Speranza
Elisir d'amore and Il filtro.
Auber had a major success in 1831 with his opera, "Il filtro", a romantic comedy about village life in the Pays Basque -- libretto: Scribe.
At lignting
speed, Donizetti came out with an Italian version -- libretto: Romani.
Scribe was one of the hottest librettists working in the 19th
century.
Scribe was more than just a mere scriverer, however.
He was a theatrical
personnage of the utmost importance, with a new conception of theater, in some
ways alined with the Romantic drama of Victor Hugo, in other ways more
commercial and bottom line oriented, providing entertainment that made immense
sums of money, almost like a Hollywood producer.
Almost every major opera
composer set a Scribe libretto or translation of one.
When Bellini's "La
Sonnambula" came out in 1831, it was an Italian version by Felice Romani of a
Scribe property that had been treated both as a vaudeville and as a
comedie-ballet.
Perhaps inspired by this, in 1832, Donizetti came out with
"Il filtro d'amore" -- L'Elisir d'amore, also a Romani version of Scribe's IL FILTRO of 1831, set by the
composer Daniel Francois Esprit Auber..
Donizetti and Auber were two of the most prominent composers on the
opera stage in the period between Rossini and Verdi.
Their natures couldn't have
been more dissimilar – Donizetti the fervent romantic, dying at 50 of syphilis,
forced by money wants to write opera after opera until he couldn't even remember
the names of them all.
Auber, the bourgeois craftsman, a comfortable businessman
in the entertainment industry.
The only real similarity is the number of
operas they wrote and the fact that both were equally comfortable in comedy and
melodrama.
Auber could be called the French Rossini for his sanguine character
and sociability, but, unlike Rossini, was not lazy – he continued to write
operas almost up to his death, due not even to old age -- although he was old
enough -- but after effects of the Prussian siege of Paris in
1871.
Donizetti of course has several operas in the standard operatic
repertoire, although, like Rossini, his comedies are overrepresented compared to
the actual break down of his oeuvre between comedies and melodramas.
Auber has
very few.
There are some on the periphery, like Muette de Portici (1828) and Fra
Diavolo, but none that are really established.
This is strange, considering
that Muette de Portici was a watershed in French grand opera – marking the end
of the more stately, grandiose style of Spontini and the beginning of a new era,
characterized most prominently by the intense dramaturgy of Meyerbeer.
And "Fra
Diavolo" lasted in the reperoire into the modern era, may still be commonly done
in German in Germany, and even was done by Laurel and Hardy, in one of their
feature films!
Auber's "Il filtro" is hard to pigeonhole.
Technically it is a comedy, but it is not as light as Fra Diavolo, which could
almost be called French Gilbert and Sullivan.
The melodies are very different
from Muette or Fra Diavolo, they have a striking folkloric element.
The vocal
writing, especially for the tenor, not Nemorino here but "Guillaume" (GUILLELMO), has a heroic
dimension, like a French "helden tenor", but with sustained singing above A
natural that would be hard for most modern tenors, and especially modern big
tenors, to encompass.
The original GUILLELMO was Adolphe Nourrit, who also
created Arnold in Guillaume Tell, Robert in Robert-le-diable and Raoul in Les
Huguenots.
Although Nourrit was supposedly in the French lineage of the
haute-contre – the tenors who from the time of Lully sang an extremely high
tessitura but did it with augmented falsetto, not from the chest – from the
other roles he sang, which are heroic, it is doubtful he had the light
insubstantial sound of today's lyric tenors.
Alfredo Kraus could have done a
good Guillaume, but even he never sang Raoul or Robert-le-diable.
In the Auber
version, there is an aria for tenor before his version of “esulti pur la
barbara”, that is illustrative of the type of tenor role that Guillaume is.
It
was sung by Leslie Johnson in the St Jude's Opera Workshop celebration of
Donizetti's bicentennial in 1997 in New York City.
In Donizetti's treatment, called Elisir d'amore, the basque village
of "Il filtro" becomes every Italian paese, with its four stock characters of
the bluff man-of-the-world recruiting sergeant, the itinerant quack doctor, the
learned, rich and beautiful property owner, and finally the little nobody –
Nemorino, the gonzo or simpleton who in different ways gets the better of all of
them.
Donizetti made Elisir less of a play with music -- by drastically
reducing the role of the peasant girl Jeannette/Gianetta he turned it into the
stock Bellini quartet, of soprano, tenor, baritone, and bass, like I Puritani.
Elisir is not really a comic opera, like Donizetti's much later Don Pasquale,
rather he called it a
"melodramma giocoso",
or a melodrama with a happy ending and
comic elements, like Marriage of Figaro.
The tenor role in Elisir is not as
challenging as the tenor in Il filtro, but it is very long and heavier than
people think.
Placido Domingo could have been a great Nemorino, as shown when he
did “Esulti pur la barbara” in the park in San Francisco.
Neither Adina nor
Nemorino are really served by the light voices who do those roles on today's
stages.
The main additions to Elisir
d'amore, additions that Donizetti asked for and for which he may well have
written the texts, increased the romantic, the pathetic, in the old sense of the
word, element of the story.
The best known difference is the addition of the
aria for tenor, the most famous piece in the opera, Una Furtiva Lagrima (a
hidden tear).
The other major difference is the duet for soprano and tenor,
Chiedi all'aura lusinghiera, which is an aria for soprano in Le Philtre.
This is
one of three duets for soprano and tenor, each with a different character, and
Chiedi is one of the most beautiful pieces in the opera, not a comic duet like
Esulti pur la barbara, but an outpouring of romantic feeling.
It is one of the
pieces that suffers the most from a soubrette Adina.
Donizetti himself could
have identified with Nemorino.
Donizetti came from a family of illiterate fabric
workers in Bergamo, and had the good fortune to sing as a boy in the church
choir of Santa Maria Maggiore where he came to the attention of Simone Mayr, the
capelmeister, a prominent opera composer from Bavaria, who gave him his first
training in music and recognized his great talent.
He himself was saved from
military service by a wealthy women who payed the fee for him to avoid being
drafted into the Austrian army.
It's a human tendency to praise one thing by
downgrading another.
This has been done with Le Philtre and Elisir d'amore.
There are people who praise Philtre by downgrading Elisir, and vice versa, but
in reality they are both wonderful works.
The real shame is that Philtre is
hardly ever done, and Elisir is done, but usually done in a halfhearted way,
with rushed tempos and lackluster ghost voiced singers so that the romantic
beauty of the music can't blossom.
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