Les bergers

{{Short description|Opéra comique with music by Jacques Offenbach}}

{{For|the painting of this name|The Shepherds (Watteau)}}

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Les bergers is a three-act opéra comique of 1865 with music by Jacques Offenbach. The French libretto was by Hector Crémieux and Philippe Gille.Lamb A., Jacques Offenbach (List of stage works). In: The New Grove Dictionary of Opera. Macmillan, London and New York, 1997. It belongs to the group of more serious works, such as Barkouf, Robinson Crusoé, Vert-Vert and above all Fantasio which became neglected as his contemporaries pigeon-holed Offenbach as simply an amusing composer of opéra bouffe.Keck, Jean-Christophe. Les Fées du Rhin – Notes sur une redécouverte. Programme book for Die Rheinnixen, Opéra de Lyon, 2005, p. 4.

Performance history

The premiere of Les bergers took place on 11 December 1865 at the Bouffes-Parisiens, Paris. It was generally well received by critics but did not run to great success, having to bear comparison with La belle Hélène, Offenbach's most recent hit.Yon, Jean-Claude. Jacques Offenbach. Éditions Gallimard, Paris, 2000, pp. 193–4. The work was staged, in German, in Vienna in 1866.

Before the opening, Le Figaro published a letter written by Offenbach to Henri de Villemessant{{clarify|date=May 2019|reason=Henri? Not Hippolyte?}}, setting out his artistic aims with the new work. He described the structure of the piece, as a "series of pastorals", with the first set in antiquity and working on the theme of Pyramus and Thisbe, the second set in the time and style of Watteau and Louis XV, and in the third act Offenbach "sought to represent Courbet in music".Faris, Alexander. Jacques Offenbach. London & Boston: Faber and Faber, 1980, pp. 135–137.

The overture contains a theme on the oboe which is the first version of "Au Mont Ida" from La belle Hélène.Keck, Jean-Christophe (translated by John Taylor Tuttle). Offenbach, an oeuvre boasting more than 600 works. Booklet essay for ‘Ballade Symphonique’, CD 476 8999, Universal Classics France, 2006.

The first act, using the title Myriame et Daphné (the names of the lovers), was staged as a curtain-raiser at the premiere of Massenet's Thérèse in Monte-Carlo in 1907; with Maggie Teyte in a principal role. Faris comments that the 18th-century pastiche "is skilfully done. Offenbach creates gavotte-like, courtly elegance with an austerly simple rhythmic accompaniment".

Roles

class="wikitable"

!Role

!Voice type

!Premiere cast, 11 December 1865
(Conductor: Jacques Offenbach)

Alphésibée

|tenor

|Gourdon

Thyrsis

|baritone

|Garrait

Palémon

|bass

|Duvernoy

Chryséa

|soprano

|Sorac

Myriame

|tenor

|Berthelier

Daphné

|soprano

|Irma Marié

Premier Berger

|soprano

|Pelva

Deuxième Berger

|soprano

|Halbleid

Troisième Berger

|soprano

|Valter

Quatrième Berger

|soprano

|Leriche

Éros

|mezzo-soprano

|Zulma Bouffar

La Marquise

|soprano

|Frasey-Berthelier

Colin

|tenor

|Berthelier

L’Intendant

|mezzo-soprano

|Zulma Bouffar

Le Bailli

|baritone

|Tacova

Le Marquis de Fonrose

|tenor

|Léonce

Nicette

|soprano

|Bonelli

Annette

|soprano

|Irma Marié

La Rouge

|soprano

|Irma Marié

La Sincère

|soprano

|Lise Tautin

Nicot

|tenor

|Berthelier

Jeannet

|mezzo-soprano

|Zulma Bouffar

Veautendon

|baritone

|Désiré

Le Menu

|tenor

|Gobin

colspan="4"|Chorus: Bergers et Bergères, Chasseurs

Synopsis

= Act 1 – L'Idylle (The Idyll) =

The first act takes place in a sacred wood in Arcadia. Palémon aims to commit his son Myriame (a shepherd) to Apollo; Chryséa hopes to vow her daughter, Daphné (a shepherdess) to Diane. Myriame and Daphné are in love and with the help of Alphésibée arrange a secret meeting in a wood where hunters are pursuing a she-wolf. Myriame mistakenly believes that the hunters have killed his love and ends his life, but Éros appears and saves the young man, deciding that the two lovers will go through different ages.

= Act 2 – Le Trumeau (The Trumeau) =

In the second act they are in the park of a mansion at the time of Louis XV; Myriame is now Colin and Daphné is Annette. Éros has been sent down to the world by Jupiter in the form of a steward. The marquis returns home to his wife but both are flirting with the young couple; intrigue follows. When he is accused of presiding over disorder, the steward transforms into Éros and is protected by cupids as the curtain falls.

= Act 3 – Le Bergerie réaliste (The realist pastoral) =

The final act is introduced by a realist pastoral symphony. Daphné is now the shepherdess La Rouge who is intended for Nicot-la-Braise - Myriame. La Rouge's friend La Sincère has been promised to Le Menu. Meanwhile, Éros is in the form of a wily rascal, Jeannet. All are offered a wedding feast by the generous landowner Vautendon during which Jeannet tries to stir up jealousy among the lovers. In the finale Éros is perched on the fatted calf of Vautendon and the three visitors from antiquity arise into the heavens.

Recordings

Excerpts have appeared on the anthologies Ballade SymphoniqueKeck, Jean-Christophe. Offenbach, an oeuvre boasting more than 600 works. Booklet essay for Ballade Symphonique, CD 476 8999, Universal Classics France, 2006. (Overture) Offenbach au menu!Laurent, F. Review of Offenbach au menu! Maguelone CD MAG11188. Diapason, January 2012 (598), p. 93. ("Ronde de la soupe aux choux" (act 3)) and Entre Nous.Milnes, R. Review of Entre Nous Opera Rara CD set. Opera, November 2007, 1388–90. ("Reconnais-tu la voix" (act 2) and "En attendant l'hymen" (act 3))

References