Céphale et Procris (Grétry)Céphale et Procris (Cephalus and Procris) is an opera by André Grétry with a French-language libretto by Jean-François Marmontel based on the Classical myth of Cephalus and Procris as told in Book Seven of Ovid's Metamorphoses. It takes the form of a ballet héroïque in three acts. It was first performed at the Palace of Versailles on 30 December 1773. Performance historyCéphale et Procris was first given at Versailles on 30 December 1773 as part of the royal wedding celebrations of the Comte d'Artois (the third grandson of King Louis XV) and Princess Maria Theresa of Savoy. It was not well received as the audience found the music too modern. It was revived at the Académie royale de musique (the Paris Opéra) on 2 May 1775, where it ran for 12 performances. Again, the reception was poor, with critics focussing on the inadequacies of Marmontel's libretto. A revival in May 1777 was more successful, with a total of 26 performances.[1] Music and librettoCéphale et Procris was part of a movement to introduce a more Italianate style of writing recitative, arias and ensembles into serious French opera. It thus has much in common with such contemporary works as Philidor's Ernelinde, princesse de Norvège (1767) and Gossec's Sabinus (1773), both of which were also played during the Comte d'Artois' wedding festivities.[2] Although Marmontel described the opera as a ballet héroïque, the musicologist Benoït Dratwicki writes that Céphale et Procris does not really fit the genre as conceived earlier in the 18th century. Rather, it is closer to tragédie lyrique and even contains elements which look forward to Romanticism.[3] Roles
SynopsisAct 1Scene: A forest Act 2Scene: Aurora's palace Act 3Scene: A desolate place in the middle of a forest RecordingsComplete opera
Ballet suite
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