L'enfant prodigue / La damoiselle élue / Sardanapalo
Details
In Brief
The great impressionist composer’s only opera (Pelléas et Mélisande) was recently awakened from a sleep of more than half a century by the Hungarian State Opera. Now two cantatas by Debussy are brought to the stage in the framework of one experimental production: La damoiselle élue has never been staged before, while L’enfant prodigue was last presented by the OPERA in a single run over a hundred years ago. These lyrical cantatas are self-contained short stories that enter into a peculiar dialogue with one another. In the second half of the evening, the first act of Franz Liszt’s only adult opera – left unfinished – is performed, following the research of Cambridge scholar Dr. David Trippett. The Liszt fragment inspired by a Berlioz cantata inspired by a Byron work inspired by a Delacroix painting had its world premiere in 2018, and so far it has been performed worldwide by only one German orchestra, the same ensemble that presented it in Budapest a few years ago. However, it has never before been staged; the right to do so was granted for the first time to the very institution that, 143 years ago, placed a statue of the Hungarian composer at the entrance of its main building: the Hungarian State Opera House. Debussy’s stage cantatas and Liszt’s large-scale operatic fragment are directed by Péter István Nagy, for whom this production will mark his debut in the genre. The musical director of the performance is conductor János Kovács, a devoted champion of Debussy, who also served as conductor of Pelléas and has previously conducted these two cantatas in concert performances.
Parental guidance
Events
Premiere: March 6, 2027
L'enfant prodigue (The Prodigal Son)
The barely twenty-year-old Claude Debussy achieved a sweeping victory in 1884 at the Prix de Rome with his composition L'enfant prodigue (The Prodigal Son), written for voices and piano. He later orchestrated the lyrical scene based on the well-known biblical parable with the help of his friend André Caplet, and although he never intended it to be an opera, it was staged in Boston a few years later and was also performed at the Hungarian Royal Opera House a couple of times in 1913. After a hiatus of over a century, it now returns to the repertoire of the OPERA.
La damoiselle élue (The Blessed Damozel)
Debussy encountered Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s poem The Blessed Damozel during his period of interest in symbolism. In the poem, the title character gazes down at her beloved from heaven and mourns their love, unfulfilled in paradise. It is uncertain whether Debussy saw Rossetti’s painting, created as a companion piece to his own poem, but the lyrical work composed for soprano and alto soloists, women’s choir, and orchestra perfectly captures the Pre-Raphaelites’ almost translucent yet charming depictions of female figures.