Charlotte Salomon (opera)

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Charlotte Salomon, World Premiere at the Salzburg Festival 2014

Charlotte Salomon is an opera by Marc-André Dalbavie. The libretto is by Barbara Honigmann (portions translated into French by Johannes Honigmann) who based much of it on Charlotte Salomon's autobiographical and posthumous work Leben? Oder Theater?[1] The opera was first performed at the Salzburg Festival on July 28, 2014.[2]

Composition[edit]

The nature of Leben? Oder Theater? is of an artist fashioning her own life into an artistic creation. Dalbavie said that the "intrinsically musical and even cinematic qualities of 'Leben? Oder Theater?'" combined with an attraction to real-life drama inspired him to compose an opera based on Charlotte Salomon.[1] Since Salomon was aiming for a form of communication that combined various arts, Dalbalvie felt that her story needed music. He was quoted as saying "She recreated her life through a work of art."[1] Just as Dalbavie's opera Gesualdo (based on the life of Carlo Gesualdo) incorporates portions of his subject's compositions, so too does Dalbavie incorporate existing music into his opera, such as the "Habañera" from Bizet's Carmen and "Wir winden dir den Jungfernkranz" from Weber's Der Freischütz.[1]

The opera includes a character representing the author Charlotte Salomon (speaking role), and also her fictive creation, named Charlotte Kann (mezzo-soprano). While the opera (including the role of Charlotte Kann) is sung in French, the character named Charlotte Salomon comments on the action in German. By the end of the opera, the languages are reversed, representing the integration of the artist her subject.[1]

Dalbavie's orchestrations derives from his analysis of the human voice's acoustic frequencies, a technique used in spectral music as well as alluding to a singing teacher's character in the opera.[1] Dalbavie described the scoring of the opera—for 65 orchestral musicians (the size of the Salzburg Mozarteum Orchestra)—as one designed not as much for dramatic impact as for "maximum tonal richness."[2]

Premiere[edit]

Charlotte Salomon is in two acts and an epilogue. It was first performed at the Salzburg Festival on July 28, 2014, where it was directed by Luc Bondy. The production involved twenty projections of Salomon's artwork.[2]

Roles[edit]

Role Voice type Premiere Cast, July 28, 2014
Conductor: Marc-André Dalbavie
Charlotte Salomon speaking role Johanna Wokalek
Charlotte Kann Mezzo-soprano Marianne Crebassa
Frau Knarre, her grandmother Mezzo-soprano Cornelia Kallisch
Franziska Kann, her mother / A woman Mezzo-soprano Géraldine Chauvet
Paulinka Bimbam, a singer, her stepmother Mezzo-soprano Anaik Morel
Amadeus Daberlohn, a singing teacher Tenor Frédéric Antoun
Herr Knarre / Fourth Nazi Bass-Baritone Vincent LeTexier
Doktor Kann, a doctor, her father / First emigrant Baritone Jean Sébastien Bou
Professor Klingklang / An art student / Second Nazi / Policeman Baritone Michal Partyka
Art teacher / The Minister of Propaganda / First Nazi / A man / Second emigrant Tenor Éric Huchet
An art student from Tirol Mezzo-soprano Annika Schlicht
Third Nazi Baritone Wolfgang Resch

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Rebecca Schmid, "Reanimating a Life and an Art Cut Short," New York Times (July 26, 2014).
  2. ^ a b c "Marc Andre Dalbavie: Charlotte Salomon", Österreichischer Rundfunk. Retrieved 25 April 2021. (in German)