Hercules (Handel)
Hercules (HWV 60) is a Musical Drama in three acts by George Frideric Handel, composed in July and August 1744. The English language libretto was by the Reverend Thomas Broughton, based on Sophocles's Women of Trachis and the ninth book of Ovid's Metamorphoses.[1]
Performance history
Hercules was first given at the King's Theatre in London on 5 January 1745 in concert style. There were only two performances in the original run.[2] The role of Lichas was originally a small one for tenor, but was rewritten at great length, with six airs, for Susanna Cibber, she, however, was too ill to sing on the first night, and the music was either omitted or redistributed on that occasion. She sang in the second performance on January 12, but the music for the chorus "Wanton God" and the air "Cease, ruler of the day" was never given in this opera: the latter was adapted for the final chorus of Theodora. The work was a total failure and caused Handel to suspend his season. Hercules obtained three further hearings, two in 1749 and one in 1752, for which the role of Lichas was entirely eliminated, and much of the other music was also cut.[3]
Hercules was originally performed in the theatre but like an oratorio without stage action. It is argued that this contributed to its later neglect as it did not make the transition into the church and the concert hall successfully. Its revival therefore occurred through reappraisal in the context of stage presentation, when it was acclaimed by Romain Rolland, Henry Prunières, Paul Henry Lang and others as one of the supreme masterpieces of its age.[3] The first modern performance was in Münster in 1925. Hercules is sometimes given a full staging as an opera today. Among other performances, it was given in a procution by Peter Sellars at the Chicago Lyric Opera in 2011.[4]
Roles
Role | Voice type | Premiere cast 5 January 1745 |
---|---|---|
Hercules | bass | Thomas Reinhold |
Dejanira, wife of Hercules | mezzo-soprano | Anastasia Robinson |
Iole, daughter of the King of Oechalia | soprano | Elisabeth Duparc, called "La Francesina" |
Hyllus, son of Hercules | tenor | John Beard |
Lichas, a herald | contralto | Susanna Maria Cibber |
Synopsis
Precis: When the great hero Hercules returns to his wife Dejanira after a long absence, bringing with him as a captive the beautiful Princess Iole, Dejanira becomes consumed with jealousy. In a misguided attempt to secure her husband's fidelity, she inadvertently causes his death and goes mad.
Scene:Greece, in legendary antiquity
Years before the action of the piece, the centuar Nessus had attempted to ravish Hercules' wife Dejanira, but had been killed in the attempt by Hercules. As he died, Nessus gave Dejanira a cloak soaked with his blood, which he told her she should give her husband if she ever doubted his fidelity. If he put on the cloak, Nessus assured her, her husband would never look at another woman again.
Act I
A royal apartment
Lichas, a royal herald, notices the inconsolable grief of Dejanira, (Accompanied recitative: See, with what sad dejection in her looks) and sympathises (Air: No longer, fate, relentless frown). Dejanira is convinced that her husband, Hercules, has been killed whilst on a military expedition that has kept him apart from her for more than a year (Accompanied recitative:O, Hercules, why art thou absent from me? and Air: The world, when day's career is run). Hyllus, son of Dejanira and Hercules, enters and reports that an oracle has been consulted and indicated that the hero is dead and the summits of Mount Oeta are ablaze with fire (Arioso:I feel, I feel the god, he swells my breast). The prophecy confirms Dejanira's fears and she longs to join her husband in death (Air:There in myrtle shades reclin'd); however Hyllus refuses to give up hope and vows to search for his father to the ends of the earth.(Air: Where congeal'd the northern streams) . The chorus comment on the devotion of Hercules' son and wife (Chorus: O filial piety, O gen'rous love!). Lichas arrives and announces that Hercules has returned alive after conquering Oechalia, much to the relief of Dejanira (Air:Begone, my fears). Lichas is glad that despair has so quickly turned to joy (Air:The smiling hours of joyful train) and the chorus reflect that one should never give up hope (Chorus:Let none despair).
A square before the Palace. Iole and Oechalian virgins, led captive
Among the captives is the princess Iole of legendary beauty. She laments the loss of her freedom (Air:Daughter of gods, bright liberty). Her predicament leaves Hyllus deeply moved. Hercules enters to a march in the orchestra. Despite having ravaged her country and sacrificed her father, Hercules reassures Iole that even though in exile, she may consider herself free.However, Iole cannot forget her father's death, which she herself witnessed and prays that he may rest in peace (Air:My father! Ah, methinks I see ). Hercules looks forward to enjoying domestic life after long martial activity (Air: The God of battle quits the bloody field). The chorus celebrate Hercules' glorious accomplishments (Chorus:Crown with festal pomp the day).
Act II
An apartment
Iole is seized by a yearning desire for a simple, humble form of happiness far removed from the machinations of power (Air:How blest the maid). Meanwhile, Dejanira, convinced that Hercules has been unfaithful to her, considers Iole's beauty as proof of his betrayal (Air:When beauty sorrow's livery wears), even though her suspicions are resolutely refuted by her supposed rival (Air:Ah, think what ills the jealous prove!). Lichas, too, observes the unstoppable progression of Dejanira's jealousy (Air:As stars, that rise and disappear). The chorus reflect on the corrosive effects of jealousy (Chorus:Jealousy! Infernal pest). Hyllus, for his part, having declared his love to the captive princess, is rejected by her (Air:Banish love from thy breast),which greatly distresses him (Air:From celestial seats descending). The chorus reflect on the power of love (Chorus:Wanton god of am'rous fires).
Another arpartment
Dejanira accuses her husband of having tainted his reputation, an accusation he rejects (Air:Alcides' name in latest story). She insists he has disgraced himself by becoming besotted with the captive princess Iole (Air:Resign thy club and lion's spoils). Hercules advises his wife to put aside these unjust suspicions, but Dejanira is consumed with jealousy (Air:Cease, ruler of the day, to rise).While Hercules is summoned to celebrate the rites of his victory, Dejanira gives Lichas a garment for her husband as a token of reconciliation. Lichas is pleased by this apparent sign of marital harmony (Air:Constant lovers, never roving). The blood-soaked cloak, entrusted to her by the centaur Nessus as he lay dying defeated by Hercules, is apparently endowed with the power to lead a heart back to faithfulness. Meanwhile, Dejanira takes great pains to convince Iole that she regrets her accusations (Duet:Joys of freedom, joys of pow'r). The chorus hope that the marriage of Hercules and Dejanira will now once again be a happy one (Chorus:Love and Hymen, hand in hand).
Act III
Lichas recounts how Hercules received Dejanira's gift at the Temple and how the cloak was impregnated with a deadly poison which burnt and melted the flesh from his bones (Air:O scene of unexampl'd woe). The chorus lament the terrible news (Chorus: Tyrants now no more shall dread).
The Temple of Jupiter
As his son watches on, the hero, undefeated until now, dies in appalling suffering and cursing Dejanira's vengeance (Accompanied recitative:O Jove, what land is this). The last wishes expressed by the father to his son—that he be carried to the summit of Mount Oeta and set upon a funeral pyre—throw a belated light on the meaning of the oracle of the first act. Hyllus hopes his father's ignominious death will not be widely known (Air: Let not fame the tidings spread).
The Palace
Dejanira, hearing of Hercules' agonising end, realising that she should not have trusted the dying words of Nessus and discovering that she has been the instrument of her beloved husband's death, sinks into madness. (Accompanied recitative:Where shall I fly? Where hide this guilty head? ) Such misfortune arouses the pity of Iole (Air:.My breast with tender pity swells). A priest of Jupiter announces that Hercules has been lifted up to Olympus to join the gods there for all eternity. Hyllus pays tribute to his father's ascension to heaven (Air:He, who for Atlas propp'd the sky). Jove ordains the marriage between Hyllus and Iole, a decree that is received with joy by Hyllus and obedience by Iole (Duet:O prince, whose virtues all admire). The chorus praise the King of the gods (Chorus:To him your grateful notes of praise belong).[5][6]
Musical features
The mad scene for Dejanira "Where shall I fly?" is one of the highlights of the score. It contains many changes of tempo and mood, following the character's panic and despair. The chorus comment on the action after the manner of the choruses in Greek tragedy, with varied and inventive music.[7] Some of the choruses contain massive fugues, others are "jolly" tunes.[8] The work makes extensive use of musical chromaticism.[8] For musicologist Paul Henry Lang, the excellence of the libretto, the masterly characterisation through music, and Handel's superlative musical invention make Hercules "the crowning glory of Baroque music drama".[8]
Recordings
Audio recordings
Year | Cast Hercules, Dejanira, Iole, Hyllus, Lichas |
Conductor, orchestra, chorus |
Label |
---|---|---|---|
1968 | Louis Quilico, Maureen Forrester, Teresa Stich-Randall, Alexander Young, Norma Lerer |
Brian Priestman, Wiener Rundfunk Orchester, Wiener Akademie Chor |
RCA LP Cat:SER 5569-71 |
1982 | John Tomlinson , Sarah Walker, Jennifer Smith, Anthony Rolfe-Johnson, Catherine Denley |
John Eliot Gardiner, English Baroque Soloists, Monteverdi Choir |
Archiv CD Cat:2742 004 |
2000 | Gidon Saks, Anne Sofie von Otter, Lynne Dawson, Richard Croft, David Daniels |
Marc Minkowski, Les Musiciens du Louvre, Les Musiciens du Louvre |
Archiv CD Cat:469 532-2 |
2008 | Peter Kooij, Nicola Wemyss, Gerlinde Sämann, Knut Schoch, Franz Vitzthum |
Joachim Carlos Martini, Barock-orchester Frankfurt, Junge Kantorei |
Naxos CD Cat:8.557960-62 |
Video recording
Year | Cast Hercules, Dejanira, Iole, Hyllus, Lichas |
Stage Director, Conductor, orchestra, chorus |
Label |
---|---|---|---|
2005 | William Shimell, Joyce DiDonato, Ingela Bohlin, Toby Spence, Malena Ernman |
Luc Bondy, William Christie, Les Arts Florissants, Les Arts Florissants |
Naxos DVD Cat: BAC513 |
Notes
- ↑ Lang, Paul Henry (1996). George Frederic Handel. Courier Dover Publications. pp. 421–9. Retrieved 22 June 2011.
- ↑ Winton Dean, 'Hercules, "one of the greatest secular musical dramas in the English language",' in booklet accompanying RCA Victor records, Handel:Hercules (LSC 6181, 1968).
- 1 2 Dean 1968.
- ↑ von Rhein, John (6 March 2011). "Dream cast". Chicago Tribune. Chicago. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
- ↑ "Hercules". Handel & Hendrix in London. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
- ↑ "Hercules Study Guide" (PDF). Canadian Opera Company. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
- ↑ Blakeman, Edward. The Faber Pocket Guide to Handel. Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0571238316.
- 1 2 3 Lang, Paul Henry (2011). George Frederic Handel, revised edition 2011. Dover. ISBN 978-0486292274.
Sources
- Hercules by Stanley Sadie, in 'The New Grove Dictionary of Opera', ed. Stanley Sadie (London, 1992) ISBN 0-333-73432-7
- Complete Score of Hercules (ed. Friedrich Chrysander, Leipzig 1859) in English and German in PDF format from the IMSLP
External links
- Score of Hercules (ed. Friedrich Chrysander, Leipzig 1859) (in English and German)
- Libretto of "Hercules" hosted by Stanford University