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The Makropulos Affair (opera)

The Makropulos Affair (or The Makropoulos Case, The Makropulos Secret, or, literally, The Makropulos Thing; Czech Věc Makropulos[1]) is a Czech opera in 3 acts, with music and libretto by Leoš Janáček. Janáček based his opera on the play Věc Makropulos by Karel Čapek. Composed between 1923 and 1925, The Makropulos Affair was his penultimate opera and, like much of his later work, was inspired by his infatuation with Kamila Stösslová, a married woman much younger than himself.

The Makropulos Affair
Opera by Leoš Janáček
Relief of the composer by Julius Pelikán
Native title
Věc Makropulos
Other titleThe Makropoulos Case
LibrettistJanáček
LanguageCzech
Based onVěc Makropulos
by Karel Čapek
Premiere
18 December 1926 (1926-12-18)

The opera received its world premiere at the National Theatre in Brno on 18 December 1926, conducted by František Neumann.

Composition history edit

Janáček had seen the play early in its run in Prague on 10 December 1922, and immediately saw its potential as an opera. He entered into a correspondence with Čapek, who was accommodating towards the idea, although legal problems in securing the rights to the play delayed work. When these problems were cleared on 10 September 1923, Janáček began work on the opera. By December 1924, he had completed the first draft of the work. He spent another year refining the score, before completing it on 3 December 1925.

Musically, much of the piece has little in the way of thematic development, instead presenting the listener with a mass of different motifs and ideas. Janáček's writings indicate that this was a deliberate ploy to give musical embodiment to the disruptive, unsettling main character Emilia Marty/Elina Makropulos. Only at the end of the final act, when Makropulos' vulnerability is revealed, does the music tap into and develop the rich lyrical vein that has driven it throughout.

Performance history edit

Janáček was making adjustments to the score almost right up to the premiere in Brno. Two years after its premiere, the opera was given in Prague, and also in Germany in 1929, but it did not become really popular until a production by the Sadler's Wells company in London in 1964, conducted by Charles Mackerras with Marie Collier as Emilia Marty. While performed with some regularity, it has not become part of the core opera repertory in the same way as have Jenůfa, Káťa Kabanová or The Cunning Little Vixen.

In 1966, the San Francisco Opera gave the first US performances (in an English translation), also with Marie Collier in the lead role.[2] The first New York City performance was in December 1967, by the Little Orchestra Society with Naděžda Kniplová as Emilia Marty.[3] The first Metropolitan Opera production of the opera, in an English translation, had its opening night on 5 January 1996, but ended prematurely only a few minutes into act 1 when tenor Richard Versalle, 63, whilst climbing the 20-foot (6.1 m) ladder which was part of the set, fell 10 feet (3.0 m) from the ladder, from a heart attack, immediately after singing Vitek's line: "Too bad you can only live so long". His death was reported that same evening.[4][5] The scheduled second performance on 8 January 1996 was cancelled because of severe winter weather, and the first full performance of the Metropolitan Opera production did not take place until 11 January 1996.[6] The first Metropolitan Opera performances of the work in the original Czech occurred in April 1998.[7]

Tomáš Šimerda directed a 2001 version of the opera for Czech television, with Gabriela Beňačková as Emilia Marty, and a cast that included Roman Sadnik, Jan Hladík, Zdeněk Šmukař, Monika Brychtová, and Pavel Kamas, with the Brno National Theatre Chorus and Orchestra and conductor Oliver von Dohnányi. The opera has been performed twice at The Proms, in August 1995 (the Glyndebourne production presented in concert at the Royal Albert Hall) and in August 2016 (with the BBC Symphony Orchestra, in a semi-staged concert version).[8]

Karita Mattila sang the title role in a San Francisco Opera production in November 2010.[9][10] The production was filmed live, and was later streamed for free for two days in July 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown.[11] Mattila reprised the role at the Metropolitan Opera in April 2012,[12] in Helsinki at the Finnish National Opera in August–September 2012,[13][14] and in the semi-staged version at The Proms in the Royal Albert Hall in August 2016.[8]

Roles edit

Role Voice type Premiere cast, 18 December 1926
(Conductor: František Neumann)
Emilia Marty, formerly Elina Makropulos, a celebrated singer soprano Alexandra Čvanová
Albert Gregor tenor Emil Olšovský
Dr Kolenatý, a lawyer bass-baritone Ferdinand Pour
Vítek, Kolenatý's clerk tenor Valentin Šindler
Kristina, his daughter, a young singer soprano Jožka Mattesová
Baron Jaroslav Prus baritone Zdeněk Otava
Janek, his son tenor Antonín Pelc
Count Hauk-Šendorf tenor Václav Šindler
Stage Technician baritone Jaroslav Čihák
Cleaning Woman alto Jelena Ježičová
Hotel Maid alto
Offstage male chorus

Synopsis edit

Act 1 edit

Kolenatý's law office, Prague, 1922

Vitek, Kolenatý's clerk, notes that the probate case of Gregor v. Prus has been going on for almost a century. Kolenatý represents the middle-class Gregors against the wealthy and aristocratic Prus family. Albert Gregor comes in to ask about the case. Kolenatý is at the Supreme Court, but has not returned because he is expecting the final resolution. Vitek's daughter Kristina, enters. She is a young opera singer, and praises Emilia Marty, a famous singer she has seen rehearsing and admits that she will never be the artist Emilia Marty is.

Kolenatý returns to his law office. Emilia Marty enters displaying an interest in the Gregor case, which Kolenatý summarizes for her. Baron Joseph Ferdinand Prus died in 1827, leaving no will or legitimate children. His cousin claimed the estate, but so did Albert's ancestor, Ferdinand Gregor, who asserted that the Baron had promised the estate to him. Each party presented different evidence to support their case, but neither could proffer an actual will. Here Emilia interrupts. Speaking with unusual familiarity of these long-ago events, she states that Ferdinand Gregor was the out-of-wedlock son of Baron Joseph (who was a very centered and diligent man, contradicting Dr. Kolenatý's description) and opera singer Ellian MacGregor. Kolenatý says that the case seems to be on the side of the Prus family, because there is no will. Emilia asks what would be required for Albert Gregor to win, and Kolenatý answers that the missing will is such an item. Emilia says that there is in fact a will, and describes an old cupboard in the Prus mansion where important papers were kept, where that document may be found.

Kolenatý thinks Emilia is inventing stories, but Albert insists that Kolenatý investigate at once, and even threatens to take the case to a rival lawyer. Kolenatý leaves, and Albert tells Emilia that if he does not get the estate, he will be penniless and shoot himself. He is already infatuated with Emilia, and makes advances to her. But Emilia, bored and indifferent, coldly refuses him. However, she asks his help in retrieving a document that will be found with the will.

Kolenatý returns with Jaroslav Prus. They found the will where Emilia said it would be, and Jaroslav congratulates Albert on his victory – if he can prove that Ferdinand Gregor was the Baron's out-of-wedlock son. Emilia says that she can prove that.

Act 2 edit

The empty stage of the opera house

A stagehand and a cleaning woman discuss Emilia's extraordinary performance. Jaroslav Prus enters, seeking Emilia, accompanied by his young son Janek, and Kristina. Kristina is in love with, and in a relationship with, Janek.

Emilia enters, but spurns them all, including Janek, who falls under her spell, and Albert, who brings her expensive flowers. The old Count Hauk-Šendorf enters, and thinks he recognizes Emilia as Eugenia Montez, a Romani woman with whom he had an affair in Andalusia half a century before. Emilia tells him Eugenia is not dead, and in Spanish, calls him by a pet name and asks him for a kiss.

All except Jaroslav leave. He demands an explanation of her strange interest in his family, and reveals that the mother of the Baron's child was recorded as Elina Makropulos, who might be the same as Ellian MacGregor, whose love letters he has read. Prus describes her as a passionate woman with flexible morals, to which Emilia takes offense. He continues saying that only a descendant of Ferdinand Makropoulos can claim the estate. Emilia offers to buy a mysterious document found with the will, but Jaroslav refuses and leaves. Albert returns and again pleads his love, but Emilia merely falls asleep, and Albert leaves. Janek returns, and Emilia asks him to get the document for her. Jaroslav overhears this, and orders Janek to leave. He then agrees to provide the document himself if Emilia will spend the night with him.

Act 3 edit

Emila's hotel room the next morning

Emilia and Jaroslav have spent the night together. Though disappointed by Emilia's coldness, Jaroslav nonetheless gives her the envelope containing the document. News arrives that his son Janek has committed suicide because of his infatuation with Emilia. Jaroslav grieves, but Emilia is indifferent. Jaroslav hardly has time to express his anger at her reaction before Count Hauk-Šendorf enters. Hauk-Šendorf says that he has left his wife and wants to elope with Emilia to Spain. Albert, Kolenatý, and Kristina enter, with a doctor who takes Count Hauk-Šendorf away. Kolenatý has noticed that Emilia's handwriting matches that of Ellian MacGregor and suspects her of forgery. She leaves the room to get dressed, and says that after she has had her breakfast, she will clarify everything.

The rest of the party begins to search her papers and belongings. The searchers find many documents and keepsakes, all bearing names with the initials 'E.M.' Jaroslav says that the handwriting of Elina Makropulos on Ferdinand's birth certificate also matches that of Emilia.

Emilia returns, drunk and with a pistol, but Albert disarms her. Emilia decides to tell the truth. She is Elina Makropulos, born in 1575 (not 1585, as in Čapek's eponymous original stage play, which premiered in 1922), daughter of Hieronymus Makropulos, an alchemist in Emperor Rudolf II's Court, who ordered him to prepare a potion that would extend his life. When the potion was ready, the Emperor ordered his alchemist to test it on his daughter first. She fell into a coma, and Hieronymus was sent to prison. After a week, Elina woke up and fled with the formula, which proved successful. She has since lived an itinerant life for three centuries, becoming one of the best singers of all time. To conceal her longevity, she has assumed many identities, including 'Eugenia Montez', 'Ekaterina Myshkin', and 'Ellian McGregor'. She confided her secret to Baron Joseph and gave him the formula, which he attached to his will for his son. However, the document was lost among the Baron's papers after his death.

The potion is finally wearing off. Elina had wanted the formula to gain another 300 years of life. As the first signs of old age appear on her face, the others, initially disbelieving her story, come to believe her, and to feel pity for her. Elina has realized that perpetual youth has led her to exhausted apathy and resolves to allow death to come naturally to her, understanding that a sense of transcendence and purpose come from a naturally short span of life. Aging rapidly before the eyes of the astonished onlookers, she offers Kristina the formula so she now can become a great artist herself. However, Kristina burns the parchment in a candle flame. Elina collapses as she recites the first words of the Lord's Prayer in Greek.

Recordings edit

Year Cast:
Emilia, Gregor, Kolenatý, Vítek, Kristina, Jaroslav Prus, Janek
Conductor, chorus & orchestra, stage director (for videos) Label
1966 Libuše Prylová, Ivo Žídek, Karel Berman, Rudolf Vonásek, Helena Tattermuschová, Přemysl Kočí, Viktor Kočí Bohumil Gregor, Prague National Theatre Chorus and Orchestra LP and Audio CD: Supraphon
1978 Elisabeth Söderström, Peter Dvorský, Dalibor Jedlička, Vladimír Krejčík, Anna Czaková, Václav Zítek, Zdeněk Švehla Sir Charles Mackerras, Wiener Staatsopernchor (chorus master: Helmuth Froschauer), Wiener Philharmoniker LP and Audio CD: Decca
1989 Stephanie Sundine, Graham Clark, Robert Orth, Richard Margison, Kathleen Brett, Cornelius Opthof, Benoit Boutet Berislav Klobučar, conductor, Canadian Opera Company, Lotfi Mansouri (stage director) VHS Video: Pickwick Video
1995 Anja Silja, Kim Begley, Andrew Shore, Anthony Roden, Manuela Kriscak, Victor Braun, Christopher Ventris London Philharmonic Orchestra, Sir Andrew Davis, Glyndebourne Festival, Nikolaus Lehnhoff (stage director) VHS & DVD: Warner Music Vision
2007 Cheryl Barker, Robert Brubaker, Neal Davies, John Graham-Hall, Elena Xanthoudakis, John Wegner, Thomas Walker Sir Charles Mackerras, English National Opera Orchestra and Chorus CD: Chandos (sung in English)[15]
2012 Angela Denoke, Raymond Very, Jochen Schmeckenbecher [de], Peter Hoare, Jurgita Adamonyte, Johan Reuter, Ales Briscein Esa-Pekka Salonen, Vienna Philharmonic, Christoph Marthaler (stage director) DVD: C-Major Entertainment[16]

References edit

  1. ^ Kenneth Furie (1995-12-24). "A Woman Skips Across 3 Centuries, Maintaining Her Ability to Enchant". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-08-23.
  2. ^ Harold C. Schonberg (1966-11-21). "Janacek in San Francisco; The Makropulos Case Has U.S. Premiere – Striking Work Is Taken From Play by Capek". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-08-23.
  3. ^ Harold C. Schonberg (1967-12-13). "Makropulos Case; Janacek Work Is Heard Here for First Time". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-08-23.
  4. ^ Randy Kennedy (1996-01-06). "Met Tenor Is Stricken Ill Onstage And Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-08-23.
  5. ^ Lynette Holloway (1996-01-07). "Richard Versalle, 63, Met Tenor, Dies After Fall in a Performance". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-11-29.
  6. ^ Martin Bernheimer (1996-02-03). "Opera Review : Janacek's Case at the Met Misfires". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2016-10-03.
  7. ^ Paul Griffiths (1998-04-13). "Opera Review: She's a Free Spirit, Forever Toying With Men". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-10-03.
  8. ^ a b Tim Ashley (2016-08-21). . The Guardian. Archived from the original on 2016-12-28.
  9. ^ "You are being redirected..." www.operanews.com. Retrieved Dec 1, 2020.
  10. ^ "A Miraculous Mattila Makropulos". San Francisco Classical Voice. Retrieved Dec 1, 2020.
  11. ^ "Best Bets: S.F. Opera's 'The Makropulos Case,' Yoshi's benefit concert, Shakespeare fest and much more on tap". Local News Matters. Jul 22, 2020. Retrieved Dec 1, 2020.
  12. ^ Tommasini, Anthony (Apr 29, 2012). "A Mysterious Woman With a Past, 300 Years of It (Published 2012)". The New York Times. Retrieved Dec 1, 2020.
  13. ^ "Triumphant Makropulos in Helsinki – Seen and Heard International". seenandheard-international.com. Retrieved Dec 1, 2020.
  14. ^ Marcus, J. S. (Sep 6, 2012). "Finland's Classical Crescendo". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved Dec 1, 2020 – via www.wsj.com.
  15. ^ Tim Ashley (2007-02-23). "Janacek: The Makropulos Case, Barker/ Brubaker/ Wegner/ Chorus and Orchestra of English National Opera/ Mackerras". The Guardian. Retrieved 2016-08-23.
  16. ^ Tim Ashley (2012-12-13). "Janáček: The Makropulos Case – DVD review". The Guardian. Retrieved 2016-08-23.

Sources edit

External links edit

  • The Makropulos Case returns to Prague's National Theatre – Czech Radio

makropulos, affair, opera, this, article, about, opera, leoš, janáček, play, karel, Čapek, makropulos, affair, makropulos, affair, makropoulos, case, makropulos, secret, literally, makropulos, thing, czech, věc, makropulos, czech, opera, acts, with, music, lib. This article is about the opera by Leos Janacek For the play by Karel Capek see The Makropulos Affair The Makropulos Affair or The Makropoulos Case The Makropulos Secret or literally The Makropulos Thing Czech Vec Makropulos 1 is a Czech opera in 3 acts with music and libretto by Leos Janacek Janacek based his opera on the play Vec Makropulos by Karel Capek Composed between 1923 and 1925 The Makropulos Affair was his penultimate opera and like much of his later work was inspired by his infatuation with Kamila Stosslova a married woman much younger than himself The Makropulos AffairOpera by Leos JanacekRelief of the composer by Julius PelikanNative titleVec MakropulosOther titleThe Makropoulos CaseLibrettistJanacekLanguageCzechBased onVec Makropulosby Karel CapekPremiere18 December 1926 1926 12 18 National Theatre BrnoThe opera received its world premiere at the National Theatre in Brno on 18 December 1926 conducted by Frantisek Neumann Contents 1 Composition history 2 Performance history 3 Roles 4 Synopsis 4 1 Act 1 4 2 Act 2 4 3 Act 3 5 Recordings 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksComposition history editJanacek had seen the play early in its run in Prague on 10 December 1922 and immediately saw its potential as an opera He entered into a correspondence with Capek who was accommodating towards the idea although legal problems in securing the rights to the play delayed work When these problems were cleared on 10 September 1923 Janacek began work on the opera By December 1924 he had completed the first draft of the work He spent another year refining the score before completing it on 3 December 1925 Musically much of the piece has little in the way of thematic development instead presenting the listener with a mass of different motifs and ideas Janacek s writings indicate that this was a deliberate ploy to give musical embodiment to the disruptive unsettling main character Emilia Marty Elina Makropulos Only at the end of the final act when Makropulos vulnerability is revealed does the music tap into and develop the rich lyrical vein that has driven it throughout Performance history editJanacek was making adjustments to the score almost right up to the premiere in Brno Two years after its premiere the opera was given in Prague and also in Germany in 1929 but it did not become really popular until a production by the Sadler s Wells company in London in 1964 conducted by Charles Mackerras with Marie Collier as Emilia Marty While performed with some regularity it has not become part of the core opera repertory in the same way as have Jenufa Kata Kabanova or The Cunning Little Vixen In 1966 the San Francisco Opera gave the first US performances in an English translation also with Marie Collier in the lead role 2 The first New York City performance was in December 1967 by the Little Orchestra Society with Nadezda Kniplova as Emilia Marty 3 The first Metropolitan Opera production of the opera in an English translation had its opening night on 5 January 1996 but ended prematurely only a few minutes into act 1 when tenor Richard Versalle 63 whilst climbing the 20 foot 6 1 m ladder which was part of the set fell 10 feet 3 0 m from the ladder from a heart attack immediately after singing Vitek s line Too bad you can only live so long His death was reported that same evening 4 5 The scheduled second performance on 8 January 1996 was cancelled because of severe winter weather and the first full performance of the Metropolitan Opera production did not take place until 11 January 1996 6 The first Metropolitan Opera performances of the work in the original Czech occurred in April 1998 7 Tomas Simerda directed a 2001 version of the opera for Czech television with Gabriela Benackova as Emilia Marty and a cast that included Roman Sadnik Jan Hladik Zdenek Smukar Monika Brychtova and Pavel Kamas with the Brno National Theatre Chorus and Orchestra and conductor Oliver von Dohnanyi The opera has been performed twice at The Proms in August 1995 the Glyndebourne production presented in concert at the Royal Albert Hall and in August 2016 with the BBC Symphony Orchestra in a semi staged concert version 8 Karita Mattila sang the title role in a San Francisco Opera production in November 2010 9 10 The production was filmed live and was later streamed for free for two days in July 2020 during the COVID 19 pandemic lockdown 11 Mattila reprised the role at the Metropolitan Opera in April 2012 12 in Helsinki at the Finnish National Opera in August September 2012 13 14 and in the semi staged version at The Proms in the Royal Albert Hall in August 2016 8 Roles editRole Voice type Premiere cast 18 December 1926 Conductor Frantisek Neumann Emilia Marty formerly Elina Makropulos a celebrated singer soprano Alexandra CvanovaAlbert Gregor tenor Emil OlsovskyDr Kolenaty a lawyer bass baritone Ferdinand PourVitek Kolenaty s clerk tenor Valentin SindlerKristina his daughter a young singer soprano Jozka MattesovaBaron Jaroslav Prus baritone Zdenek OtavaJanek his son tenor Antonin PelcCount Hauk Sendorf tenor Vaclav SindlerStage Technician baritone Jaroslav CihakCleaning Woman alto Jelena JezicovaHotel Maid altoOffstage male chorusSynopsis editAct 1 edit Kolenaty s law office Prague 1922Vitek Kolenaty s clerk notes that the probate case of Gregor v Prus has been going on for almost a century Kolenaty represents the middle class Gregors against the wealthy and aristocratic Prus family Albert Gregor comes in to ask about the case Kolenaty is at the Supreme Court but has not returned because he is expecting the final resolution Vitek s daughter Kristina enters She is a young opera singer and praises Emilia Marty a famous singer she has seen rehearsing and admits that she will never be the artist Emilia Marty is Kolenaty returns to his law office Emilia Marty enters displaying an interest in the Gregor case which Kolenaty summarizes for her Baron Joseph Ferdinand Prus died in 1827 leaving no will or legitimate children His cousin claimed the estate but so did Albert s ancestor Ferdinand Gregor who asserted that the Baron had promised the estate to him Each party presented different evidence to support their case but neither could proffer an actual will Here Emilia interrupts Speaking with unusual familiarity of these long ago events she states that Ferdinand Gregor was the out of wedlock son of Baron Joseph who was a very centered and diligent man contradicting Dr Kolenaty s description and opera singer Ellian MacGregor Kolenaty says that the case seems to be on the side of the Prus family because there is no will Emilia asks what would be required for Albert Gregor to win and Kolenaty answers that the missing will is such an item Emilia says that there is in fact a will and describes an old cupboard in the Prus mansion where important papers were kept where that document may be found Kolenaty thinks Emilia is inventing stories but Albert insists that Kolenaty investigate at once and even threatens to take the case to a rival lawyer Kolenaty leaves and Albert tells Emilia that if he does not get the estate he will be penniless and shoot himself He is already infatuated with Emilia and makes advances to her But Emilia bored and indifferent coldly refuses him However she asks his help in retrieving a document that will be found with the will Kolenaty returns with Jaroslav Prus They found the will where Emilia said it would be and Jaroslav congratulates Albert on his victory if he can prove that Ferdinand Gregor was the Baron s out of wedlock son Emilia says that she can prove that Act 2 edit The empty stage of the opera houseA stagehand and a cleaning woman discuss Emilia s extraordinary performance Jaroslav Prus enters seeking Emilia accompanied by his young son Janek and Kristina Kristina is in love with and in a relationship with Janek Emilia enters but spurns them all including Janek who falls under her spell and Albert who brings her expensive flowers The old Count Hauk Sendorf enters and thinks he recognizes Emilia as Eugenia Montez a Romani woman with whom he had an affair in Andalusia half a century before Emilia tells him Eugenia is not dead and in Spanish calls him by a pet name and asks him for a kiss All except Jaroslav leave He demands an explanation of her strange interest in his family and reveals that the mother of the Baron s child was recorded as Elina Makropulos who might be the same as Ellian MacGregor whose love letters he has read Prus describes her as a passionate woman with flexible morals to which Emilia takes offense He continues saying that only a descendant of Ferdinand Makropoulos can claim the estate Emilia offers to buy a mysterious document found with the will but Jaroslav refuses and leaves Albert returns and again pleads his love but Emilia merely falls asleep and Albert leaves Janek returns and Emilia asks him to get the document for her Jaroslav overhears this and orders Janek to leave He then agrees to provide the document himself if Emilia will spend the night with him Act 3 edit Emila s hotel room the next morningEmilia and Jaroslav have spent the night together Though disappointed by Emilia s coldness Jaroslav nonetheless gives her the envelope containing the document News arrives that his son Janek has committed suicide because of his infatuation with Emilia Jaroslav grieves but Emilia is indifferent Jaroslav hardly has time to express his anger at her reaction before Count Hauk Sendorf enters Hauk Sendorf says that he has left his wife and wants to elope with Emilia to Spain Albert Kolenaty and Kristina enter with a doctor who takes Count Hauk Sendorf away Kolenaty has noticed that Emilia s handwriting matches that of Ellian MacGregor and suspects her of forgery She leaves the room to get dressed and says that after she has had her breakfast she will clarify everything The rest of the party begins to search her papers and belongings The searchers find many documents and keepsakes all bearing names with the initials E M Jaroslav says that the handwriting of Elina Makropulos on Ferdinand s birth certificate also matches that of Emilia Emilia returns drunk and with a pistol but Albert disarms her Emilia decides to tell the truth She is Elina Makropulos born in 1575 not 1585 as in Capek s eponymous original stage play which premiered in 1922 daughter of Hieronymus Makropulos an alchemist in Emperor Rudolf II s Court who ordered him to prepare a potion that would extend his life When the potion was ready the Emperor ordered his alchemist to test it on his daughter first She fell into a coma and Hieronymus was sent to prison After a week Elina woke up and fled with the formula which proved successful She has since lived an itinerant life for three centuries becoming one of the best singers of all time To conceal her longevity she has assumed many identities including Eugenia Montez Ekaterina Myshkin and Ellian McGregor She confided her secret to Baron Joseph and gave him the formula which he attached to his will for his son However the document was lost among the Baron s papers after his death The potion is finally wearing off Elina had wanted the formula to gain another 300 years of life As the first signs of old age appear on her face the others initially disbelieving her story come to believe her and to feel pity for her Elina has realized that perpetual youth has led her to exhausted apathy and resolves to allow death to come naturally to her understanding that a sense of transcendence and purpose come from a naturally short span of life Aging rapidly before the eyes of the astonished onlookers she offers Kristina the formula so she now can become a great artist herself However Kristina burns the parchment in a candle flame Elina collapses as she recites the first words of the Lord s Prayer in Greek Recordings editYear Cast Emilia Gregor Kolenaty Vitek Kristina Jaroslav Prus Janek Conductor chorus amp orchestra stage director for videos Label1966 Libuse Prylova Ivo Zidek Karel Berman Rudolf Vonasek Helena Tattermuschova Premysl Koci Viktor Koci Bohumil Gregor Prague National Theatre Chorus and Orchestra LP and Audio CD Supraphon1978 Elisabeth Soderstrom Peter Dvorsky Dalibor Jedlicka Vladimir Krejcik Anna Czakova Vaclav Zitek Zdenek Svehla Sir Charles Mackerras Wiener Staatsopernchor chorus master Helmuth Froschauer Wiener Philharmoniker LP and Audio CD Decca1989 Stephanie Sundine Graham Clark Robert Orth Richard Margison Kathleen Brett Cornelius Opthof Benoit Boutet Berislav Klobucar conductor Canadian Opera Company Lotfi Mansouri stage director VHS Video Pickwick Video1995 Anja Silja Kim Begley Andrew Shore Anthony Roden Manuela Kriscak Victor Braun Christopher Ventris London Philharmonic Orchestra Sir Andrew Davis Glyndebourne Festival Nikolaus Lehnhoff stage director VHS amp DVD Warner Music Vision2007 Cheryl Barker Robert Brubaker Neal Davies John Graham Hall Elena Xanthoudakis John Wegner Thomas Walker Sir Charles Mackerras English National Opera Orchestra and Chorus CD Chandos sung in English 15 2012 Angela Denoke Raymond Very Jochen Schmeckenbecher de Peter Hoare Jurgita Adamonyte Johan Reuter Ales Briscein Esa Pekka Salonen Vienna Philharmonic Christoph Marthaler stage director DVD C Major Entertainment 16 References edit Kenneth Furie 1995 12 24 A Woman Skips Across 3 Centuries Maintaining Her Ability to Enchant The New York Times Retrieved 2016 08 23 Harold C Schonberg 1966 11 21 Janacek in San Francisco The Makropulos Case Has U S Premiere Striking Work Is Taken From Play by Capek The New York Times Retrieved 2016 08 23 Harold C Schonberg 1967 12 13 Makropulos Case Janacek Work Is Heard Here for First Time The New York Times Retrieved 2016 08 23 Randy Kennedy 1996 01 06 Met Tenor Is Stricken Ill Onstage And Dies The New York Times Retrieved 2016 08 23 Lynette Holloway 1996 01 07 Richard Versalle 63 Met Tenor Dies After Fall in a Performance The New York Times Retrieved 2008 11 29 Martin Bernheimer 1996 02 03 Opera Review Janacek s Case at the Met Misfires Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2016 10 03 Paul Griffiths 1998 04 13 Opera Review She s a Free Spirit Forever Toying With Men The New York Times Retrieved 2016 10 03 a b Tim Ashley 2016 08 21 The Makropulos Affair review Karita Mattila s diva glows with breathtaking opulence The Guardian Archived from the original on 2016 12 28 You are being redirected www operanews com Retrieved Dec 1 2020 A Miraculous Mattila Makropulos San Francisco Classical Voice Retrieved Dec 1 2020 Best Bets S F Opera s The Makropulos Case Yoshi s benefit concert Shakespeare fest and much more on tap Local News Matters Jul 22 2020 Retrieved Dec 1 2020 Tommasini Anthony Apr 29 2012 A Mysterious Woman With a Past 300 Years of It Published 2012 The New York Times Retrieved Dec 1 2020 Triumphant Makropulos in Helsinki Seen and Heard International seenandheard international com Retrieved Dec 1 2020 Marcus J S Sep 6 2012 Finland s Classical Crescendo Wall Street Journal Retrieved Dec 1 2020 via www wsj com Tim Ashley 2007 02 23 Janacek The Makropulos Case Barker Brubaker Wegner Chorus and Orchestra of English National Opera Mackerras The Guardian Retrieved 2016 08 23 Tim Ashley 2012 12 13 Janacek The Makropulos Case DVD review The Guardian Retrieved 2016 08 23 Sources editHolden Amanda ed The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam 2001 ISBN 0 14 029312 4 Programme for English National Opera s performances of The Makropoulos Affair May 2006 Tyrrell John Janacek s Operas A Documentary Account Faber and Faber 1992 ISBN 0 571 15129 9 Ch 8 p 304 325 External links editThe Makropulos Case returns to Prague s National Theatre Czech Radio Metropolitan Opera programme for The Makropulos Case 5 May 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Makropulos Affair opera amp oldid 1179132017, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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