Ariane (Massenet)

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Operas by Jules Massenet

La grand'tante (1867)
Don César de Bazan (1872)
Le roi de Lahore (1877)
Hérodiade (1881)
Manon (1884)
Le Cid (1885)
Esclarmonde (1889)
Le mage (1891)
Werther (1892)
Thaïs (1894)
Le portrait de Manon (1894)
La Navarraise (1894)
Sapho (1897)
Cendrillon (1899)
Grisélidis (1901)
Le jongleur de Notre-Dame (1902)
Chérubin (1903)
Ariane (1906)
Thérèse (1907)
Bacchus (1909)
Don Quichotte (1910)
Roma (1912)
Panurge (1913)
Cléopâtre (1914)
Amadis (1922)

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Ariane is an opera in five acts by Jules Massenet to a French libretto by Catulle Mendès after Greek mythology. It was first performed at the Palais Garnier in Paris on October 31, 1906, with Lucienne Bréval in the title role.

[edit] History

Although not a proper sequel, as Ariane dies in both pieces, Massenet's later opera, Bacchus is a companion to Ariane, containing a number of common characters and the same librettist. Ariane has never maintained popularity and belongs to Massenet's later works that were considered outmoded for their date of composition. The piece did, however, inspire this quote from the great French composer Gabriel Fauré: "Ariane, a noble, great and moving work..."

[edit] Synopsis

The story is based on the mythology surrounding Theseus and the sisters Ariane and Phèdre. The two sisters are both in love with Theseus, yet he chooses Phèdre over Ariane. When Phèdre is killed by the toppled statue of Adonis, Ariane travels to the underworld to beg Perséphone for her sister's resurrection. Softened by Ariane's offering of roses, Perséphone complies and Phèdre returns to earth. Theseus is then made to choose among the sisters again and once more chooses Phèdre, abandoning Ariane on the banks of Naxos. Distraught, she is lured into the sea by the voices of the beckoning sirens.

[edit] References