Speranza
After his tragic opera "Vanda; ossia la regina di Polonia", Dvorak turned his attention to a quite different
topic, choosing a comic libretto set in a Czech village.
He was most likely
inspired by the recent success of the premiere of Smetana’s The Kiss which,
after the latter’s previous two operas, criticised for their stylistic
inclination towards the Wagnerian music drama, was extremely well received as a
work which re-kindled the spirit of the iconic Bartered Bride.
Dvorak began
writing his new opera in 1877.
The libretto – whose original title, "A Slap for
the Prince", was later changed to "Il contadino astuto" – was penned by J. Vesely, with whom Dvorak had become acquainted during
visits to the Academic Readers’ Association.
The melodrama took Dvorak about six
months to complete and, as soon as it was finished, in the summer of 1877, he
submitted it to the Provisional Theatre for staging.
poster announcing the
premiere
Like the composer’s previous comic opera The
Stubborn Lovers, this libretto also capitalised on the universal popularity of
Smetana’s The Bartered Bride, perhaps even to a greater extent.
Apart from the
rural theme, parallel plotlines and the names of certain characters (the heroine
is to marry Vaclav, but she loves Jenik), the librettist in this case also opted
for a similar text, including analogous verse endings (zlosti - mrzutosti, jinde
- kvinde). The libretto also draws on Beaumarchais’s The Marriage of Figaro:
here, too, the worlds of the nobility and commoners collide, the story involves
love entanglements between members of both social strata, and it also uses the
popular motif of disguise, among others. The audience at that time must have
sensed the libretto’s lack of originality even more, given that some of the
characters were evidently inspired by other Czech operas, today little known or
forgotten, but frequently performed at the time. Take the wise Veruna, whose
prefiguration (and name) will be found in Blodek’s one-act opera In the Well, or
the motif of ridicule, where the comic character falls into a barrel in a scene
strongly reminiscent of the then highly successful opera by Vojtech Hrimaly, The
Enchanted Prince. The libretto as a whole is considerably naive, certain
plotlines lack full justification, and the endings of both acts are too
lacklustre to be dramatically convincing. Referring to the libretto, music
critic and aesthetician Otakar Hostinsky later remarked: “Dvorak’s The Cunning
Peasant found favour with the public from the very outset. That the reception of
this new work was so wonderful, even wholehearted, testifies most of all to the
impact of Dvorak’s music; we can hardly attribute this to the text. In no way
can we state that this two-act comic libretto, penned by J. O. Vesely,
represents progress along a path once happily set down by The Bartered Bride; it
is more a clear step backwards.”
Despite all its shortcomings, the libretto enabled Dvorak to
create a mature operatic work with independent scenes constructed upon
traditional musical forms. The music is joyful in temperament and its melodic,
rhythmical and harmonic elements are typical expressions of the composer’s
invention. The folkloric spirit of the work was achieved, among others, with
abundant use of distinctive dance types (polka, skocna /fast dance/, sousedska
/slow dance in 3/4 time/), whose treatment in the introductory scene in Act Two
(May festival) is perhaps one of the composer’s most original stylisations of a
folk dance. The sophisticated composition and effective instrumentation of these
passages betray the elemental symphonist in their author. The music appeared now
to step over the boundaries of the comic folk opera, as eminent Viennese critic
Eduard Hanslick observed: “The ballet movement in D minor in Act Two is more a
symphonic scherzo than an operatic dance piece”. One of the finer points of
Dvorak’s musical setting is his ability to characterise the individual figures
and clearly distinguish their affiliation to a particular estate, in this case,
the nobility or commoners.
The opera’s premiere, hosted
by the Provisional Theatre on 27 January 1878, was universally well received as
a valuable contribution to the “Czech national opera” collection. Critics also
acknowledged Dvorak’s endeavour to emulate the example set by Smetana in his
Bartered Bride and The Kiss. The audience at the premiere demanded encores of
both the overture and the duet in Act One. With this work Dvorak presented
himself for the first time as a true dramatic author in whom people saw a
successor who would continue the legacy Bedrich Smetana had left behind for the
stage.
Czech operatic literature
can now boast the addition of yet another successful work. Dvorak’s comic opera
The Cunning Peasant is not only faultless, but also of a supreme maturity which
will ensure that it will not fall into the mire of oblivion in the theatre
archives – it has much life in it yet. The future will hardly admonish us for a
false claim if we predict its place in our repertoire for many years to come.
[...] The Kiss provided a fitting model for him [i.e. Dvorak], but not a model
we would wish to imitate; instead, using our own fantasy, we create a
counter-image of equal weight. Perhaps Dvorak in this case has not yet achieved
the consistency of all parts, the appropriate characteristics, and the purity
and permanence of the national style that we rightly admire in the music of
Smetana, nevertheless, he should feel entirely gratified by his opera, thanks to
which he now assumes second place among our drama composers.”
In connection with the
growing number of performances of Dvorak’s orchestral works abroad, and their
ever increasing popularity, the composer was approached in 1881 by the
management of Vienna’s Ringtheater, who requested one of his operas for staging
at the venue. The composer offered them The Cunning Peasant. However, the work
merely existed in manuscript form; the only part of the opera to have been
published was the overture. With the potential staging of The Cunning Peasant in
Vienna, Dvorak wrote to his publisher Simrock in Berlin:
“My opera The Cunning
Peasant will be performed in Vienna’s Ringtheater in the autumn. It is the most
opportune time for the work to appear in print. [...] I therefore would like to
ask you if you would publish the opera, since you have already published the
overture.” Simrock did indeed publish the entire opera shortly
afterwards.
However, the preparations for the performance at the Ringtheater
were hampered by unexpected delays, and so the first foreign production was
entrusted to the Dresden Opera, which was also keen to stage the work. The
Dresden premiere on 24 October 1882, attended by Dvorak himself, was a
resounding success, not only for the composer but – as was the general opinion –
for Czech music overall. Music critic Ludevit Prochazka, who also attended the
premiere, noted that “the audience listened from beginning to end with obvious
pleasure and found that, in this work, Czech art holds its own in a manner
worthy not only of respect, but also admiration”. It wasn’t long before another
foreign opera house expressed an interest in staging the work, this time in
Hamburg.
The latter premiere was held on 3 January 1883, and thus also preceded
the Viennese production.
26 October 1882, Antonin Dvorak writing to Fritz
Simrock about the Dresden performance:
“It is such a shame that you were not
in Dresden; you would have certainly been overjoyed at the total success and
exemplary performance. Schuch conducted the opera superbly. Everything went as
it should have done, and the nuances in the orchestra and chorus were wonderful.
Mr Bulss (the Prince) and Mrs Schuch (Betuska), also Mr Decarli (Martin)
alongside Erl (Jenik) and Jensen (the Valet) were excellent. Even the overture
received thunderous applause, as did practically all the numbers. The Prince’s
aria, in particular, was so beautifully performed that the audience demanded
that it be sung again. In short, everything was magnificent and the audience was
extremely lively. I was called up to take a bow after each act!”
The premiere
of the Vienna production eventually took place in the Hofoper on 19 November
1885, but it was marred by unfavourable circumstances, becoming the victim of
politico-nationalistic attacks; the opera only saw one repeat performance.
During a police operation, several members of the Teutonia students’ society
were led out of the theatre and arrested.
Dvorak alluded to this event in a note
he made at the end of his sketch for the first part of the oratorio Saint
Ludmila, which he was working on at the time: “Completed at the time of the
execution of ‘The Cunning Peasant’ in Vienna!”
The very first year The Cunning Peasant appeared on stage, it
was performed eight times, a considerably greater number in comparison with the
composer’s previous operas. A testament to its popularity, the work was also
Dvorak’s first opera to be staged outside Prague – for the first time on 7 July
1878 at what was known as the Arena, the site of the present-day Svanda Theatre
in Prague’s Smichov district (an area at that time located outside the capital’s
boundaries); six months later the opera played to audiences at the Municipal
Theatre in Plzen – in both cases attributable to the enterprising theatre
impresario Pavel Svanda of Semcice, who negotiated with Dvorak for exclusive
rights to stage the opera outside Prague. (According to musicologist Jarmil
Burghauser, Dvorak himself apparently conducted four of the Smichov performances
of The Cunning Peasant.)
The Cunning Peasant
was performed in Czech theatres relatively frequently up until the 1950s.
Even
though the number of its repeat performances would never match that of The
Jacobin, The Devil and Kate and Rusalka, it still managed to maintain a sense of
continuity in the eyes of the public.
The opera was last staged at the National
Theatre in Prague on 14 June 1958. Its appearance in regional theatres is only
sporadic (1948 Opava, 1949 Usti nad Labem, 1954 Plzen, 1954 Ostrava, 1960
Liberec, 1977 Opava, 1979 Liberec, 1981 Ostrava, 1989 Ceske Budejovice).
The
most recent production of the opera was probably staged in London in 1997
(Guildhall School of Music & Drama, directed by Robert Chevara).
ACT ONE:
Martin, a farmer, intends to marry off his
daughter Betuska to a rich farmer’s son, Vaclav, completely disregarding the
fact that she loves the poor farm hand Jenik. Betuska refuses to forsake her
love, so her father, together with Vaclav, thinks up a plan to thwart the
lovers: in the evening, they will place a barrel of water beneath Betuska’s
window with a broken plank across it. When Jenik comes to Betuska’s window in
the evening, he’ll fall into the barrel and they’ll give him a good beating as
well afterwards. But their plan is overheard by Veruna, the village forewoman,
who decides to put a stop to it. The Prince and Princess arrive in the village,
together with their entourage from the castle. Betuska decides to ask the gentry
to help her prevent the arranged marriage. Both the Prince and his valet Jean
are greatly taken with her beauty – Jean forgets all about the chambermaid
Berta, and the Prince tells Betuska that he is willing to give Jenik an entire
farm just for a rendezvous with her in the evening after the May dance. Veruna
immediately knows how to make use of this situation. She asks for an audience
with the Princess and informs her of her subterfuge: in the evening, the
Princess and Berta will be disguised as villagers – the Princess will go instead
of Betuska for a rendezvous with the Prince, while Berta will hide in Betuska’s
room, from where she will lure besotted Jean towards the barrel positioned
beneath the window.
ACT TWO:
In the evening, after the May celebration,
Martin and Vaclav roll a barrel up to the house and position it beneath
Betuska’s window; then they find a hiding place and lie in wait. The Princess,
disguised as Betuska, waits for the Prince by the gate, and Berta goes up to the
room to wait for Jean. After a while, Jean sneaks up to the window, climbs up
onto the barrel and immediately falls in. At that moment, a loud slap is heard
from the direction of the gate, where the Prince has just received his
comeuppance for being unfaithful to his wife. The Prince now has to grovel
before the Princess and fulfil the promise he made to Betuska – to give Jenik a
farm. Now Martin has no qualms about his daughter marrying Jenik.
REFERENCES:
(c)
http://www.antonin-dvorak.cz/en/cunning-peasant
Sunday, February 2, 2014
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