Der Kreidekreis (opera)

Der Kreidekreis (Op. 21), is an opera in three acts by Alexander von Zemlinsky to a libretto by the composer after the play Der Kreidekreis by Klabund – a telling of the Chalk Circle story. The opera was written during 1930-31 and premiered on 14 October 1933 in the Zürich Opera House.[1] Among the singers were Artūrs Cavara,[2] Maria Madlen Madsen[3] Maria Bernhard-Ulbrich;[4] Fred Destal, Georg Oeggl and Peter Klein;[5] it was directed by Karl Schmid-Bloß[4] and the stage design was by Roman Clemens.[6]

Der Kreidekreis
Opera by Alexander von Zemlinsky
The composer in 1908
TranslationThe Chalk Circle
LibrettistZemlinsky
LanguageGerman
Based onDer Kreidekreis
by Klabund
Premiere
14 October 1933 (1933-10-14)

It was planned to premiere the work simultaneously on four German stages: Frankfurt, Berlin, Cologne, and Nuremberg. Because of Zemlinsky's Jewish ancestry, this became impossible when the Nazis came to power early in 1933. Nevertheless, the work was performed in January 1934 in Stettin, Coburg, Berlin and Nuremberg, and in Graz in February due to the temporary lifting of certain restrictions.[7] The work was also performed in Prague and Bratislava.[8]

Zürich Opera revived the opera in 2003.[9] A new production was staged at the Opera de Lyon in January 2018 directed by Richard Brunel and conducted by Lothar Koenigs.[10]

Roles

RoleVoice typePremiere cast, 14 October 1933
Conductor: Robert Kolisko[8]
Tchang-Haitang, a tea house girl, second wife of MasopranoMaria Madlen Madsen
Yü-Pei, First Wife of Mamezzo-sopranoMaria Bernhard-Ulbrich
Ma, the tax collectorbassFred Destal
Prince Pao, honest officialtenorArtūrs Cavara
Tschu-tschu, a dishonest judgebass
Tschao, law court officialbass-baritone
Tong, marriage brokertenor
Tschang-Ling, brotherbaritoneGeorg Oeggl
Mrs Tschangcontralto
Hebamme (midwife)mezzo-soprano
Ein Mädchen (a girl)soprano
2 Kulis, court clerks, police, soldiers, flower girls, a master of ceremonies

Synopsis

Act 1

Tong, a former executioner, is the proprietor of a house of ill repute. He is visited by Mrs Chang and her daughter Haitang: Mrs Chang must sell her daughter into prostitution following the death of her husband, who, a victim of extortion by the evil and unscrupulous tax collector Ma, has committed suicide leaving the family penniless. Her son, Chang-Ling, a political revolutionary, objects, but after some haggling over the price, Haiting is admitted to the brothel. A customer, Prince Pao, is entranced by Haitang. She draws a chalk circle on the paper wall, symbolic of the wheel of fate. Ma's head unexpectedly bursts through the paper circle: he desires Haitang for himself and purchases her from Tong for a price with which Pao is unable to compete.

Act 2

Ma’s first wife, Yü-Pei, is furious and humiliated over Haitang’s appearance in the household. Haitang has borne Ma a son while Yü-Pei has remained childless which legally entitles Haitang to Ma’s inheritance. Yü-Pei conspires with her lover, Chow, to murder Ma. The destitute Chang-Ling reappears at the garden gate: he has joined a revolutionary group which has decreed that the villainous Ma must die. Haitang explains that she has borne Ma’s child and her husband has become a changed person as a result. After consulting the chalk circle, Chang-Ling agrees to defer the execution. Haitang gives Chang-Ling her coat, observed by Yü-Pei who promptly informs Ma, accusing Haiting of consorting with beggars. Yü-Pei slips poison into Ma’s tea and he collapses on the spot. Haitang is arrested for the murder and Yü-Pei claims the child as hers.

Act 3

The corrupt judge, Chu-Chu, has been bribed by Chow while Yü-Pei has bribed the midwife, Mrs Lien, and two fake witnesses to testify against Haitang. Haitang is duly sentenced for the murder of Ma. News arrives that Prince Pao has been crowned Emperor and, as an act of goodwill, has declared an amnesty for all condemned prisoners. Chang-Ling shouts from the gallery that the new Emperor will be no different to the old one and he is also sentenced. Haitang and Chang-Ling are escorted by two unsympathetic soldiers in a snow-storm to Peking where they must appear before the new Emperor. Pao sympathises with the views of Chang-Ling and reprieves him. He orders the child to be placed in the middle of a chalk circle and the two women are told to pull the child out: the child will be handed to whoever pulls the hardest. Unable to harm her son, Haitang reveals herself to be the true mother. Yü-Pei, Chow and Chu are led off for sentencing. As she is about to leave, Haiting reveals to Pao that she had a dream in which he had made love to her while she slept during her first night in Ma’s house. Pao tells her that it was no dream and Haiting tells him the child must therefore be his. Pao proclaims Haitang his wife and she is crowned empress.

Instrumentation

  • strings

Onstage music: flute, harp, tambourine

Recording

gollark: Perhaps I should switch it to using 16-bit colors.
gollark: Which green lines?
gollark: It's NOT plain black.
gollark: Okay, this looks... less good.
gollark: Impractical, though.

References

  1. The American Scholar, vol. 61, p. 587. 1992 "Even those operas considered to be his best, Kleider machen Leute and Der Kreidekreis, both based on good texts, suffer in..."
  2. Liner notes Der Rosenkavalier, 1936, Teatro Colón Archived 2013-07-30 at the Wayback Machine, Marston Records]
  3. Wildner-Partsch, Angelika (1982). Adler, Guido; Wessely, Othmar (eds.). "Alexander Zemlinsky: Betrachtungen über sein musikdramatisches Schaffen anhand zweier repräsentativer Werke". Studien zur Musikwissenschaft (in German). Hans Schneider. 33: 55–125.
  4. Suter, Paul (2005). "Maria Bernhard-Ulbrich". In Kotte, Andreas (ed.). Theaterlexikon der Schweiz (in German). Zürich: Chronos. p. 179.
  5. "Das tägliche Kalenderblatt – 14. Oktober 1982", tamino-klassikforum, citing Reclams Opernlexikon (2001), p. 1419
  6. Pisk, Paul A. (January 1933). "Zemlinskys Kreidekreis". Anbruch – Monatsschrift für moderne Musik. 15 (1): 145–147.
  7. Reevers, Peter (1997). "III. Musikdramatische Ostasienrezeption". Das Fremde und das Vertraute: Studien zur musiktheoretischen und musikdramatischen Ostasienrezeption. Supplement to the Archiv für Musikwissenschaft (in German). 41. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. p. 204. ISBN 9783515071338.
  8. Blackburn, Robert (1999). "Zemlinsky's The Chalk Circle: Artifice, Fairy-tale and Humanity" (PDF). Revista Música. São Paulo. 9 (10): 104. (Original publication)
  9. Alexander Zemlinsky: Der Kreidekreis, October 2003, Zürich Opera House, cast and reviews (in German)
  10. http://www.opera-lyon.com/spectacle/le-cercle-de-craie. Retrieved November 2017.
  11. Der Kreidekreis, 1991 recording
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.