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8 - The Unstoppable March of Time: Carmen, and New Orleans in Transition

from Part II - Across Frontiers

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2020

Richard Langham Smith
Affiliation:
Royal College of Music, London
Clair Rowden
Affiliation:
Cardiff University
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Summary

This chapter explores the early performance history and reception of Carmen in New Orleans following its premiere in the city on 17 December 1879. While New Orleans had for long time been home to a resident French opera troupe – indeed, for a period of some thirty years, this was the only permanent opera company in North America – Carmen’s premiere there was given as part of a season mounted by a visiting Italian opera company, under the direction of Max Strakosch. Using local critics’ reflections on change and progress as a starting point, this chapter argues that Carmen’s somewhat cursory initial reception in New Orleans (followed by its swift adoption on the city’s stages in various forms) yields insights into both specifically local conditions and processes of operatic globalisation in the period. Their assessments of Carmen, set alongside other documents such as programme booklets, reveal a rupture with New Orleans’s operatic past in the post-Civil War period, and at the same time reflect fundamental changes in the broader operatic culture of the United States, as well as the wider internationalism of operatic performance in the late nineteenth century.

Type
Chapter
Information
Carmen Abroad
Bizet's Opera on the Global Stage
, pp. 130 - 142
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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References

Archives

Gideon Steiner French Opera House Scrapbooks, 1856–1919, volume II, Louisiana Research Collection, Tulane University, Manuscript 941.

Newspapers and Periodical Literature

L’Abeille

The Daily Picayune

The New York Times

General Bibliography

Belsom, Jack. ‘En route to stardom: Adelina Patti at the French Opera House, New Orleans, 1860–1861’. Opera Quarterly, 10(3), 1994, 113–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Belsom, Jack‘Reception of major operatic premieres in New Orleans during the nineteenth century’, MA dissertation. Baton Rouge, LA, Louisiana State University, 1972.Google Scholar
Bentley, Charlotte. ‘The race for Robert and other rivalries: Negotiating the local and (inter)national in nineteenth-century New Orleans’. Cambridge Opera Journal, 29(1), 2017, 94112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bentley, Charlotte‘Resituating transatlantic opera: The case of the Théâtre d’Orléans, New Orleans, 1819–1859’, PhD dissertation. Cambridge, University of Cambridge, 2017.Google Scholar
Hogue, James Keith. Uncivil War: Five New Orleans Street Battles and the Rise and Fall of Radical Reconstruction. Baton Rouge, LA, Louisiana State University Press, 2006.Google Scholar
Kendall, John S.Patti in New Orleans’. Southwest Review, 16(4), 1931, 460–8.Google Scholar
Kmen, Henry. Music in New Orleans: The Formative Years, 1791–1841. Baton Rouge, LA, Louisiana State University Press, 1966.Google Scholar
Preston, Katherine K. Opera on the Road: Traveling Opera Troupes in the United States, 1835–60. Urbana, Il, University of Illinois Press, 1993.Google Scholar
Ross, Michael Anthony. The Great New Orleans Kidnapping Case: Race, Law, and Justice in the Reconstruction Era. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2015.Google Scholar

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