Love's Labour's Lost (opera)

{{Short description|Opera by Nicholas Nabokov}}

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{{Infobox opera

| name = Love's Labour's Lost

| composer = Nicolas Nabokov

| image =

| caption = Composer John Adams, 2008

| librettist = {{plainlist|

}}

| language = English

| based_on = {{based on|Love's Labour's Lost|Shakespeare}}

| premiere_date = {{Start date|1973|02|07}}

| premiere_location = Brussels

| website =

}}

Love's Labour's Lost is an opera by Nicolas Nabokov, written by W. H. Auden and Chester Kallman, based on Shakespeare's play of the same name. It was first performed in Brussels on 7 February 1973.

History

While Nabokov was in New York, preparing a ballet revival, Lincoln Kirstein initiated talks with W. H. Auden who was looking for an opera project and had already contacted Michael Tippett and Harrison Birtwistle. The composer read Shakespeare's play Love's Labour's Lost again, and found similarities to Mozart's Così fan tutte in its "stylized, deliberately artificial plot". Auden and Nabokov discussed the project in February 1969. Auden won Chester Kallman to participate, as before for Stravinsky's The Rake's Progress and Henze's Elegy for Young Lovers. In his foreword to an edition of Shakespeare's play for the Royal Shakespeare Company, Jonathan Bate muses that they were possibly inspired by Thomas Mann's novel Doctor Faustus, in which the fictional hero composes his single opera based on this same play, intended to be "in a spirit of the most artificial mockery and parody of the artificial, something highly playful and highly precious".

The librettists agreed to focus on the scenes around the couples, and Nabokov planned a "tender, lyrical, gay, but fairly small-scale opera". In July that year, the three met in Austria, working on the project, and in September the libretto was completed. It contains also a speech from As You Like It and an anonymous song from the 17th century. The plot is stretched over four seasons. Nabokov wrote the first act while being composer in residence in Aspen, Colorado, in 1970. He resumed working on the score in February 1971 in Kolbsheim, completing the work there in September. For the orchestration, he was assisted by the German-American conductor Harold Byrns.[http://www.cpanda.org/pdfs/csob/2001.pdf Central Opera Service Bulletin] The New Grove Dictionary of Opera summarizes that "the music is cast in an eclectic parody style the composer called 'persiflage', sending up Tristan and Beethoven's Fifth Symphony in Berowne's love aria, Weill and Eisler in the 'Discourse about Love', American crooning in Moth's songs, Glinka and Mussorgsky for the 'Muscovite' masquerade, and catches and madrigals."

The opera premiered in Brussels on 7 February 1973. A German version, Verlorene Liebesmüh, was written by Claus H. Henneberg, but performances in Berlin shortly after the premiere were in English, because the singers were reluctant to learn yet another language.

Roles

class="wikitable plainrowheaders"

|+{{sronly|Roles, voice types, premiere cast}}

! scope="col"| Role

! scope="col"| Voice type

! scope="col"| Premiere cast, 7 February 1973
Conductor: Reinhard Peters

scope="row"| Rosaline

| dramatic soprano

| Lou Ann Wyckoff

scope="row"| Katherine

| lyric soprano

|

scope="row"| Jaquenetta

| coloratura soprano

| Carol Malone

scope="row"| Moth

| lyric soprano (contralto)

| David Knudsen

scope="row"| Princess

| coloratura mezzo-soprano

| Patricia Johnson

scope="row"| Dumaine

| tenor

|

scope="row"| Berowne

| high baritone

| Barry McDaniel

scope="row"| Don Armado

| baritone

| George Fortune

scope="row"| King

| baritone

|

scope="row"| Boyet

| bass

| Manfred Röhrl

References

{{reflist

| refs =

{{cite book

| author = William Shakespeare

| contributor = Jonathan Bate

| contribution = Introduction

| editor-last = Rasmussen

| editor-first = Eric

| editor-link = Eric Rasmussen (academic)

| title = Love's Labour's Lost

| series = The RSC Shakespeare

| publisher = Palgrave Macmillan

| year = 2008

| pages = vii–viii

| isbn = 978-0230217911

}}

{{cite book

| last = Giroud

| first = Vincent

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Nv0GBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA392

| title = Nicolas Nabokov: A Life in Freedom and Music

| publisher = Oxford University Press

| year = 2015

| pages = 392–398

| isbn = 9780199399895

}}

{{cite book

| last = Carpenter

| first = Humphrey

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=VIexQgAACAAJ

| title = W. H. Auden: A Biography

| publisher = Allen & Unwin

| year = 1981

| pages = 428

| isbn = 9780049280441

}}

{{cite book

| last = Mesa

| first = Franklin

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=9yMkCQAAQBAJ&pg=PA371

| title = Opera: An Encyclopedia of World Premieres and Significant Performances, Singers, Composers, Librettists, Arias and Conductors, 1597–2000

| publisher = McFarland

| year = 2007

| pages = 371, 417

| isbn = 9780786477289

}}

{{cite book

| last = Sander

| first = Peter

| url = http://www.hofstra.edu/pdf/dd_lllstudyguide.pdf

| title = Love's Labour's Lost by William Shakespeare

| publisher = Hofstra University

| year = 2000

| page = 17

}}

{{cite web

| url = https://www.boosey.com/pages/opera/moreDetails?site-lang=en&musicID=26079

| title = Nabokoff, Nicholas / Love's Labours Lost (1973)

| publisher = Boosey & Hawkes

| accessdate = 12 September 2017

}}

}}

{{Love's Labour's Lost}}

{{W. H. Auden}}

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Category:Operas

Category:English-language operas

Category:1973 operas

Category:Operas by Nicolas Nabokov

Category:Libretti by W. H. Auden

Category:Operas based on works by William Shakespeare

Category:Works based on Love's Labour's Lost