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Prométhée, 82, ( Prometheus) is a tragédie lyrique (grand ) in three acts by the French composer Gabriel Fauré with a French by the Symboliste poets and (1865–1940). It was partly based on the opening of the Greek tragedy of . The first performance at Arènes de Béziers on 27 August 1900 involved almost 800 performers (including two and 15 ) and was watched by an audience of 10,000. Between 1914 and 1916, Jean Roger-Ducasse reworked the score for a reduced orchestra. This version (which was later revised by Fauré) made its debut at the on 17 May 1917 but never became popular.

Designated as a tragédie lyrique, the work resists easy categorisation. It was intended to be on a large-scale with spoken and musical sections. and West call it a grand cantata, arguing that since "only some of the characters participate in the stage action it is scarcely an opera, though Fauré's conception of the work is at times more operatic than merely choral ... and the clearest example to date of 's influence on his music."Warrack and West 1992, p. 233.


Roles
+ !Role ! !Premiere cast, 27 August 1900
Conductor: Charles Eustace
Prométhée ()spoken roleÉdouard de Max
Pandore ()spoken roleCora Laparcerie
Hermès ()spoken roleOdette de Fehl
AenoëTorrês
BiasopranoCaroline Fiérens-Peters
Rosa Feldy
AndrosCharles Rousselière
KratostenorFonteix
Hephaïstos ()bassJean Vallier


Plot
The plot on which the opera was based has been deprecated as "patchy, and for the most part mediocre".Nectoux 2004, p.197 It suffers particularly from the introduction of Pandore as the counterpart in importance of Prométhée. At the close of act 1 "she falls as if dead" and act 2 accordingly opens with the powerful funeral procession carrying her body., "Le Cortège de Pandore", Orchestre national de l'Opéra de Monte-Carlo, conducting Illogically, but necessarily because of her balancing role, she revives later in the act and continues to take part in the action.

Act 1
A musical prelude is followed by a massed choral scene, in which Andros leads the men and Aenoë leads the women in rejoicing at the gift of fire., , Brazil, directed and conducted by Paulo Maron Prométhée praises its benefits but Pandore opposes his action in defying Zeus. Then Gaia appears to warn the Titan of the consequences of his action. She is followed by Kratos (power) and Bia (violence), sent by Zeus to punish him; with them is the divine smith Hephaestus, who is a friend of Prométhée. The three tell Prométhée his sentence: he will be chained forever to a rock and every day a black eagle shall drink from his veins.

Act 2
The female choir enters carrying Pandore on a bier of leafy branches, after which Aenoë makes the funeral oration. Prométhée returns with the executioners from Olympus. Though Hephaestus laments for his friend, Bia and Kratos are there to ensure that he make the chains to bind Prométhée to the rock. Having slit his veins, they leave and the revived Pandore enters again to lament his fate.

Act 3
A chorus of comforts Pandore. Bia and Kratos return to threaten her and Prométhée, followed by Hermes with the gift of a box from Zeus. Despite being warned by Prométhée to refuse, Pandore insists on taking it. She discovers that her tears have been miraculously transformed there to a balsam. The opera ends with praise for the benevolence of the tyrannical Zeus.There is a musical analysis of the plot in Nectoux 2004, pp. 194–210


Productions
The opera has been presented very rarely, but in July 2011 there was a Brazilian production by the in São Paulo. This Brazilian production included recitatives instead of spoken lines and a new by their conductor and director, Paulo Maron. "Teatro Anhembi Morumbi apresenta Prometheus", 15 June 2011, revised 14 September 2013

Notes

Sources

  • Nectoux, Jean-Michel, Gabriel Fauré: A Musical Life, Cambridge University 2004, pp. 192–214
  • ; West, Ewan (1992). The Oxford Dictionary of Opera. Oxford: Oxford University Press. .


Further reading
  • Murray, David (2001). "Gabriel Fauré" in The New Penguin Opera Guide, edited by Amanda Holden. London: Penguin Books. .


External links
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