Croquefer, ou Le dernier des paladins
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Croquefer, ou Le dernier des paladins is a one-act opéra bouffe by Jacques Offenbach to a French libretto by Adolphe Jaime and Étienne Tréfeu, first performed in 1857 in Paris.[1] It satirizes the immorality of the Crusades and the arrogance of medieval knighthood.
The successful premiere was at the Théâtre des Bouffes-Parisiens, Rue Monsigny, Paris, on 12 February 1857, subsequently revived, and productions followed in Vienna (as Ritter Eisenfrass) in 1864 and London (as The Last of the Paladins) in 1868.[2] The work was first performed in England on 1 July 1857 at St James's Theatre during Offenbach's second visit to London, arranged by his father-in-law John Mitchell, when the composer brought the Bouffes company including orchestra and offered 19 different pieces, 11 by him.[3]
The authors had defied the theatrical regulation forbidding more than four characters in a stage piece at the Bouffes Parisiens theatre by adding a fifth who had no tongue and could therefore only 'sing' grunts and barks in the 'quintet'.[4] In the Duo Offenbach mocks the Salle Le Peletier, home of the Paris Opéra, and quotes from operas by Meyerbeer, Donizetti and Halévy.[5]
A complete performance of Croquefer forms part of the 1996 television film Offenbachs Geheimnis, directed by István Szabó, with Graham Clark and Laurence Dale among the cast.[6] Croquefer was revived by the Compagnie Les Brigands at the Théâtre de l'Athénée as part of a double-bill with L'Île de Tulipatan in December 2012.[7] Opera della Luna revived an English version of the piece in England in 2016.[8]
Roles
| Role | Voice type | Premiere Cast, 12 February 1857 (Conductor: Jacques Offenbach) |
|---|---|---|
| Croquefer, an immodest and faithless knight | tenor | Étienne Pradeau |
| Boutefeu, his stubborn squire | tenor | Léonce |
| Ramasse-ta-Tête, his nephew; a spirited gentleman but bad relation | tenor | Tayau |
| Fleur-de-Soufre, an unfortunate princess who is resigned to become an assassin | soprano | Maréchal |
| Mousse-à-Mort, a dismembered knight, father of Fleur-de-Soufre; returned from Palestine | tenor | Michel |
| Chorus: Armed guards, vassals and child soldiers | ||