stanislav LolekPremiere6 November 1924 1924 11 06 National Theatre Brno Contents 1 Name 2 Composition 3 Performance history 4 Roles 5 Synopsis 5 1 Act 1 5 2 Act 2 5 3 Act 3 6 Music 7 Recordings 8 Arrangements 9 Films 10 Adaptations 11 References 12 External linksName EditThe opera s libretto was adapted by the composer from a 1920 serialized novella Liska Bystrouska by Rudolf Tesnohlidek which was first published in the newspaper Lidove noviny with illustrations by Stanislav Lolek 1 For the title of the opera Prihody means tales lisky is the genitive of vixen Bystrousky still genitive is the pun sharp having the double meaning of pointed like fox ears and clever The opera first became familiar outside Czechoslovakia in a 1927 German adaptation by Max Brod who provided the new name Das schlaue Fuchslein by which Germans still know it and which in English means The Cunning Little Vixen Composition EditWhen Janacek discovered Tesnohlidek s comic strip inspired story and decided to turn it into an opera in 1921 he began work by meeting with the author and studying the animals With this understanding of the characters involved his own 70 years of life experience and an undying unrequited love for the much younger married Kamila Stosslova he began work on the opera He transformed the originally comedic cartoon into a philosophical reflection on the cycle of life by ending with the death of the titular Vixen as with other operas by elderly composers this one depicts life leading to a return to simplicity Work was completed in 1922 23 2 and the first edition was published the next year in Vienna by Universal Edition The premiere took place on 6 November 1924 in National Theatre Brno conducted by Frantisek Neumann with Ota Zitek as director and Eduard Milen as stage designer The opera incorporates Moravian folk music and rhythms as it recounts the life of a clever alternative reading sharp eared fox and accompanying wildlife as well as a few humans and their small adventures while traversing their lifecycles 3 4 Described as a comic opera 5 it has nonetheless been noted to contain a serious theme 6 Interpretations of the work remain varied ranging from children s entertainment to tragedy 4 Performance history EditThe first non Czech performance took place in Mainz Germany in 1927 in an adaptation by Max Brod under the title Das schlaue Fuchslein Brod described the opera as a dream of the eternity of nature and love lust but his version substantially changed the story line It was not successful In 1956 Walter Felsenstein created a performing version closer to the original which was successfully performed at the Komische Oper in Berlin 2 In 1965 Felsenstein made this a Deutscher Fernsehfunk movie with Irmgard Arnold in the title role but retaining Brod s Das schlaue Fuchslein title The opera received its Italian premiere at La Scala in 1958 with Mariella Adani in the title role The work was first staged in England in 1961 by the Sadler s Wells Opera Company now the English National Opera with June Bronhill in the title albeit with a tenor Fox Kevin Miller the director was Colin Graham with conductor Colin Davis and scenery and costume designs by Barry Kay 7 A production by David Pountney was mounted by the three UK national companies in the 1980s first being seen with Scottish Opera at the 1980 Edinburgh Festival then Welsh National Opera in London the following year and finally with English National Opera in June 1988 8 nearly 40 years on Pountney supervised a revival by Welsh National Opera in Cardiff and on tour 9 In 1981 the New York City Opera mounted a production in English based on images created by Maurice Sendak and conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas in his company debut It starred soprano Gianna Rolandi as Vixen Sharp Ears and baritone Richard Cross as the Forester Glyndebourne Festival Opera staged it in 2012 directed by Melly Still and a revival was included in the Glyndebourne Festival for 2016 with Christopher Purves as the Forester and Elena Tsallagova as the Vixen conductor Jakub Hrusa and the London Philharmonic Orchestra In May 2014 the Cleveland Orchestra conducted by Franz Welser Most performed an innovative version directed by Yuval Sharon This production returned the opera to its roots by utilizing animation and hand drawn video sets by the artists Bill Barminski and Christopher Louie of Walter Robot Studios The production featured the use of hole in the wall carnival cutouts to place the singers heads on the animated bodies of the animal characters Roles Edit Monument of Bystrouska Janacek s opera The Cunning Little Vixen at Hukvaldy Janacek s hometown Role Voice type Premiere cast 6 November 1924 Conductor Frantisek Neumann Sharp Ears Bystrouska the Vixen soprano Hana Hrdlickova ZavrelovaGold Stripe Zlatohrbitek the Fox soprano or mezzo soprano Bozena SnopkovaForester Revirnik baritone Arnold FloglParson bassSchoolmaster tenor Antonin PelcHarasta a poultry dealer bass Ferdinand PourSupporting roles Forester s wife contraltoLapak a dog mezzo soprano Marta DobruskaChocholka a hen soprano Vlasta KubikovaRooster sopranoBit roles Pepik Forester s grandson soprano Bozena PolakovaFrantik Pepik s friend soprano Milada RabasovaPasek an innkeeper tenor Bedrich ZavadilMrs Paskova Pasek s wife soprano Jelena JezicovaYoung Vixen Bystrouska child sopranoCricket child sopranoYoung Frog child sopranoGrasshopper child sopranoJay sopranoOwl contraltoWoodpecker contraltoMosquito tenorBadger bassChorus roles Hens women s chorus SA Forest Creatures women s chorus SA Voice of the Forest mixed chorus SAATTBB Fox Cubs children s chorusBallet roles Blue Dragonfly Midges Apparition of the Vixen as a girl Hedgehog Squirrels a Young Vixen Forest CreaturesAccording to instructions in the score four pairs of roles may be performed by the same singer Parson Badger Schoolmaster Mosquito Forester s Wife Owl and Rooster Jay Janacek later required that Lapak Rooster and Chocholka be sung by girls approximately fifteen years old Synopsis EditAct 1 Edit In the forest the animals and insects are playing and dancing The forester enters and lies down against a tree for a nap A curious vixen cub often sung by a young girl inquisitively chases a frog right into the lap of the surprised forester who forcibly takes the vixen home as a pet Time passes in the form of an orchestral interlude and we see the vixen now grown up into a young adult and sung by a soprano tied up in the forester s yard with the conservative old dachshund Fed up with life in confinement the vixen chews through her rope attacks the rooster and hen kills the other chickens jumps over the fence and runs off to freedom Act 2 Edit The vixen takes over a badger s home and kicks him out At the inn the parson the forester and the schoolmaster drink and talk about their mutual infatuation with the gypsy girl Terynka The drunken schoolmaster leaves the inn and mistakes a sunflower behind which the vixen is hiding for Terynka professing his devotion to her The forester also on his way home sees the vixen and fires two shots at her sending her running Later the vixen coming into her adulthood meets a charming boy fox and they retire to the badger s home An unexpected pregnancy and a forest full of gossipy creatures necessitate their marriage which rounds out the act Act 3 Edit The poacher Harasta is engaged to Terynka and is out hunting in preparation for their marriage He sets a fox trap which the numerous fox and vixen cubs mock Harasta watching from a distance shoots and kills the vixen sending her children running At Harasta s wedding the forester sees the vixen s fur which Harasta gave to Terynka as a wedding present and flees to the forest to reflect He returns to the place where he met the vixen and sits at the tree grieving the loss of both the vixen and Terynka His grief grows until just as in the beginning of the opera a frog unexpectedly jumps in his lap the grandson of the one who did so in Act 1 This reassurance of the cycle of death bringing new life gives his heart a deep peace Music EditApart from The Excursions of Mr Broucek this is Janacek s lightest opera and despite the titular vixen s death at the end of the work it stands in contrast to the often brutally serious nature of operas such as Jenufa and Kata Kabanova In The Cunning Little Vixen the composer moved away from the more conversational style of previous and subsequent operas in favor of a more folk like style and wove into its fabric some of his most experimental opera concepts ballet mime and orchestral interludes Janacek based The Cunning Little Vixen s tonality on modes similarly to much output during his last decade expanding the music s harmonic range through the utilisation of the seventh and ninth chords 10 The composition makes frequent use of folk influenced rhythms and scasovka personally coined term for a short motif while it has been noted to contain similarities to the music of French composer Claude Debussy 10 At Janacek s request the final scene from The Cunning Little Vixen was performed at his funeral in 1928 Recordings EditPrague National Theatre Chorus and Orchestra Bohumil Gregor Supraphon SU 3071 2612 Royal Opera House Chorus and Orchestra Simon Rattle recorded 1991 Chandos 3101 2 sung in English Wiener Staatsopernchor amp Philharmoniker Charles Mackerras recorded 1981 Decca 417 129 2 Orchestre de Paris Charles Mackerras video recorded 1995 Kultur D4544 OCLC 698051148 Medici Arts OCLC 698051148 London Symphony Orchestra Simon Rattle 2020 LSO Live LSO0850 Arrangements EditOrchestral suite of the opera by Vaclav Talich performed by Czech Philharmonic Orchestra conductor Vaclav Talich Orchestral suite of the opera by Vaclav Talich performed by Boston Symphony Orchestra conductor Erich Leinsdorf Orchestral suite of the opera by Vaclav Talich performed by Czech Philharmonic Orchestra conductor Charles Mackerras Entr actes from the opera arrangement by Frantisek Jilek performed by Brno Philharmonic Orchestra conductor Jakub Hrusa Music from the opera for brass quintet arrangement by Frantisek Jilek performed by Brno Brass Quintet ar Vlastimil Bialas Cut version of the opera for an animated film arrangement by Kent Nagano in English texted Geoff Dunbar performed by soloists Berlin German Symphony Orchestra conductor Kent NaganoFilms EditIn 1965 Walter Felsenstein directed a filmed version in German Das schlaue Fuchslein In 2003 an animated version was produced by the BBC 11 Adaptations EditUrsula Dubosarsky s 2018 novel for children Brindabella is based on Rudolf Tesnohlidek s Vixen Sharp Ears the source story of the Cunning Little Vixen 12 relocated in the Australian bush with the role of the Vixen played by a kangaroo 13 14 References EditNotes Osborne Charles 1983 The Dictionary of the Opera Simon amp Schuster p 87 ISBN 0 671 49218 7 a b Tyrell John 2002 Cunning Little Vixen The Prihody Lisky Bystrousky The Adventures of the Vixen Bystrouska Grove Dictionary of Music doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article O008664 Cheek 2004 p 6 a b Zemanova 2002 page needed Leos Janacek Czech composer Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 11 July 2019 Rupert Christiansen The Cunning Little Vixen Glyndebourne review The Telegraph London 12 May 2012 Shawe Taylor D Opera Diary The Cunning Little Vixen Sadler s Wells 24 March and 6 April Opera May 1961 p338 341 Max Loppert The Cunning Little Vixen English National Opera at the London Coliseum 9 June Opera August 1988 p994 96 Rian Evans The Cunning Little Vixen Welsh National Opera at the Wales Millenium Centre 4 October Opera December 2019 p1587 a b Zemanova 2002 p 178 The Cunning Little Vixen 2003 at IMDb Opera at Peabody The Adventures of Sharp Ears the Vixen www peabodyopera org Retrieved 11 July 2019 Brindabella Ursula Dubosarsky illustrated by Andrew Joyner 9781760112042 Allen amp Unwin Australia www allenandunwin com Retrieved 11 July 2019 Ursula Dubosarsky Ursula Dubosarsky Retrieved 11 July 2019 Sources Holden Amanda ed 2001 The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam ISBN 0 14 029312 4 Janacek Leos Timothy Cheek 2004 The Janacek Opera Libretti Kata Kabanova Scarecrow Press Kennedy Michael and Joyce Oxford Concise Dictionary of Music 5th edition Oxford Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 19 920383 3 Sokol Martin L 1981 The New York City Opera An American Adventure Macmillan ISBN 0 02 612280 4 Warrack John and West Ewan 1992 The Oxford Dictionary of Opera ISBN 0 19 869164 5 Zemanova Mirka 2002 Janacek A Composer s Life University Press of New England ISBN 978 1 55553 549 0External links EditGavin Plumley s Leos Janacek site information on The Cunning Little Vixen Synopsis of The Cunning Little Vixen from the English Touring Opera Synopsis of The Cunning Little Vixen from the Royal Opera House The Cunning Little Vixen Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Portal Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Cunning Little Vixen amp oldid 1124096404, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.