Léon Pillet

Léon Pillet (6 December 1803 – 20 March 1868),[1] was a French journalist, civil servant, and director of the Paris Opera from 1840 to 1847. A political appointee, he was probably the least successful director of the Paris Opera in the 19th century.[2]

Early life and training

Born Raymond-François-Léon Pillet in Paris,[3] he was the son of Fabien Pillet (1772–1855), who was a journalist and French administrator.[4] After attending the Lycée Napoléon (now the Lycée Henri-IV), Léon Pillet continued his studies in law and joined the offices of an attorney by the name of Mauguin.[5]

Journalist

He took part in the founding of the Nouveau Journal de Paris in 1827, serving mainly as its drama critic. Later, when the suppression of the privileges of the major journals gave more leeway to the enterprise, he became its editor, transforming it into a political newspaper and embracing the liberal cause. In July 1830 he signed the journalists' protest against government restrictions on the press, and during the three days 26, 27, and 28 July, his journal, now known simply as the Journal de Paris, was published several times each day. Having supported the change to a more conservative government which occurred on 13 March 1831, the paper was taken over by venture capitalists who were favorable to the new regime, but Pillet stayed on as director and supported ministerial policies.[4][5][6]

Civil servant

In 1834 Pillet received a government post as maître des requêtes en service extraordinaire and appears in the Almanach royal beginning in 1836 as the Royal Commissioner and Secretary of the Special Commission for the Conservatoire and Royal Theatres.[2][3] In this position Pillet was the administrator with responsibility for the Paris Opera.[7]

Librettist

Pillet also had aspirations as a librettist. During his time as Commissioner, he cowrote the libretto for the 3-act opera La vendetta with Adolphe Vannois, for which Henri Ruolz-Montchal provided the music. The work was produced at the Opera on 11 September 1839, but was poorly received. It was withdrawn after its seventh performance on 11 October for revision and was compressed to two acts. On 22 January 1840 it was performed in its new version on a double-bill with the 3-act ballet La Somnambule, but ticket sales came to a paltry 1,237 francs and 30 centimes, and it was dropped, after its sixth performance in its revised form on 1 May 1840.[8] Pillet by this time had also written libretti for a series of vaudevilles.[7]

Director of the Paris Opera

On 1 June 1840,[9] as a political favor, Pillet, who was "neither an artist nor a true entrepreneur",[2] was appointed to a co-directorship of the Paris Opera, where he joined the already resident director, Henri Duponchel. The two men quarreled, and Duponchel withdrew in October 1841,[10] leaving Pillet as sole director, which probably led the German composer Richard Wagner to say that the Opera was run by "political appointees, as a reward."[2] Wagner sold Pillet the sketch of his opera The Flying Dutchman for 500 francs, but was unable to convince him that the music was worth producing.[11] Pillet used Wagner's idea to produce a new opera, Le vaisseau fantôme, with music by Pierre-Louis Dietsch (libretto by Paul Foucher), which failed to please.[12]

Rosine Stoltz, the leading mezzo-soprano at the Paris Opera, became Pillet's mistress, and he began to insist that every opera should have a starring role for her. This eventually caused dissension within the company and a scandal. Pillet may have had a child with Stoltz, if one is to believe the Escudier brothers' La france musicale (April 1843), which reported that they had gone to Le Havre: "Mme Stoltz is suffering from an indisposition which would require nine months to recover from."[13]

On top of this, both the most successful librettist of the day, Eugène Scribe, who blamed Pillet for the continued failure to mount Donizetti's unfinished Le duc d'Albe, and the most successful composer, Giacomo Meyerbeer, who did not want to cast Stoltz in his new opera Le prophète, declined to work with Pillet after 1845. Pillet was attacked by the press and suffered financial losses at the theater.[14]

Pillet invited Giuseppe Verdi to compose an opera for the company in November 1845 and February 1846, but Verdi declined.[15] Within a week of Verdi's arrival in Paris on 27 July 1847, Duponchel and Nestor Roqueplan joined Pillet as co-directors (31 July 1847),[16] and Verdi received his first commission from the company, agreeing to adapt I Lombardi to a new French libretto with the title Jérusalem.[17] Pillet was forced to retire from his directorship in October or November,[18] and Verdi's "new" opera premiered on 26 November.[19]

List of premieres

During Pillet's directorship of the Paris Opera, the following works were premiered:

Later career

In 1849 Pillet was appointed the French consul to Nice, where he remained until 1861, when he became the consul to Palermo, and subsequently the consul to Venice. He died in Venice.[3]

References

Notes
  1. Huebner 1992.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Fulcher 1987, p. 103; Gerhard 1998, p. 35.
  3. 1 2 3 Parturier 1942, p. 163.
  4. 1 2 Larousse 1874, vol. 12, p. 1015.
  5. 1 2 Vapereau 1858, p. 1449.
  6. Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country, vol. 17 ( 1838), p. 209.
  7. 1 2 Pitou 1990, p. 1060.
  8. Pitou 1990, p. 1060; Lajarte 1878, p. 160; libretto at Google Books; costume designs at Gallica.
  9. Levin 2009, p. 382, and Gerhard 1998, p. 35, say Pillet joined Duponchel as a co-director on 1 June 1840, while Fontaine 2003, p. 23, gives the date as 1 June 1841. Fontaine is probably incorrect, however, since Guest 2008, p. 326, mentions that in 1840 Pillet, "as Director of the Opera", sent an emissary to London to negotiate a reappearance of the ballerina Marie Taglioni at the Paris Opera.
  10. Gerhard 1998, p. 35, says Duponchel retired in October 1841. Fontaine 2003, p. 23, gives the year 1843 for the beginning of Pillet's sole directorship, while Levin 2009, p. 383, gives 1 June 1842.
  11. Gregor-Dellin 1983, p. 106.
  12. Fulcher 1987, pp. 104–105.
  13. Jordan 1996, p. 122.
  14. Gerhard 1998, p. 35.
  15. Walker 1962, p. 181.
  16. Fontaine 2003, p. 23.
  17. Walker 1962, pp. 183–184.
  18. Gerhard 1998, p. 35 (October 1847); Fulcher 1987, p. 113 (24 November 1847).
  19. Walker 1962, p. 184.
Sources
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