Archbishop's Theater 2 July 2020 - The Golden Cockerel | GoComGo.com

The Golden Cockerel

Archbishop's Theater, Aix-en-Provence, France
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10 PM
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Important Info
Type: Opera
City: Aix-en-Provence, France
Starts at: 22:00
Acts: 3
Duration:
Sung in: Russian
Titles in: English,French

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Overview

"The story is false, but in it lies a lesson for inward eyes."

Alexander Pushkin: The Golden Cockerel, 1834

“Cockle-doo, cockle-doodle-doo! You can sleep peacefully!” Through this clarion call, a golden cockerel, given by an astrologer-magician, calms Tsar Dodon: the borders of his kingdom are not in danger. “Cockle-doo, cockle-doodle-doo! Watch out! Wake up!” This time, the bird announces an invader, forcing the ruler to go to war… and fall into the arms of an enticing stranger. Picking up on the irony inherent in Pushkin’s tale, Rimsky-Korsakov constructs his last opera as a satire aimed against the tsarist regime. He does so by deploying all the pop of a resplendent orchestra, invigorating choruses, heady melodies, and exotic harmonies. Moreover, stage director Barrie Kosky recognizes in this fascinating fable the memory of Shakespeare and a sense of the Theatre of the Absurd, and creates a fantastical parade-like production that is entertaining even in its despair.

NEW PRODUCTION OF THE FESTIVAL D’AIX-EN-PROVENCE
A COPRODUCTION WITH OPÉRA NATIONAL DE LYON, ADELAIDE FESTIVAL, KOMISCHE OPER BERLIN

WITH THE SUPPORT OF MADAME ALINE FORIEL-DESTEZET, GRANDE DONATRICE EXCLUSIVE DU THÉÂTRE DE L’ARCHEVÊCHÉ

SCORE'S PUBLISHER: ROB. FORBERG MUSIKVERLAG GMBH, BERLIN

History
Premiere of this production: 07 October 1909, Solodovnikov Theatre , Moscow, Russia

The Golden Cockerel is an opera in three acts, with short prologue and even shorter epilogue, composed by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. Its libretto written by Vladimir Belsky derives from Alexander Pushkin's 1834 poem The Tale of the Golden Cockerel. The opera was completed in 1907 and premiered in 1909 in Moscow, after the composer's death. Outside Russia it has often been performed in French as Le coq d'or.

Synopsis

Time: Unspecified
Place: In the thrice-tenth tsardom, a far off place (beyond thrice-nine lands) in Russian folklore
Note: There is an actual city of Shemakha (also spelled "Şamaxı", "Schemacha" and "Shamakhy"), which is the capital of the Shamakhi Rayon of Azerbaijan. In Pushkin's day it was an important city and capital of what was to become the Baku Governorate. But the realm of that name, ruled by its tsaritsa, bears little resemblance to today's Shemakha and region; Pushkin likely seized the name for convenience, to conjure an exotic monarchy.

Prologue
After quotation by the orchestra of the most important leitmotifs, a mysterious Astrologer comes before the curtain and announces to the audience that, although they are going to see and hear a fictional tale from long ago, his story will have a valid and true moral.

Act 1
The bumbling Tsar Dodon talks himself into believing that his country is in danger from a neighbouring state, Shemakha, ruled by a beautiful Tsaritsa. He requests advice of the Astrologer, who supplies a magic Golden Cockerel to safeguard the Tsar's interests. When the little cockerel confirms that the Tsaritsa of Shemakha does harbor territorial ambitions, Dodon decides to preemptively strike Shemakha, sending his army to battle under the command of his two sons.

Act 2
However, his sons are both so inept that they manage to kill each other on the battlefield. Tsar Dodon then decides to lead the army himself, but further bloodshed is averted because the Golden Cockerel ensures that the old Tsar becomes besotted when he actually sees the beautiful Tsaritsa. The Tsaritsa herself encourages this situation by performing a seductive dance – which tempts the Tsar to try and partner her, but he is clumsy and makes a complete mess of it. The Tsaritsa realises that she can take over Dodon’s country without further fighting – she engineers a marriage proposal from Dodon, which she coyly accepts.

Act 3
The Final Scene starts with the wedding procession in all its splendour. As this reaches its conclusion, the Astrologer appears and says to Dodon, “You promised me anything I could ask for if there could be a happy resolution of your troubles ... .” “Yes, yes,” replies the Tsar, “just name it and you shall have it.” “Right,” says the Astrologer, “I want the Tsaritsa of Shemakha!” At this, the Tsar flares up in fury, and strikes down the Astrologer with a blow from his mace. The Golden Cockerel, loyal to his Astrologer master, then swoops across and pecks through the Tsar’s jugular. The sky darkens. When light returns, the Tsaritsa and the little cockerel are gone.

Epilogue
The Astrologer comes again before the curtain and announces the end of his story, reminding the public that what they just saw was “merely illusion,” that only he and the Tsaritsa were mortals and real.

Venue Info

Archbishop's Theater - Aix-en-Provence
Location   26 Rue Gaston de Saporta

With its main staircase, its medieval vaults and its 17th century wings closing in an almost square space, the courtyard of the Old Archbishopric is a flagship of Aix's heritage, one of the most evocative of the old city's past. Transformed into a theater one evening in 1948, it has become the emblematic location of the Aix-en-Provence Festival.

The latest developments, carried out in 1998, enhanced the facades and allow a privileged relationship between stage and audience. Every summer, the Théâtre de l'Archevêché exudes a magical atmosphere, that of "Don Juan aux étoiles" evoked by Francois Mauriac.

Important Info
Type: Opera
City: Aix-en-Provence, France
Starts at: 22:00
Acts: 3
Duration:
Sung in: Russian
Titles in: English,French
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