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John Corigliano : The Ghosts of Versailles


Publisher G Schirmer Inc
Category
Opera and Music Theatre
Year Composed 1991
Duration
2 Hours, 50 Minutes
Chorus chorus
Solo Instrument(s)
4 Mezzo sopranos, 3 Baritone, 5 Tenors, 6 Sopranos, 2 Altos, 2 Basses, Bass Baritone, coloratura Soprano, speaking role
Orchestration 3(pic).3(ca).3(Ebcl:bcl).3(cbn)/4431/timp.4perc/hp.kbd(pf,syn)/str; onstage players from pit orchestra: fl, ob, perc, va
Languages
English
Availability Hire  Explain this...
Discography
Here...

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Libretto(s) 50481578 Libretto(s) Not available
Vocal Score(s) 50481815, 50481816 Vocal Score(s) Not available

Programme Note

    About the available Alternate Version:
    as performed by Lyric Opera of Chicago and Staatsoper Hannover, Germany
  • Eliminates the onstage orchestra by incorporating those parts into the regular pit orchestra
  • Re-assigns roles played by comprimario singers (in the Met production) to choristers
  • Requires 10 principals; 9 if Samira's scene is cut: (Ghost of) Marie Antoinette, Beaumarchais, Figaro, Count Almaviva, Patrick Honoré Bégearss, Rosina, Susanna, Florestine, Léon, Samira
download brochure
downloadable brochure
Acrobat format, 170 KB


About both versions:

Cast List:
GHOSTS
   WOMAN WITH HAT, elegant woman in her thirties: Mezzo-soprano
   LOUIS XVI, slow, self-important, in his late thirties: Bass
   MARQUIS, Louis's young confidant, a dandy: Tenor
   TRIO OF GOSSIPS: Soprano, Soprano, Alto
   OPERA QUARTET, jaded aristocrats: Soprano, Alto, Tenor, Bass
   PIERRE-AUGUSTIN CARON DE BEAUMARCHAIS, author of 'The
      Barber of Seville' and 'The Marriage of Figaro,' passionate, quick,
      middle-aged: Bass-baritone
   MARIE ANTOINETTE, soulfully beautiful, vulnerable, warm, yet willful,
      in her thirties: Soprano

PLAYERS
   FIGARO, Count Almaviva's wily servant, middle-aged: Baritone
   SUSANNA, Figaro's loyal but independent wife, middle-aged: Soprano
   COUNT ALMAVIVA, a proud, stubborn Spanish aristocrat, middle-aged: Tenor
   ROSINA, his still-beautiful, grieving wife, in her forties: Soprano
   LEON, Rosina's son by Cherubino, about twenty: Tenor
   FLORESTINE, Almaviva's daughter, about twenty: Coloratura soprano
   PATRICK HONORE BEGEARSS, Almaviva's treacherous friend, middle-aged: Tenor
   WILHELM, doltish young servant of Begearss: Speaking part
   CHERUBINO, a former page of Almaviva, handsome, in his late teens: Mezzo-soprano
   SULEYMAN PASHA, Turkish ambassador, heavy, bald, middle-aged or older: Bass
   BRITISH AMBASSADOR, distinguished older gentleman: Baritone
   SAMIRA, sultry Egyptian singer: Mezzo-Soprano
   DUCHESS (living version of Woman with Hat): Mezzo-soprano (sung by WOMAN WITH HAT)
   LIVING MARIE ANTOINETTE, careworn figure of David's portrait, humbled by great suffering:
      Soprano (sung by ghost MARIE ANTOINETTE)
   Pursuers of Figaro, Turkish duelists, page, dancing and harem girls, "rheita" players, acrobats,
      revolutionary guards, revolutionary women, courtiers, dancers, prison guards, prisoners, soldiers.


Synopsis:

Act I
The ghosts of the court of Louis XVI arrive at the theatre of Versailles. Bored and listless, even the King is uninterested when Beaumarchais arrives and declares his love for the Queen. As Marie Antoinette is too haunted by her execution to reciprocate his love, Beaumarchais announces his intention to change her fate through the plot of his new opera 'A Figaro for Antonia.'

The cast of the opera-within-the-opera is introduced. Following the familiar escapades of the Figaro characters, Almaviva has divorced the Countess after she had a son, Leon, with Cherubino. Leon wants to marry Florestine, Almaviva's illegitimate daughter, but the Count has forbidden the union as retribution for his wife's infidelity and has promised Florestine instead to Bégearss.

Figaro enrages the Count by warning him that his trusted Bégearss is in fact a revolutionary spy. Figaro is fired, but overhears Bégearss and his servant Wilhelm hatching a plot to arrest the Count that evening at the Turkish Embassy when he sells the Queen's necklace to the English Ambassador. Figaro intercepts the plot by infiltrating the party, dressed as a dancing girl. During the outrageous performance of the Turkish singer Samira, Figaro steals the necklace from the Count before the sale can take place, and runs away.

Act II
Figaro returns only to defy Beaumarchais's intention that he return the necklace to the queen, as he wants to sell it to help the Almavivas escape. To put the story back on course, Beaumarchais enters the opera and shocks Figaro into submission by allowing him to witness the unfair trial of Marie.

The Count, swayed by his wife's wishes, rescinds his offer to Bégearss of his daughter's hand. Even though Figaro gives him the necklace, Bégearrs is enraged and sends the Spaniards to the prison where Marie Antoinette lingers.

Beaumarchais and Figaro, the only two to escape, arrive at the prison to try to rescue the Almavivas. They are shortly followed by Bérgeass whom Figaro denounces to the revolutionaries, revealing that he has kept the necklace rather than using it to feed the poor. Bégearss is carried off, the Almavivas escape to America and Beaumarchais is left with the keys to the Queen's cell. But the power of his love has made the Queen accept her fate and she refuses to let Beaumarchais alter the course of history. Marie is executed, and the pair is united in Paradise.


Reviews

  • A triumph with the public, a success with the New York press, and a sell-out at the box office...It is heartening to find a new opera greeted with a standing ovation.
    Andrew Porter, Times (London)
  • ...the hottest ticket in New York. In an era when contemporary operas have usually been received with polite indifference. . . the response to Ghosts bespoke an audience's gratitude at discovering an opera it
    could actually like.
    Barrymore Scherer, Gramaphone
  • The opera was an all-around triumph...the pathos here is exquisite.
    David Patrick Stearns, The Independent (London)
  • Everything works...Corigliano's English prosody enables four thousand people to understand just about everything sung on stage. . . New York audiences adored it.
    Martin Mayer, Opera (London)
  • A hit...effective and, above all, singable. Diverting and spectacular.
    Martha Duffy, Time
  • Opera history was made at the premiere of "The Ghosts of Versailles." Audiences normally skeptical of non-mainstream work gave Corigliano and Hoffman the evening's greatest ovation. That alone proves that a fine, new contemporary opera can be far more exciting than the most spectacular Aida. . . With the help of Hoffman's wise, witty libretto, the composer achieves moments as passionate and moving as any in Puccini, but with a spirituality that makes The Ghosts of Versailles more exalted.
    David Patrick Stearns, USA Today
  • "Ghosts"...is one of the major musical events of the year and possibly the '90's...
    Joseph McLellan, The Washington Post
  • ...audiences went nuts...Let's put to bed forever the old canard that opera in English doesn't work because nobody understands the words anyway. . . the Met audiences' enthusiasm for Ghosts was that the words contributed to their understanding and enjoyment. . . the Met has a hit on its hands.
    Erik Neher, Opera Monthly
  • A work of genius that stands a good chance of surviving for decades, perhaps centuries to come.
    Robert Croan, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
  • This was a real event...I am convinced that The Ghosts of Versailles is as intriguing as it is well-crafted. It is likely to find a permanent place in the annals. . .
    James Wierzbicki, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
  • ..."The Ghosts of Versailles" has brought forth a towering achievement...Corigliano has the Italians' innate genius for devising music to ennoble the human voice.
    Alan Rich, L.A. Weekly
  • Fascinating as drama, set to an eclectic score of rare beauty and power...Composer John Corigliano and librettist William M. Hoffman have created a work of tremendous complexity that works with the precision of a fine clock.
    Byron Belt, Newhouse News Service
  • The best show on Broadway...Ghosts is about love, loyalty, politics, and most compelling, the power of art. Hoffman's virtuosic libretto gives free rein to Corigliano, whose. . . keen theatrical sense and gift for orchestration are evident everywhere. . . Ghosts is a triumph. It echoes in the mind and settles in the heart.
    Katrine Ames, Newsweek
  • Probably the best libretto since Auden and Kallman provided the words for "The Rake's Progress"...The music is at once an exterior riot of invention and an interior wealth of beauty. . . It was one of two times I have left a premiere humming one of the melodies.
    John Ardoin, Dallas Morning News
  • An old-fashioned hit...Recognizable arias and ensembles, a fascinating plot, humor and phantasmic stagecraft: These are the things opera lovers crave. They're also the ingredients of good theater.
    Jeff Bradley, Denver Post
  • Corigliano and Hoffman received a deafening, rapturous standing ovation. The Ghosts of Versailles achieved on its first night the kind of popular triumph that composers, librettists and opera companies hardly dare even fantasize about these days.
    Mark Swed, Los Angeles Times
  • ...a grand show...entertaining and touching, the sold out house at every performance loved every minute of it...
    Richard Dyer, The Boston Globe
  • "Ghosts" celebrates the genre of opera gloriously, tunefully, touchingly, and finally movingly. [It] should easily find a home in the repertory of all major international opera companies. . . Mr. Hoffman's libretto is clever, very rich in characterization. . . Corigliano has created a beautiful work. . . [his] reputation as the finest orchestrator of the day is given new luster here.
    Thor Eckert, Jr., The Christian Science Monitor
  • Cheers and bravos rang through the Metropolitan Opera House... Corigliano and Hoffman have brought off a work of genuine brilliance that could have a long life. Ghosts is a deeply serious opera, a study of the growing love of two complex and sympathetic characters. . . full of imagination, soundly and brilliantly crafted. . . an enormously touching and beautiful work.
    Robert Finn, Cleveland Plain Dealer
  • The Met's biggest hit in many a season. The entire run sold out immediately, and on the nights that Ghosts played, opera fans by the dozen begged tickets. By the end of run. . . the Met had a waiting list. Inside the house, there was the kind of excitement rare at opera premieres. Listeners walked up the aisles at the intermission discussing their favorite arias and ensembles.
    Allan Kozinn, The New York Times
  • Corigliano and Hoffman restore the original fun and excitement
    of the operatic forms, partly by stripping away the barnacles of accrued tradition, partly by making a big joke of them, and partly by inventing something new and distinctly American: a huge, melting-pot mélange of styles, events, and ideas. . .
    Michael Feingold, The Village Voice
  • Contrary to much uninformed opinion, writing operas is not a lost art...there is no project in which the Met may take deeper or more legitimate pride than introducing The Ghosts of Versailles.
    Matthew Gurewitsch, The Atlantic Monthly
  • "Ghosts"...is certainly one of the most amazing first operas for both composer and librettist in the repertory...The results are, by turn, funny, sad, tender, lush, lyrical, sophisticated, and phantasmagorical. The Ghosts of Versailles is constantly engrossing on one level or another; dazzlingly allusive yet surprisingly all-of-a-piece; fashioned chock-a-block with grateful, elaborate, multi-tiered arias and ensembles. . . In keeping with the sustained, quasi-hallucinatory fancy of Hoffman's libretto. . . this is a brilliant, beautiful score from a composer who continues to surpass himself.
    Tim Page, New York Newsday
  • ...a triumph for Brooklyn-born composer John Corigliano and his librettist William M. Hoffman, for the Metropolitan Opera, and for American music. . . Certainly no opera composed and produced in our time has such potential impact.
    Susan Elliott, New York Post
  • A masterpiece...We've been waiting for that great new American opera seemingly in vain for decades, but all that was finally made worthwhile Thursday night. . . What Corigliano and Hoffman have created is a Gesamtkunstwerk. . . in which all the arts share equally to create music drama on the highest level. Ghosts is vastly entertaining in its fecundity of tunes, dazzling ensembles and riotous humor. It's also, like Die Meistersinger, an opera that makes you think. . . [with] some of the most intoxicating music of our time. . . The "O God of Love" sextet toward the end may just be the most beautiful operatic ensemble written since Der Rosenkavalier.
    Bill Zakariasen, Daily News
  • ...one of the most imaginative theatrical experiences of the last decade...In a rare turn of events, a contemporary opera became the Metropolitan Opera's hottest ticket last season. Tonight [on television] you can see why...
    John J. O'Connor , The New York Times
  • ...may be the most popular full-length opera written in half a century...a beguiling entertainment. . . It is a welcome addition to the Met and will offer pleasures to wide audiences.
    Edward Rothstein, The New York Times
  • A smash hit...This was one hell of a night...a Corigliano score so fertile, so warmly tuneful, often so atonally wild, and just as often so disarmingly dizzy that you just go along for three hours with wave after wave of wit, farce, tears, laughter, and song. . .
    Leighton Kerner, The Village Voice

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