Hagith (opera)

Hagith opera in one act
David and Abishag ("Hagith"), 1879 oil painting by Pedro Américo of Brazil

Hagith op. 25 is an opera in one act by the Polish composer and pianist Karol Szymanowski considered one of the greatest Polish composers of the 20th century. The opera premiered at the Grand Theatre, Warsaw in 1922, nine years after its creation. The libretto in German was written by the Viennese secessionist poet and Szymanowski's friend Felix Dörmann.[1]

Background and performance history

Szymanowski wrote the opera in 1912–1913 while living in Vienna, Austria. The piano-and-vocal score was first published by Universal Edition A.G. Vienna in 1920.[2][3] Musically and dramatically, Hagith has been compared to Richard Strauss's Salome. The opera made its premiere on May 13, 1922 at the Great Theatre, Warsaw, Poland,[2][4] and it has been produced four times. Szymanowski commissioned a Polish translation of the text (by Stanisław Barącz), but the project was not successful.

The opera was criticized and disparaged in the interwar Poland notably by critic (and writer of prayer songs) Stanisław Niewiadomski, a devout Catholic and former official in the Austrian Partition,[5] as well as other clericalists, due to its author's openly gay lifestyle.[6]

Roles

Role [2][3] Voice type [2][3] Premiere cast: May 13, 1922 [1][4]
(Conductor: Emil Młynarski) [7]
The aged king tenor Ignacy Dygas
The young king tenor Stanisław Gruszczyński
Hagith soprano Maria Mokrzycka
The high priest bass
The physician baritone
A servant silent actor
Chorus: the people

Synopsis

The libretto by Feliks Dörmann is loosely based on the Old Testament, with the emphasis on deception and jealousy in love and death, similar to other popular motifs in operatic works of the early 20th century including Salome and Electra by Strauss.[1] Dörmann's Libretto tells a Biblical story of King David, the aged king in the opera, his female servant Abishag (Hagith) and Solomon (the young king), as described in Chapter One of the First Book of Kings. However, in the Bible, the young woman is called "Avishag", not Hagith. Haggith is one of the wives of David, the mother of Adonijah.

In the Libretto, the old and ailing King David is told by the high priest and his doctor, that only the love of a young girl can bring him a new lease of life. He remains suspicious, because his son Solomon has just been crowned against his will with great fanfare. Later that evening, the old David attempts to banish his son. The young Hagith is brought to him right after that, and sees the young king leaving his quarters. The two mutually declare their love for each other. Hagith refuses to make a sacrifice on behalf of the aged king. Losing her temper, she tells David she hates him. The old king dies from too much anger. Hagith runs outside and pronounces his death. She is accused of killing him by the priest and sentenced to death by stoning. The new king Solomon attempts to save her, but it is too late.[1]

Instrumentation

The orchestral score calls for:

On stage music: 4 trumpets in D, 4 trombones, timpani, triangle.[2]

Recordings

The only recording of the opera is on DVD Video, with Tomasz Szreder conducting the chorus and orchestra of Wrocław Opera.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Polish culture: Karol Szymanowski, Hagith Op. 25". Polish Culture in the World (www.culture.pl). Retrieved 29 September 2010.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Karol Szymanowski – Hagith – Opera in 1 act – op. 25". Universal Edition A.G. Vienna. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
  3. 1 2 3 "Karol Szymanowski – Op. 25 – Hagith" (PDF). Universal Edition A.G. Vienna / IMSLP. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
  4. 1 2 "Almanacco 13 May 1922" (in Italian). AmadeusOnline. Retrieved 29 September 2010.
  5. "Stanisław Niewiadomski (1859–1936)". Polskie Wydawnictwo Muzyczne SA. 2007. Retrieved February 19, 2013.
  6. Ryszard Marek Groński (January 8, 2013). "Homoseksualiści II RP w kulturze". Kultura (in Polish). Polityka.pl. pp. 1–2. Retrieved February 19, 2013. See also: page 2.
  7. "Hagith. Opera w 1 akcie op. 25 (1912–1913)". Szymanowski. Adam Mickiewicz Institute culture.pl. Retrieved February 19, 2013.
  8. "Szymanowski: Hagith". Presto Classical. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
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