La rose de Saint-Flour
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| La rose de Saint-Flour | |
|---|---|
| Opérette by Jacques Offenbach | |
Jacques Offenbach | |
| Librettist | Michel Carré |
| Language | French |
| Premiere | 12 June 1856 Salle Lacaze, Paris |
La rose de Saint-Flour is a one-act opérette with music by Jacques Offenbach to a French libretto by Michel Carré, first performed in 1856.[1]
The premiere was on 12 June 1856 the Salle Lacaze, Paris, and the work shared its second performance on a bill with the "pièce de circonstance" Les Dragées de baptême, celebrating the christening of the Prince Imperial.[2] The characters in the piece use Auvergnat accents in their dialogue and songs; Pradeau was pure Auvergnat and scored a hit as the jealous coppersmith. The work was much revived over the next twenty years and staged in Vienna.[2] It was performed in England as The Rose of Auvergne,[3] and a full translation with production details published.[4]
Roles
| Role | Voice type | Premiere cast, 12 June 1856[2] (Conductor: Jacques Offenbach) |
|---|---|---|
| Pierrette | soprano | Hortense Schneider |
| Chapailloux | baritone | Charles Petit |
| Marcachu | tenor | Pradeau |