Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Preface
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Note on the text
- Note on sources
- 1 The Rival Queens 1726–1728
- 2 Alessandro
- 3 Admeto, Re di Tessaglia
- 4 Riccardo Primo, Re d’Inghilterra
- 5 Siroe, Re di Persia
- 6 Tolomeo, Re di Egitto
- 7 The ‘Second Academy’ 1729–1734
- 8 Lotario
- 9 Partenope
- 10 Poro, Re dell’Indie
- 11 Ezio
- 12 Sosarme, Re di Media
- 13 Orlando
- 14 Arianna in Creta
- 15 Covent Garden 1734–1737
- 16 Ariodante
- 17 Alcina
- 18 Atalanta
- 19 Arminio
- 20 Giustino
- 21 Berenice, Regina di Egitto
- 22 The Last Operas 1738–1741
- 23 Faramondo
- 24 Serse
- 25 Imeneo
- 26 Deidamia
- Epilogue 1 From Oratorio to Opera
- Epilogue 2 andel’s Operas on the Modern Stage
- Appendix A Structural Analysis
- Appendix B Instrumentation
- Appendix C Performances during Handel’s Life
- Appendix D Borrowings
- Appendix E Modern Stage Productions to end of 2005
- Select Bibliography
- Index of Handel’s Works
- General Index
Epilogue 2 - andel’s Operas on the Modern Stage
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Preface
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Note on the text
- Note on sources
- 1 The Rival Queens 1726–1728
- 2 Alessandro
- 3 Admeto, Re di Tessaglia
- 4 Riccardo Primo, Re d’Inghilterra
- 5 Siroe, Re di Persia
- 6 Tolomeo, Re di Egitto
- 7 The ‘Second Academy’ 1729–1734
- 8 Lotario
- 9 Partenope
- 10 Poro, Re dell’Indie
- 11 Ezio
- 12 Sosarme, Re di Media
- 13 Orlando
- 14 Arianna in Creta
- 15 Covent Garden 1734–1737
- 16 Ariodante
- 17 Alcina
- 18 Atalanta
- 19 Arminio
- 20 Giustino
- 21 Berenice, Regina di Egitto
- 22 The Last Operas 1738–1741
- 23 Faramondo
- 24 Serse
- 25 Imeneo
- 26 Deidamia
- Epilogue 1 From Oratorio to Opera
- Epilogue 2 andel’s Operas on the Modern Stage
- Appendix A Structural Analysis
- Appendix B Instrumentation
- Appendix C Performances during Handel’s Life
- Appendix D Borrowings
- Appendix E Modern Stage Productions to end of 2005
- Select Bibliography
- Index of Handel’s Works
- General Index
Summary
THE revival of Handel's operas in the modern theatre, after not one of them had been performed anywhere between 1754, when Handel was still living, and 1920, has been among the most remarkable phenomena in the history of the art. Moreover the movement is still expanding at what one might liken to compound interest. But it is not a straightforward story, and not all its implications are fully understood. There were hurdles, both musical and dramatic, to be surmounted. The art had moved from opera seria to Gesamtkunstwerk, leaving a huge gap to be bridged by public taste. Looking back, one must conclude that the movement got off on the wrong foot, and has not always retained its balance since. In 1920 a shaky start was inevitable. When in that year Oskar Hagen and his colleagues at Gottingen set the ball rolling with their production of Rodelinda, followed soon after by Ottone, Giulio Cesare and Serse, their achievement could be likened to Samuel Johnson's comparison of a woman preaching to a dog walking on his hinder legs: it was not done well, but you are surprised to find it done at all. An idiom based on the solo singer, the da capo aria, secco recitatives, castrato heroes and an almost total absence of ensembles was the absolute antithesis of the current fashion for huge orchestras, rich post-Romantic harmony and plots heavy with symbolism as exemplified by Wagner's successors and the operas of Strauss, Pfitzner and Schreker.
It is hardly surprising that Hagen virtually rewrote Handel's operas, rescoring them (recitatives included) for a massive orchestra, making devastating cuts, chopping up every aria by shortening ritornellos and abolishing da capos, rewriting stage directions wholesale, dragging in music from elsewhere, and transposing all high male parts down an octave, seemingly from a distaste for the unnatural and unmanly voice of the castrato. These versions were immensely popular in Germany and produced in dozens of cities over the next few years. A pattern was set, and arrangements of further operas by different companies soon followed.
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- Handel's Operas, 1726-1741 , pp. 487 - 492Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2006