The Fiery Angel (Prokofiev)
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Operas by Sergei Prokofiev |
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Maddalena (1913) |
The Fiery Angel (Russian: Огненный ангел — Ognenny angel in transliteration) is an opera in five acts by Sergei Prokofiev to a Russian libretto by the composer, based on the novel by Valery Bryusov.
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[edit] Background
Prokofiev had great trouble staging this opera. Numerous attempts to do so failed either because he did not meet deadlines or because the work's peculiar nature estranged people. For these reasons, the opera never premiered during the composer's lifetime. Disappointed by its failure but determined to preserve the fruits of his labor, Prokofiev recycled the music into his Symphony No. 3. Since his death the opera has had better luck, but is still not widely performed.
[edit] Synopsis
The full title of Bryusov's novel gives a good idea of the substance of the opera:
- The Fiery Angel; or, a True Story in which is related of the Devil, not once but often appearing in the Image of a Spirit of Light to a Maiden and seducing her to Various and Many Sinful Deeds, of Ungodly Practices of Magic, Alchymy, Astrology, the Cabalistical Sciences and Necromancy, of the Trial of the Said Maiden under the Presidency of His Eminence the Archbishop of Trier, as well as of Encounters and Discourses with the Knight and thrice Doctor Agrippa of Nettesheim, and with Doctor Faustus, composed by an Eyewitness.
Set in sixteenth-century Germany, the story concerns a young woman named Renata who has fallen in love with a "fiery angel" whom she believes appeared to her during her childhood. She later identifies the "angel" with one Count Heinrich, who takes her as his mistress but then abandons her. She enlists the knight-errant Ruprecht in her efforts to track down her "angel". Though she believes her motives are holy, the presence of Faust, Mephistopheles and assorted demons in the story suggests otherwise. Her obsessive quest leads her and the loyal, lovestruck Ruprecht deep into the realms of the occult. After many bizarre adventures, Ruprecht emerges unscathed, but Renata is condemned by the Inquisition to a fiery death at the stake.
[edit] Analysis
The opera treats the dark arts in a largely sarcastic and humorous manner. The music is dark and imposing, and the singing, especially that of Renata, is chillingly histrionic.
[edit] Premiere
25 November 1954, Théâtre des Champs-Elysées, Paris.
[edit] Recordings
There are only three recordings of the Fiery Angel in existence. The most recent two are conducted by Prokofiev specialist Neeme Järvi with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra and Valery Gergiev, who has recorded a wide array of Russian operas with the Kirov Opera.