The Noblewoman Vera Sheloga

The Noblewoman Vera Sheloga (Russian: Боярыня Вера Шелога, Boyarïnya Vera Sheloga) is an opera in one act by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. Rimsky-Korsakov wrote the libretto, which he based on the drama by Lev Alexandrovich Mey. The opera was composed in 1898 from material omitted from Rimsky-Korsakov's first opera, The Maid of Pskov (1873).[1]

The work was first performed in Moscow in 1898. It was later used as a prologue to The Maid of Pskov in a 1901 performance. [2]

Performance history

The premiere performance took place in Moscow on 27 December 1898 at the Solodovnikov Theater. As a one-act opera, it was first given in the US on 9 May 1922 in New York.[3]

Roles[4]

Role Voice type Premiere cast
Moscow, 27 December 1898
(Conductor: Iosif Truffi)
Boyar Ivan Semyonovich Sheloga basso Nikolay Mutin
Vera Dmitriyevna, his wife soprano Sofiya Gladkaya
Nadezhda Nasonova, Vera's sister mezzo-soprano Yevdokiya Stefanovich
Prince Yuriy Ivanovich Tokmakov baritone or bass Anton Bedlevich
Vlasyevna, Nadezhda's nurse contralto Varvara Strakhova

Synopsis

Place: Pskov, Russia
Time: 1555

Vera's husband has been away on a campaign. In the meantime, she has given birth to Olga.

She confesses to her unmarried sister, Nadezhda, of having been wooed by a man who passed through earlier (the man turns out to have been Ivan the Terrible), and that the baby is not her husband's.

As this conversation ends, Vera's husband finally returns, surprised by the presence of the baby. Upon his demand to know where the baby came from, Nadezhda saves her sister by claiming to be the mother.

Recordings

Audio Recordings (Mainly studio recordings)

Source: www.operadis-opera-discography.org.uk

References

Notes
  1. Abraham, Gerald (1986). "Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov". In Stanley Sadie. The New Grove: Russian Masters 2. New York: W.W. Norton & Company. p. 19. ISBN 0-393-30103-6.
  2. L. Macy (editor) (2007). "Boyarïnya Vera Sheloga". New Grove Dictionary of Opera / Grove Music Online. Retrieved 2007-06-07.
  3. Holden, p. 753
  4. Opera Glass, Source: Stanford University
Sources