The Cunning Little Vixen

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Operas by Leoš Janáček

Šárka (1887)
The Beginning of a Romance (1894)
Jenůfa (1904)
Osud (1907)
The Excursions of Mr. Brouček (1920)
Káťa Kabanová (1921)
The Cunning Little Vixen (1924)
The Makropulos Affair (1926)
From the House of the Dead (1930)

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The Cunning Little Vixen (Czech: Příhody Lišky Bystroušky, lit. The Adventures of Vixen Sharp-Ears) is an opera by Leoš Janáček, with a libretto adapted by the composer from a serialized novella (daily comic) by Rudolf Těsnohlídek, which was first published in newspaper Lidové noviny.

When Janáček discovered Těsnohlídek's comic-strip and decided to turn it into an opera, he began work by meeting with the author and beginning a study of animals. With this understanding of the characters involved, his own 70 years of life experience, and an undying, unrequited love for the much younger, married Kamila Stösslová, he began work on the opera. Writing his own libretto, he transformed himself into the forester, and Kamila into the vixen and Terynka. He also transformed the originally comedic cartoon into a philosophical reflection on the cycle of life and death by including the death of the vixen. As with other operas by older composers, this late opera shows a deep understanding of life leading to a return to simplicity.

It was given its premiere performance on 6 November 1924 in Brno conducted František Neumann, with Ota Zítek as director and Eduard Milén as stage desinger.

Contents

[edit] Roles

Role Voice type Premiere Cast, 6 November 1924
(Conductor: František Neumann)
Badger bass
Bystrouska,the vixen soprano
Chocholka, the hen soprano
Cock soprano
Cricket child soprano
Forester baritone
Frantik soprano
Frog child soprano
Gamekeeper baritone
Gamekeeper's wife contralto
Grasshoper child soprano
Harasta bass
Jay soprano
Lapak the dog mezzo-soprano
Midge child soprano
Mosquito tenor
Mrs. Paskova soprano
Owl contralto
Pasek tenor
Pepik soprano
Priest bass
Schoolmaster tenor
Woodpecker contralto
Young Bystrouska child soprano
Zlatohrbitek, the fox soprano

[edit] Synopsis

[edit] Act 1

In the forest, the animals and insects are playing and dancing around. The forester enters and lies down against a tree for a nap. The Vixen, in baby form (usually sung by a young girl), inquisitively chases a frog right into the lap of the surprised forester who forcibly takes her home as a pet. Time passes (in the form of an orchestral interlude) and we see the Vixen, now grown (to full size soprano), tied up in the forester's yard with the conservative old dachshund. Fed up with life in confinement, the vixen chews through her rope, attacks the chickens, and hops the fence to freedom.

[edit] Act 2

The vixen takes over a badger's home and kicks him out. In the inn, the pastor, forester, teacher and schoolmaster drink and talk about their mutual infatuation with the gypsy girl Terynka. The drunken schoolmaster leaves the inn and mistakes a sunflower that the vixen is hiding behind for Terynka and confesses his devotion to her. The forester, also on his way home, sees the vixen and fires two shots at her, sending her running. Later, the vixen, coming into her womanhood, meets a charming boy fox, and they retire to the badger's home. An unexpected pregnancy and a forest full of gossipy creatures necessitate their marriage, which rounds out the act.

[edit] Act 3

The poacher Harasta is engaged to Terynka and is out hunting in preparation for their marriage. He sets a fox trap, which the numerous vixen cubs mock. Harasta, watching from a distance, shoots and kills the vixen, sending her children running. At Harasta's wedding, the forester sees the vixen's fur, which Harasta gave to Terynka as a wedding present, and flees to the forest to reflect. He returns to the place where he met the vixen, and sits at the tree grieving the loss of both the vixen and Terynka. His grief grows until, just as in the beginning of the opera, a baby vixen unexpectedly jumps in his lap. This reassurance of the cycle of death leading to new life gives his heart a deep peace.

[edit] Music

This is Janáček's lightest opera, and, despite the titular vixen's death at the end of the work, it stands in contrast to the often brutally serious nature of operas such as Jenůfa and Káťa Kabanová. In The Cunning Little Vixen, the composer moved away from the more conversational style of previous and subsequent operas in favor of a more folk-like style, and wove into its fabric some of his most experimental opera concepts (ballet, mime, and orchestral interludes).

At Janáček's request, the final scene from The Cunning Little Vixen was performed at his funeral in 1928.

[edit] Recordings

  • The Cunning Little Vixen: Prague National Theatre Chorus and Orchestra/Bohumil Gregor (Supraphon SU 3071-2612)

[edit] Films

In 2003, an animated version was produced by the BBC[1].

[edit] References

  1. ^ At IMDb: The Cunning Little Vixen (2003)

[edit] Sources