Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Salammbô (Reyer)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Composer
  
Ernest Reyer

Adapted from
  
Salammbô

Language
  
French

Salammbô (Reyer) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Sigurd, Le roi d'Ys, Hérodiade, Lodoïska, Le roi de Lahore

Salammbô is an opera in five acts composed by Ernest Reyer to a French libretto by Camille du Locle. It is based on the homonymous novel by Gustave Flaubert (1862). Initially refused by Paris, Reyer's opera enjoyed its first performance at the Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie in Brussels, on 10 February 1890, with sets designed by Pierre Devis and Armand Lynen. The Parisian premiere at the Palais Garnier took place on 16 May 1892 with costumes by Eugène Lacoste and sets by Eugène Carpezat (Acts I and V), Auguste-Alfred Rubé and Philippe Chaperon (Act II), and Amable and Eugène Gardy (Act IV). The American premiere was at the French Opera House in New Orleans on 25 January 1900 with Lina Pacary in the title role. Portions of the opera were performed in 1906 in Carthage's ancient Roman theatre during an event sponsored by the Carthage Institute, making it among the first pieces formally staged there since the structure was destroyed by the Vandals in AD 439.

Contents

This rarely nowadays performed opera received the last performance in Paris Opera in 1943, and the most recent one in Marseilles on 27 September 2008, in commemoration of 100th anniversary of Reyer's death.

Setting

  • Place: Carthage
  • Time: 240 BC
  • Other opera adaptations

    In 1863, Modeste Mussorgsky also started writing text and music for an opera based on Flaubert's novel, but he never managed to complete the work. Other versions were written by V. Fornari (1881), Niccolò Massa (1886), Eugeniusz Morawski-Dąbrowa, Josef Matthias Hauer (1930), Alfredo Cuscinà (1931), Veselin Stoyanov (1940) and Franco Casavola (1948). Contemporary French composer Philippe Fénélon's Salammbô was first performed at the Opéra Bastille in 1998.

    References

    Salammbô (Reyer) Wikipedia