PolyphèmePolyphème is an opera composed by Jean Cras with a libretto based on Albert Samain's 1902 verse play of the same name.[1] It was written by Cras during World War I and was premiered in Paris in 1922, giving Cras a burst of notoriety in the French press. The plot is based on the classical story of Acis and Galatea.[2] ContentText![]() The text originated as a poetic drama written by Samain in the style of Maurice Maeterlinck. The title character is Polyphemus, who, according to Greek mythology, is the eldest of the Cyclopes and son of Poseidon. It tells the well-known story of Polyphemus's attempt to steal Galatea from Acis. In the original myth, Polyphemus eventually rolls a rock onto the lovers, killing Acis. Samain humanizes Polyphemus, who is portrayed as an oafish but sincere figure who is at ease with children but becomes awkward when trying to communicate with adults. There is no suggestion that he is not fully human (the text clarifies that he has two eyes), but he is portrayed as a morose and solitary forest dweller who hopelessly yearns for love. Eventually he becomes aware of the feelings shared by the two lovers and, though he looms over them with a heavy boulder, decides not to crush them. Ultimately, the cyclops put his eyes out like Oedipus and wanders into the sea to find death because the couple's happiness together horrifies him. Composition![]() Cras encountered Samain's dramatic poem in 1910, ten years after its author's death. He adapted it by dividing it into four rather than the original two acts and slightly pruned the longer speeches.[3] He described the work as a "lyric tragedy" rather than an opera, since there is very little action.[4] The drama proceeds through a series of arcadian pastoral tableaus punctuated by Polyphème's long brooding soliloquies and his obsessive interrogations of Galatée's young brother Lycas. Cras completed the music in 1914, working on the orchestration while serving in the French navy during the Adriatic campaign of World War I. The music is impressionistic, restless, and highly chromatic, in the spirit of Chausson and Duparc. Polyphème's depression is marked by the use of diminished seventh chords and tortuous figures. The influence of Debussy's La mer and his opera Pelléas et Mélisande is also noticeable, especially in the use of whole-tone scales.[4] PremiereThe opera won the first Ville de Paris Prize in 1921, and was first performed at the Opéra-Comique in Paris in December 1922. It was conducted by Albert Wolff and directed by Albert Carré. It was revived in 1924. Roles
Plot
RecordingA recording of this opera was released in 2003, with Bramwell Tovey conducting the Luxembourg Philharmonic Orchestra and with Armand Arapian in the title role. It was released by Timpani Records on three CDs.[5] Notes
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