L'Aiglon (opera) explained

L'Aiglon
Type:Drame musical
Composer:
Image Upright:1.3
Translated Name:The Eaglet
Librettist:Henri Cain
Language:French
Premiere Location:Opéra de Monte-Carlo

L'Aiglon is an opera (drame musical) in five acts composed by Arthur Honegger and Jacques Ibert. Honegger composed acts 2, 3, and 4, with Ibert composing acts 1 and 5. A 2016 reviewer described it as "a singular piece of work" with its "blend of operetta, divertissement, conversation piece, historical pageant and, in the disturbingly powerful fourth act set on the Napoleonic battlefield at Wagram, phantasmagoria peopled with living figures onstage and dead voices off".[1]

Background

The libretto by Henri Cain was based on Edmond Rostand's 1900 play, L'Aiglon ("The Eaglet"), about the life of Napoleon II, who was the son of Emperor Napoleon I and his second wife, Empress Marie Louise.

It premiered at the Opéra de Monte-Carlo on 11 March 1937 in a production by Pierre Chéreau. The principal roles were sung by Fanny Heldy and Vanni Marcoux.[2]

At the Paris Opera that August, Heldy repeated her performance alongside Vanni-Marcoux under François Ruhlmann. The work was revived there in 1952 with Géori Boué in the title role under André Cluytens.[2]

The work was revived in February 2016 at the Opéra de Marseille with Stéphanie d'Oustrac in the title role and conducted by Jean-Yves Ossonce.[3]

A 1956 French radio recording with Boué conducted by Pierre Dervaux was later issued on CD, and a full studio Decca recording under Kent Nagano, following concert performances in Montreal, was released in 2016.

Roles

!Role!Voice type!Premiere cast, 11 March 1937
(Conductor: F. Wolfes)
L'Aiglon/The Duke of Reichstadt, son of NapoleonsopranoFanny Heldy
Séraphin Flambeau, his footmanbassVanni Marcoux
The French attachétenorVictor Pujol
Countess CameratacontraltoGermaine Chellet
Le Chevalier de Prokesch-OstenbassLuigi Cérésole
Maréchal MarmontbaritoneRobert Marvini
Prince Metternichbass-baritoneArthur Endrèze
Marie-Louisemezzo-sopranoMlle. Gadsden
Comte de SedlinskytenorBarone
Frédéric de GentztenorFraikin
Thérèse de LorgetsopranoMaria Branèze
Fanny Elsslermezzo-sopranoSchirman

Synopsis

The Duke of Reichstadt (Napoleon II), with his faithful footman Séraphin Flambeau, escapes from Austrian imprisonment and visits the old site of the Battle of Wagram, before eventually dying of tuberculosis.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Max Loppert. Review of Decca recording of L'Aiglon. Opera, July 2016, Vol 67, No 7, p. 913.
  2. http://www.artlyriquefr.fr/dicos/operas%20-%20A.html L'Aiglon
  3. Laurent, François. "Le petit prince [review]". Diapason No. 645, April 2016, p. 60.