Die Kinder der Heide
Die Kinder der Heide (The Children of the Moorland) is a four-act opera by Anton Rubinstein, to a libretto by Salomon Mosenthal, based on a verse novel by the Hungarian poet Carl Beck.
Background
[edit]Whilst working on the opera in 1859, Rubinstein wrote to a friend:
I have absolutely no luck with opera texts. I have wasted a lot of time and money and everything has been unusable.[...] I am hoping that with my present attempt, I shall have more luck, and then the world will have something novel in store![1]
He also told Franz Liszt that he hoped to have the opera premiered in Vienna, where in fact it was eventually produced in 1861 - most of the opera was written in Dornbach, not far from the capital.[2] The opera's first performance in Russia was in 1867.
Roles
[edit]Role | Voice type | Premiere Cast, 23 February 1861, Kärntnertor Theatre, Vienna |
---|---|---|
Count Waldemar | tenor | Gustav Walter |
Conrad, an innkeeper | baritone | Hrabanek |
Maria, his daughter | soprano | Gabrielle Krauss |
Wania, a herdsman | tenor | Aloys Ander |
Isbrana, a gypsy | mezzo-soprano | Csillag |
Gypsies, villagers, soldiers, etc |
Synopsis
[edit]The location is a Hungarian village.
Act 1
[edit]Wania is Isbrania's lover; she tells him of a planned robbery of Conrad's inn, which Wania foils. Conrad offers him as a reward his daughter Maria in marriage.
Act 2
[edit]Maria confesses to her father that she is in love with a mystery man, who turns out to be Count Waldemar. Waldemar and Isbrana conspire to interrupt the marriage ceremony.
Act 3
[edit]Finding Maria with the Count, Wania fights and kills him. He is helped to escape by Isbrana and the gypsies.
Act 4
[edit]In a forest hideout, Wania is visited by the grieving Conrad and Maria, who has gone mad. Wania prevents the gypsies from robbing them as they depart. Soldiers arrive to arrest Wania; when he refuses to escape with Isbrania she stabs herself and dies.
Notes
[edit]Sources
[edit]- Philip S. Taylor, Anton Rubinstein: A life in music, Indianapolis, 2007