Le Juif errant (opera)

1852 grand opera by Fromental Halévy From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Le Juif errant (The Wandering Jew) is a grand opera by Fromental Halévy, with a libretto by Eugène Scribe and Jules-Henri Vernoy de Saint-Georges.

TranslationThe Wandering Jew
Librettist
LanguageFrench
Quick facts Translation, Librettist ...
Le Juif errant
Grand opera by Fromental Halévy
Set design for the first act by Philippe Chaperon
TranslationThe Wandering Jew
Librettist
LanguageFrench
Based onLe Juif errant by Eugène Sue
Premiere
23 March 1852 (1852-03-23)
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The opera is based extremely loosely on themes of the novel Le Juif errant, by Eugène Sue. Whilst the novel is set in 19th century Paris and the Wandering Jew is incidental to the main story-line, the opera begins in Amsterdam in 1190 and the Jew Ahasuerus (spelled Ashvérus[1] in the opera) is a leading character.

Performance history

Le Juif errant was premiered at the Salle Le Peletier of the Paris Opera on 23 April 1852, and had 48 further performances over two seasons. The music was sufficiently popular to generate a Wandering Jew Mazurka, a Wandering Jew Waltz, a Wandering Jew Polka[2] and in France just in the several months after the opera was premiered an even more considerable quantity of piano works, including several called "Grande fantaisie dramatique" and similar titles, based on the opera.[3]

Roles

Emma La Grua in the role of Irène
More information Role, Voice type ...
Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast,[4] 23 April 1852
Conductor: Narcisse Girard
Ashvérus, the Wandering Jew baritone Eugène Massol
Nicéphore, Emperor of the Orient bass Louis-Henri Obin
Léon, descendant of Ashvérus tenor Gustave-Hippolyte Roger
Théodora, boatwoman of the Scheldt, sister of Léon mezzo-soprano Fortunata Tedesco [fr]
Irène, daughter of Baudoin, Count of Flanders, also a descendant of Ashvérus soprano Emma La Grua [fr][5]
Lady of honor soprano Petit-Brière
The exterminating angel tenor Chapuis
Ludgers, bandit chief bass Depassio
Manoel, first bandit bass Canaple
Andronic, second bandit bass Guigneau[6]
Jean, third bandit bass Noir
Arbas, fourth bandit bass Goyon
Night watchman baritone Merly
An officer of the palace baritone Lyon
A lord baritone Molinier
Another lord tenor Donzel
Chorus: lords, ladies, and people of Antwerp; robbers and bad boys; shopkeepers, inhabitants of Brabant; lords and ladies of Emperor Nicéphore's court; people of Thessalonica; people of Constantinople; mutes, almées (harem entertainers), slaves; Emperor's guards; Empress Irène's lady; angel, demons, the chosen, the damned, etc.
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References

Further reading

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