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Work Information

Gian Carlo Menotti : The Consul


Publisher G Schirmer Inc
Category
Opera and Music Theatre
Sub-Category Grand Opera
Year Composed
1950
Duration 2 Hours
Solo Instrument(s)
2 Baritones, 4 Sopranos, 2 Altos, Bass, Mezzo soprano, Bass baritone, 2 silent roles
Orchestration 1(pic)1(ca)11/2210/timp.perc/hp.pf/str
Languages
Italian, Polish, English, French, German
Availability Hire  Explain this...
Discography
Here...

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Libretto(s) 50340020 Libretto(s) GS34002
Vocal Score(s) 50337690 Vocal Score(s) GS33769

Programme Note

1950 Pulitzer Prize in Music

Digital perusal score available from ScoresOnDemand
Cast List:
   JOHN SOREL: Baritone
   MAGDA SOREL: Soprano
   THE MOTHER: Contralto
   SECRET POLICE AGENT: Bass
   FIRST PLAINCLOTHESMAN: Silent
   SECOND PLAINCLOTHESMAN: Silent
   THE SECRETARY: Mezzo-Soprano
   MR. KOFNER: Bass-Baritone
   THE FOREIGN WOMAN: Soprano
   ANNA GOMEZ: Soprano
   VERA BORONEL: Contralto
   THE MAGICIAN (NIKA MAGADOFF): Tenor
   ASSAN: Baritone
   VOICE ON THE RECORD: Soprano


Synopsis:
Set in Europe, John has fled his country, which is under a dictatorship, to save his life and wants his wife, Magda, his baby and his mother to join him. Magda is frustrated by the red tape at the consul’s office and her inability to see him. When John returns home, he discovers that Magda is dead and he is arrested by the secret police.

Reviews

  • Composed in 1950 to his own libretto, THE CONSUL was Menotti's first full-length opera. [With] its topic, the plight of political refugees, Menotti's dark, gritty, edgy post-verismo score generally inhabits a sound world [of] moody lyricism and spikiness. He makes extensive use of recitatives and successfully blends speech with music [in its] tension and emotional disintergration. Gripping, dramatic, and affecting, with a near-ideal match of subject and music, it is, to me, his best. THE CONSUL is a potent work of music drama. Strongly recommended.
    Benjamin Pernick, Fanfare
  • The vivid new Chandos recording was made live last year at the Spoleto Festival, with Richard Hickox, a passionate advocate of this early response to the Cold War. Menotti [has written] sweeping tunes that instantly catch in the mind. Menotti can also heighten tension in cunningly placed ensembles and Hickox builds them masterfully with an excellent orchestra and a good cast. It is astonishing that this work has been neglected for so long.
    Edward Greenfield, The Guardian (London)
  • The Consul offers proof that long-lined melody, backed by dramatic orchestration [with] plodding rhythms and dark, repetitious motifs can convey the accumulating weight of frustration. The power of The Consul is in the way its score and taut, compelling libretto mesh, expressing contemporary life as powerfully as screaming dissonance or chaotic rhythms.

    Wynne Delacoma, Chicago Sun-Times
  • When the opera first opened (on Broadway no less) in March of 1950 it was a phenomenal success. This 1960 production produced for television (an early attempt at "pay for view") gives clear evidence why. Not only does it preserve the original 1950 score before Menotti made some editorial changes, but also the extraordinary performance of Patricia Neway, the original Magda Sorel...it is an important historical document, but is also a strong, compelling, deeply emotional performance. There isn't a weak link here. The production is an intimate one [and] darkly evocative…
    Charles H. Parsons, American Record Guide
  • Menotti's opera THE CONSUL is a nightmare-thriller of an opera, set in a police state where the central character, Magda, is trying to flee the country and in need of a visa from the unseen and unheard consul. It does feel like Puccinian verismo, albeit with contemporary touches and a fantasy element that sits beside the thriller tension. But mostly this is music-theatre of unnerving power-with a climactic Act 2 aria that stops the show, your heart and your disbelief. Menotti has (or had, in 1950 when the piece was written) an instinctive feel for high suspense, and what he created in THE CONSUL is Hitchcock with recitatives. With a powerful staging by Simon Callow, [this production] was a pleasure. In fact, it's far and away the best thing I've ever seen at Holland Park.
    Michael White, The Independent (London)

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