Titon et l'Aurore

Titon et l'Aurore (English: Tithonus and Aurora) is an opera in three acts and a prologue by the French composer Jean-Joseph de Mondonville which was first performed at the Académie royale de musique, Paris on 9 January 1753. The authorship of the libretto has been subject to debate; Mondonville's contemporaries ascribed the prologue to Antoine Houdar de la Motte and the three acts of the opera to the Abbé de la Marre. Titon et l'Aurore belongs to the genre known as the pastorale héroïque. The work played an important role in the so-called Querelle des Bouffons, a dispute over the relative merits of the French and Italian operatic traditions which dominated the intellectual life of Paris in the early 1750s. The tremendous success of Mondonville's opera at its premiere was an important victory for the French camp (although their Italian rivals claimed that this was because they had been excluded from their seats by members of the army). Titon was one of Mondonville's most popular works and went on to enjoy several revivals during his lifetime.

Roles

Original version Voice types Premiere, Paris 1753
Titon haute-contre Pierre Jélyotte
l'Aurore soprano Marie Fel
Promethée (prologue), Eole (pastorale) basse-taille (bass-baritone) Claude-Louis-Dominique Chassé de Chinais, called Chassé
Palès soprano Marie-Jeanne Fesch, called Mlle Chevalier
L'Amour (prologue & pastorale)
A nimph from Pales's retinue
soprano Marie-Angélique Coupée (or Couppée)
A shepherd haute-contre François Poirier
Aquillon basse-taille (bass-baritone) M. Person
Borée basse-taille (bass-baritone) Nicolas Gelin
Jupiter (prologue)[1] not stated role unperformed

Synopsis

Recordings

References

Notes
  1. The part of Jupiter appears in the libretto (prologue), but is not reported or set to music in the printed score.
Sources
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