Maskarade (Masquerade) is an opera in three acts by Carl Nielsen to a Danish libretto by Vilhelm Andersen, based on the comedy by Ludvig Holberg. It was first performed on 11 November 1906 at Royal Danish Theatre, Copenhagen. Maskarade has enjoyed enduring popularity in Denmark where it is considered to be the country's national opera.
Maskarade | |
---|---|
Opera by Carl Nielsen | |
Librettist | Vilhelm Andersen |
Language | Danish |
Premiere | 11 November 1906 Royal Danish Theatre, Copenhagen |
Background and performance history
editNielsen first considered writing an opera based on Holberg's play Maskarade around the turn of the 20th century. He contacted Vilhelm Andersen (1864–1953) whom he knew from his student days, hoping to persuade him to write a libretto. Andersen initially refused but finally agreed, allowing Nielsen to start composing in May 1904. The Royal Theatre scheduled the opera even before it was finished. In fact, Nielsen completed the overture only on 3 November, a week before the opera's premiere.[1]
The world premiere of Maskarade took place at Royal Danish Theatre in Copenhagen on 11 November 1906. It was a resounding success from the start with an exceptional run of 25 performances over its first four months. Reviews in the press were however mixed, the consensus being that the first act was the best, the second was rather weak and the third lacked theatrical clarity although the music was brilliant.[1] Announcement of plans to turn Holberg's classical comedy into an opera buffa had met with dismay in Danish literary circles, but the opera was immediately popular, more so than the play itself. Now considered to be Denmark's national opera, it has enjoyed lasting success in the country, attributable to its many strophic songs, its dances and its underlying "old Copenhagen" atmosphere. In 2006, Denmark's Ministry of Culture named it one of Denmark's twelve greatest musical works.[1][2][3]
The opera did not premiere in the United States until 1972 when it was performed by the St. Paul Opera in Minnesota with conductor Igor Buketoff, Mary Beth Peil as Leonora, and Clinton Ware as Leander.[4] The first reported New York performance was by the Bronx Opera Company in 1983.[5] It was performed in the US again in 2014, when it had its Chicago premiere on 18 January at the Vittum Theater performed by the Vox3 Collective.[6] Maskarade received a major international revival in 2005 in a new production by David Pountney which was performed at the Bregenz Festival in August of that year and travelled to the Royal Opera House the following month for its first performance by the company.[7][8] The opera had been previously performed in the UK at London's Morley College in 1983 and in Leeds by Opera North in 1990.[9]
Despite its popularity in his home country, Nielsen was not entirely satisfied with the work, citing structural weakness in the final two acts; but he never got around to revising the work. The overture and the ballet from the third act ("Dance of the Cockerels") are performed frequently, as noted by the Carl Nielsen Society, which states that the overture is one of Nielsen's most widely performed works at concerts in Europe and North America.[10]
Roles
editRole | Voice type | Premiere cast, 11 November 1906[11] Conductor: Carl Nielsen |
---|---|---|
Jeronimus, a citizen of Copenhagen | bass-baritone | Karl Mantzius |
Magdelone, his wife | alto or mezzo-soprano | Jonna Neiiendam |
Leander, their son | tenor | Hans Kierulf |
Henrik, Leander's valet | bass-baritone | Helge Nissen |
Arv, Jeronimus' servant | tenor | Lars Knudsen |
Leonard, a citizen of Slagelse | tenor or baritone | Peter Jerndorff |
Leonora, his daughter | soprano | Emilie Ulrich |
Pernille, Leonora's maid | soprano or mezzo-soprano | Ida Møller/Margrethe Lindrop |
Mask Vendor | baritone | |
Doorman at the Playhouse | bass | |
A Tutor | bass | |
Night Watchman | bass | |
Master of the Masquerade | bass | Albert Petersen |
Masqueraders, Students, Girls, Officers |
Synopsis
edit- Time: Spring 1723
- Place: Copenhagen
The story revolves around Leander and Leonora, two young people who meet fortuitously at a masquerade ball, swear their undying love for each other and exchange rings. The following day, Leander tells his valet Henrik of his newfound love. He becomes distraught when reminded by Henrik that his parents have betrothed him in marriage to Leonora, the daughter of Leonard from remote Slagelse. Things get complicated when Leonard himself, whose daughter Leonora is the other part of this arrangement, comes complaining to Leander's father that Leonora is in love with someone she met at the masquerade the previous night. In the third act, all is resolved when the various parties slip off to the night's masquerade, where all is revealed to everyone's mutual satisfaction.
Commemorative performances
editAs part of the celebrations of the 150th anniversary of Carl Nielsen's birth, the Royal Theatre in Copenhagen staged eleven well-received performances of Maskarade from March to May 2015.[12][13] The Royal Danish Opera's schedule for 2015 includes performances of a chamber version of the opera in three other locations in Denmark from mid-July to early September. The Maskarade overture has been included in the first night of Britain's BBC Proms on 17 July 2015.[14][15]
Recordings
edit- Grondahl (conductor), on Danacord, 1954
- Frandsen (conductor), on Unicorn, 1977
- Schirmer (conductor), on Decca, Recorded 1996, 1998
- Schirmer (conductor), video from Bregenz on Capriccio, 2005
- Schønwandt (conductor), video from Copenhagen on Dacapo, 2006
References
edit- ^ a b c Schepelern, Gerhard (1987). Opera bogen (in Danish). Gyldendal A/S. pp. 346–351. ISBN 87-00-19464-6.
- ^ Fjeldsøe, Michael; Foltmann, Niels Bo; Hauge, Peter; Bruunshuus Petersen, Elly; Flensborg Petersen, Kirsten, eds. (2001). "Preface". Maskerade (Masquerade) (PDF). Carl Nielsen Works – Stage Music (in Danish and English). Vol. 1. The Carl Nielsen Edition, Royal Danish Library. pp. xi–xxvii. ISBN 978-87-598-1047-7. ISMN 979-0-66134-019-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 October 2014. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
- ^ Krabbe, Niels (2007). "A Survey of the Written Reception of Carl Nielsen, 1931–2006". Notes. Second Series. 64 (1): 1–13. doi:10.1353/not.2007.0115. S2CID 191315266.
- ^ "Allen Hughes". The New York Times. June 25, 1972.
- ^ John Rockwell (16 January 1983). "Maskarade, by Carl Nielsen". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 October 2023.
- ^ Johnson, Lawrence A. (24 January 2014). "Even with rough edges, Nielsen's Maskarade is a delight in belated Chicago premiere". Chicago Classical Review. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
- ^ Service, Tom (21 September 2005). "Review: Maskarade". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
- ^ Picard, Anna (25 September 2005). "Review: Maskarade, Royal Opera House, London". The Independent.
- ^ Kennedy, Michael and Bourne, Joyce (2004). "Maskarade". The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music, p. 459. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198608845
- ^ "Performances", Carl Nielsen Society. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
- ^ Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Maskarade, 11 November 1906". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
- ^ "Maskarade by Carl Nielsen". Det Kongelige Teater. Archived from the original on 2 March 2015. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
- ^ Søren Schauser (9 April 2015). "Operaklassiker med selfies". Berlingske (in Danish). Retrieved 15 June 2015.
- ^ Fred Plotkin (5 June 2015). "Is the World Ready for Carl Nielsen's Maskarade?". WQXR-FM Operavore. Archived from the original on June 6, 2015. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
- ^ "Prom 1: First Night of the Proms". BBC. Retrieved 15 June 2015.
Further reading
edit- Notes and libretto accompanying Nielsen, Carl; Andersen, Vilhelm; Haugland, Aage; Resmark, Susanne; Henning-Jensen, Gert; Skovhus, Bo; Kristensen, Michael; Ravn, Kurt; Bonde-Hansen, Henriette; Rørholm, Marianne; Schirmer, Ulf; Holberg, Ludvig; Danmarks radio; Symfoniorkestret; Radiokoret (Denmark) (1998), Maskarade (in Danish), Decca, OCLC 42520568
External links
edit- Maskarade: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
- Discography (Carl Nielsen Society)
- Account of the opera's composition (Carl Nielsen Society)