König Hirsch Explained

German: König Hirsch
Italian: Il re cervo
Genre:Opera
Composer:Hans Werner Henze
Translated Name:The Stag King
Language:German
Based On:Il re cervo by Carlo Gozzi
Premiere Location:Theater des Westens, Berlin

German: König Hirsch (in English, The Stag King) is an opera in three acts by Hans Werner Henze to a German libretto by after Il re cervo, a theatrical fable (1762) by Carlo Gozzi. He revised it as Il re cervo, premiered in 1963 at the Staatstheater Kassel.

Performance history

German: König Hirsch was first performed in a drastically shortened version by the Städtische Oper Berlin on 23 September 1956 in the Theater des Westens with staging by Jean-Pierre Ponnelle and conducted by Hermann Scherchen as a highlight of the Berliner Festwochen 1956.[1]

It was rewritten as Italian: Il re cervo, German: oder Die Irrfahrten der Wahrheit (The Stag King or The Odysseys of Truth) and performed at the Staatstheater Kassel on 10 March 1963. This version was also produced at the Santa Fe Opera on 4 August 1965. The complete, original form of König Hirsch was given for the first time on 5 May 1985 at the Staatsoper Stuttgart.

Roles

!Role!Voice type!Premiere cast, 23 September 1956
Conductor: Hermann Scherchen
The king (Leandro)tenorSándor Kónya
The governor (Tartaglia)bass-baritoneLeopold Clam
The maiden (Costanza)sopranoHelga Pilarczyk
The preceptorbassTomislav Neralic
CheccotenorHelmut Krebs
ColtellinotenorMartin Vantin
Scollatella IsopranoNora Jungwirth
Scollatella IIsoprano
Scollatella IIImezzo-soprano
Scollatella IVcontralto
Woman in blackcontralto
Statue Isoprano
Statue IIsoprano
The stagmime
Voices in the forest, courtiers, animals, huntsmen, soldiers, city dwellers (chorus)

Synopsis

The king, who has been cast into the forest as a child by the governor, returns to his kingdom. However he is tricked by the governor and forced to go back to the forest where he turns into a stag. Eventually he goes back once again, the governor is killed, and he is transformed again into human form.

Instrumentation

Recordings

To date the opera has not been recorded in its entirety. An excerpt (act 3, scene 5) from a performance recorded by the Südwestrundfunk Stuttgart in 1985 (soprano; John Bröcheler, bass-baritone; Helmut Holzapfel, tenor-buffo; Würtembergisches Staatsorchester Stuttgart; Dennis Russell Davies, conductor) is included as part of:

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Die Zeit. 27 September 1956. Skandal um Henzes König Hirsch. 28 January 2023. Carl Georg Heise. de. 'Liegt denn in alle dem ein Sinn?' sang getreu nach dem Libretto Heinz v. Cramers in schmelzenden Tönen der Tenor Helmut Krebs. 'Nee', hallte es vom dritten Rang wie ein Peitschenknall in die andächtige, vielleicht auch etwas schläfrige Festwochenpremiere. Das Parkett antwortete mit Beifall..