Puck (opera) explained

Puck is an opéra-féerique in three acts with music by Marcel Delannoy, premiered in 1949. The French libretto was adapted by André Boll from Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night's Dream.[1]

Background

It was first performed at the Opéra Municipal in Strasbourg on 29 January 1949 directed by Roger Lalande with scenery and costumes designed by Boll.[2] The Strasbourg production was seen at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées on 17 November 1949 and at the Theater des Westens in Berlin on 22 September 1951.[3] The Paris Conservatoire Orchestra conducted by André Cluytens played a suite from Puck at their concert on 21 May 1956.[4]

There was much media coverage of the premiere and a generally positive welcome for the work.[2] The story is loosely based on the play by Shakespeare and mixes traditional opéra comique elements with dance (the title role) and actors.[3] Grove talks of the opera’s "mobile declamation oscillating between speech and song".[1]

Roles and role creators

RoleVoice typeCast of premiere, 29 January 1949.
Conductor: Ernest Bour
PuckRoland April
TitaniasopranoMona Million
ObéronbassGeorges Jongejeans
A fairysopranoNany Arnaud
ThéséetenorRoger Barnier
DémétriustenorPaul Derenne
Hélènemezzo-sopranoMarika Stephanidès
Lysandrebariton-martinGeorges Verguet
HermiasopranoJacqueline Drozin
QuincetenorKedroff
BottomtenorRené Hérent
SnugbaritoneAkiaroff
FlutebassBorissoff
ÉgéespokenPaul Parmentier
HippolytesilentEveline Mischke

Notes and References

  1. [Arthur Hoérée|Hoérée, Arthur]
  2. Feschotte J. Création à Strasbourg: Puck. In: Almanach de la Musique 1950. Éditions de Flore, Paris, 128-129.
  3. Book: Lehn , Mathias . Le Personnage de Puck: Du modèle shakespearien à l'opéra contemporain (Britten, Vreuls, Delannoy, Gerber) . Editions Publibook . 2012 . 9782748382754 . none.
  4. Baeck E. André Cluytens: Itinéraire d’un chef d’orchestre. Editions Mardaga, Wavre, 2009.