Vent du soir, ou L'horrible festin

Vent-du-soir ou l'horrible festin is a one-act opérette-bouffe with music by Jacques Offenbach and a libretto by Philippe Gille, which was premiered at the Bouffes-Parisiens Salle Choiseul, on 16 May 1857.[1]

Background

The work was the first collaboration between Philippe Gille and Offenbach, and the start of a friendship between them which endured until the death of the latter.[2] It also marked the first appearance with Offenbach of the singer-actor Désiré, who went on to create many roles in the composer's works.[3]

Vent du soir was a success, and was revived in Paris and also performed in Brussels and Vienna. A production in Swedish was presented in 2003 in Stockholm by Teater travers.[4]

Roles

Roles Voice type Premiere cast, 16 May 1857[3]
(Conductor: Jacques Offenbach)
Vent-du-soir, king of the Gros-Loulous baritone Désiré
Lapin-courageux, king of the Papas-Toutous tenor Léonce
Arthur, son of Lapin-courageux tenor Tayau
Atala, daughter of Vent-du-soir soprano Garnier
Pas-Peigné-du-Tout, cook mute role

Synopsis

On an Oceanic island, Vent-du-soir receives a visit from a neighbouring chief Lapin-courageux. Both men get on very well, as they had eaten the other's wife. Vent-du-soir puts on a good spread for his guest.

Atala, daughter of Vent-du-soir, meanwhile, has fallen in love with the ship-wrecked stranger Arthur, a hair-dresser of the rue Vivienne.

As the day's hunt was fruitless, Vent-du-soir decides that he will have to sacrifice Arthur, but when they are at table, Lapin-courageux realizes that they have eaten his lost son, as he can hear the musical watch he gave his son ringing in his stomach.

Luckily the diners learn that in fact they have been served a bear, in whose skin Arthur had been hiding. All ends happily and Atala and Arthur are able to marry.

Musical numbers

References

  1. Vent-du-Soir ou l'Horrible Festin (1857), Boosey & Hawkes Keck edition website accessed 29 July 2014. The Keck edition uses the spelling Vent-du-Soir ou l'Horrible Festin, rather than that of Grove Dictionary.
  2. Louis Schneider, Offenbach, Paris, Perrin, 1923, 279.
  3. 1 2 Yon, Jean-Claude. Jacques Offenbach. Éditions Gallimard, Paris, 2000, p. 191.
  4. "Vådan av att bli kär i sin middag – Köttets lusta" (The perils of falling in love with dinner – meat lust), Svenska Dagbladet, 14 November 2003 (Swedish), accessed 10 September 2014.
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