- Die Kinder der Heide
-
Anton Rubinstein Operas- Dmitry Donskoy (1852)
- Fomka the Fool (1853)
- Die Kinder der Heide (1861)
- Feramors (1863)
- Der Thurm zu Babel (1870)
- The Demon (1871)
- Die Maccabäer (1875)
- Néron (1879)
- The Merchant Kalashnikov (1880)
- Christus (1895)
Die Kinder der Heide (The Children of the Moorland) is a four act opera by Anton Rubinstein, to a libretto by Salomon Mosenthal, based on a verse novel by the Hungarian poet Carl Beck.
Contents
Background
Whilst working on the opera in 1859, Rubinstein wrote to a friend:
I have absolutely no luck with opera texts. I have wasted a lot of time and money and everything has been unusable.[...] I am hoping that with my present attempt, I shall have more luck, and then the world will have something novel in store![1]
He also told Franz Liszt that he hoped to have the opera premiered in Vienna, where in fact it was eventually produced in 1861 - most of the opera was written in Dornbach, not far from the capital.[2] The opera's first performance in Russia was in 1867.
Roles
Role Voice type Premiere Cast, 23 February 1861, Kärntnertor Theatre, Vienna Count Waldemar tenor Gustav Walter Conrad, an innkeeper baritone Hrabanek Maria, his daughter soprano Gabrielle Kraus Wania, a herdsman tenor Aloys Ander Isbrana, a gypsy mezzo-soprano Csillag Gypsies, villagers, soldiers, etc Synopsis
The location is a Hungarian village.
Act 1
Wania is Isbrania's lover; she tells him of a planned robbery of Conrad's inn, which Wania foils. Conrad offers him as a reward his daughter Maria in marriage.
Act 2
Maria confesses to her father that she is in love with a mystery man, who turns out to be Count Waldemar. Waldemar and Isbrana conspire to interrupt the marriage ceremony.
Act 3
Finding Maria with the Count, Wania fights and kills him. He is helped to escape by Isbrania and the gypsies.
Act 4
In a forest hideout, Wania is visited by the grieving Conrad and Maria, who has gone mad. Wania prevents the gypsies from robbing them as they depart. Soldiers arrive to arrest Wania; when he refuses to escape with Isbrania she stabs herself and dies.
Sources
- Philip S. Taylor, Anton Rubinstein: A life in music, Indianapolis, 2007
Notes
Categories:- Operas
- 1861 operas
- Operas by Anton Rubinstein
- German-language operas
- Operas set in Hungary
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