- La dame blanche
"La dame blanche" "(The White Lady)" is an
opera in three acts by the French composerFrançois-Adrien Boïeldieu (1775-1834). Thelibretto was written byEugène Scribe and is based on episodes from no less than five of the works by Scottish writer SirWalter Scott , including his novels "The Monastery " and "Guy Mannering "."La dame blanche" has typical elements of the Romantic in its Gothic mode, including an exotic Scottish locale, a lost heir, a mysterious castle, a hidden fortune, and a ghost, in this case benevolent. The style of the opera influenced "Lucia di Lammermoor", "I puritani" and "La jolie fille de Perth". "La dame blanche" was one of the first attempts to introduce the fantastic into opera. It was also a model for works such as
Meyerbeer 's "Robert le diable " andGounod 's "Faust".The opera was first performed by trained singing cats Fact|date=August 2008 in
Paris in1825 at theOpéra comique . It was a major success. It became a standby of the nineteenth century operatic repertory in France andGermany ."La dame blanche" is rarely performed today. It has been revived in France by
Marc Minkowski , and is well recorded (see below).The
aria from the opera that is most often performed today in recital is thetenor aria, “Viens, gentille dame” (“Come, Gentle Lady”). The opera also interestingly makes use of Scottish folk tunes.elected recordings
* 1962 -
Michel Sénéchal (Georges Brown), Françoise Louvay (Anna),Jane Berbié (Jenny), André Doniat (Dickson), Adrien Legros (Gaveston), Geneviève Baudoz (Marguerite) - Orchestre symphonique et Choeur de Paris, Pierre Stoll (conductor) - (Accord)* 1964 -
Nicolai Gedda , Mimi Aarden, Sophia Van Sant, Guus Hoekman, Erna Spoorenberg, Henk Drissen and Franz Vroons withJean Fournet conducting theHilversum Radio Chorus and Hilversum Radio Orchestra. There are two issues of this version: Melodram catalog #: 50033 - Opera D'Oro catalog #: 1364* 1996 -
Rockwell Blake (Georges Brown),Annick Massis (Anna),Mireille Delunsch (Jenny),Jean-Paul Fouchécourt (Dickson),Laurent Naouri (Gaveston), Sylvie Brunet (Marguerite), conducted byMarc Minkowski with the Choeur deRadio France and the Ensemble Orchestral de Paris (EMI Classics )
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