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Naturalism and supernaturalism in Alfred Bruneau' Le Rêve

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 August 2008

Extract

‘If forced to choose, I would prefer Monsieur Zola widi wings than Monsieur Zola on all fours.’ So groused Anatole France about the apparent new turn in Emile Zola's great Rougon-Macquart cycle taken by die publication of Le Rêve in 1888. Because the gritty surface of La Bête humaine (1890) followed closely upon the delicate folds of Le Rêve, France's critical quandary was soon resolved. Yet ever since the publication of Le Rêve even critics much more congenial to Zola than France have remarked upon the unusual place in die Rougon-Macquart of this tale about a virginal heroine set adrift in the small provincial town of Beaumont.

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Articles
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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1999

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References

1 Review in Le Temps, 21 October 1888, cited in the critical notes by Mitterand, Henri for the Bibliothèque de la Pléiade edition of Le Rêve, Les Rougon-Macquart IV (Paris, 1966), 1654.Google Scholar

2 Extract from Zola's sketches, Les Rougon-Macquart, IV, 1627.Google Scholar

3 Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays (Princeton, 1957), 136–40.Google Scholar

4 The major study is Ripoll, Roger, Réalité et mythe chez Zola (Paris, 1981).Google Scholar

5 Frye, , Anatomy of Criticism (see n. 3), 136–7.Google Scholar

6 Zola's involvement was recorded by Philippine Bruneau in her fragmentary unpublished memoirs (Bibliothèque Nationale, Mus. Mme Bruneau, l.a.s. 5). Jean-Max, Guieu gives a brief account of the genesis of Le Rêve in Le Thêâtre lyrique d'Emile Zola, (Paris, 1983), 3945,Google Scholar and Bilodeau, Louis adds some facts and additional perspective in ‘Le Rêve: des Rougon-Macquart à la scène lyrique’, Les Cahiers naturalistes, 43 (1997), 239–50.Google Scholar See also Bruneau's memoir of his friendship with Zola, A I'Ombre d'un grand cœur: souvenirs d'une collaboration (Paris, 1932; reprint, Geneva, 1980), 1738.Google Scholar

7 For a review of these issues with reference to L'Attaque du moulin see Huebner, Steven, French Opera at the Fin de Siècle: Wagnerism, Nationalism, and Style (Oxford, 1999), 410–23.Google Scholar

8 Carolyn Abbate describes music that is not manifesdy ‘real’ as the ‘operatic body’ in Unsung Voices: Opera and Musical Narrative in the Nineteenth Century (Princeton, 1991);Google Scholar the normative ‘deafness’ of operatic characters to music is vital to her brilliant argument about a counterpoint of voices, some truthful, others not, in the work of Wagner and others. For the purposes of the present essay, the construct of ‘real music’ is all that really matters, but my own point of view, which I share with Kivy, Peter (‘Opera Talk: A Philosophical “Phantasie”’, this journal, 3 (1991), 6377) is that even within the ‘operatic body’ characters cannot be deaf to pitch configurations or phrases, just as characters in a play would have to acknowledge that they are emitting words and sentences. Put another way: characters in spoken drama also move in and out of ‘performative’ situations … without abandoning verbal discourse (‘Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears’ versus, say, ‘Et tu, Brute?’).Google Scholar Appropriate to the extravagance of the genre (Lindenberger's, Herbert term, Opera the Extravagant Art (Ithaca, 1984)), it seems to me that operatic characters modulate between a mode of communication that one might describe as ‘(extravagandy) heightened lyrical discourse’ (ultimately inseparable from narrative and atmospheric frames, but also sometimes in counterpoint with them) and ‘real’ or ‘explicit’ song where stage characters either assume a self-conscious stance as performers or listeners, or where the reality of the music is in some other way unavoidable.Google Scholar

9 Bruneau, Alfred, ‘Rapport sur la musique en France du XIIIe au XXe siède’, La Musique française (Paris, 1901), 910.Google Scholar

10 Tribute by Alfred Bruneau to Gustave Charpentier and his opera Louise, cited by Delilia, Alfred, ‘La 50me de Louise’, Le Figaro, 28 July 1900.Google Scholar

11 Bruneau was preceded in this by François-Joseph, Fétis who called Le Jeu de Robin et de Marion ‘le plus ancien opera-comique qui existe’. ‘Adam de la Hale’ (sic), Biographie universelle des musiciens, 2nd edn, I (Paris, 1868), 13.Google Scholar

12 See my Between Anarchism and the Box-Office: Gustave Charpentier's Louise’, 19th-century Music, 19 (1995/6), 135–60,Google Scholar as well Fulcher, Jane, ‘Charpentier's Operatic “Roman musical” as Read in the Wake of the Dreyfus Affair‘, 19th-century Music, 16 (1992/3), 161–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

13 Reprinted as ‘L'Opéra-Comique’, in Les Ecrits de Paul Dukas sur la musique (Paris, 1948), 422–7.Google Scholar

14 Ibid., 426.

15 Review of Messidor, Le Petit Journal, 19 February 1897. On the costumes of Messidor.Google Scholar see the fine discussion by Guieu, Jean-Max, Le Théâtre Lyrique d'Emile Zola (see n. 6), 92–3.Google Scholar

16 For an example of Bruneau's negative assessment of verismo see ‘La Tendance moderne du gout musical’, in Musiques de Russie et musiciens de France (Paris, 1903), 271;Google Scholar his negative review of the Opéra-Comique production of Fervaal is reprinted in his Musiques d'hier et de demain (Paris, 1900), 156–66.Google Scholar He further elaborated on the generic inappropriateness of Fervaal to the Opéra-Comique in the article ‘L’Emminement français’, reprinted in Musiques d'hier et de demain, 180–7.Google Scholar

17 Review of the Louise première, reprinted in La Musique française (see n. 9) 153.Google Scholar

18 Reviews of Fervaal by ‘Dom Blasius’ in L'Intransigeant, 12 September 1898,Google Scholar and Le Borne, Fernand in Le Monde artiste, 15 May 1898. The — perhaps minimal — part played by Dreyfus affair politics in Albert Carré's acceptance of Fervaal early in his tenure as director of the Opéra-Comique remains to be explicated: like d'Indy, Carré was openly anri-Dreyfusard just as l'affaire exploded around Zola's J'Accuse after 13 January 1898. Carré assumed the directorship on the very same day.Google Scholar

19 Musiques d'hier et de demain (see n. 16), 160–1.Google Scholar

20 ‘Livrets d'opéra’, reprinted in Musiques de Russie et musiciens de France (see n. 16), 113.Google Scholar

21 Le Drame lyrique’, Le Journal, 22 11 1893.Google Scholar

22 Bruneau described a narrative role for the orchestra in his own essay ‘Le Drame lyrique francais’: [Drame lyrique] requires that the role of the orchestra be no longer passive, but active, [and] that symphonic textures, working together with the vocal line, take part in the drama, comment on the feelings of the characters in this drama, explain their souls, and create an appropriate atmosphere for them. Musiques d'hier et de demain (see n. 16), 112.Google Scholar

23 In his review of d'Inddy's L'Etranger Debussy remarked that although d'Indy seemed to have liberated himself from some Wagnerisms, ‘would that he had freed himself completely from the need to explain everything, to underline, which sometimes weighs down the most beautiful scenes of L'Etranger.’ Monsieur Croche et autres écrits, ed. Lesure, Francois (Paris, 1971), 69.Google Scholar

24 See her ‘Opera and Verismo: Regressive Points of View and the Artifice of Alienation’, this journal, 5 (1993), 3953.Google Scholar

25 L'Ecbo de Paris, 7 June 1891.Google Scholar

26 Reprinted in La Musique française (see n. 9), 207.Google Scholar

27 Le Figaro, 16 June 1891.Google Scholar

28 See her ‘Debussy's Phantom Sounds’, this journal, 10 (1998), 6796.Google Scholar

29 Le Rêve, Les Rougon-Macquart, IV (see n. 1), 869.Google Scholar

30 Citation from Zola's dossier, Les Rougon-Macquart, IV 1661.Google Scholar

31 Abbate makes this and similar points in the third and fourth chapters of Unsung Voices (see n. 8).Google Scholar

32 Le Rêve (see n.1), 871.Google Scholar

33 For a different point of view see Kelkel, Manfred, Naturalisme, vérisme et réalisme dans l'opéra de 1890 à 1930 (Paris, 1984), 303.Google Scholar

34 The discrepancy did not go unnoticed by Bruneau's contemporaries. The d'Indyian critic Gauthier-Villars, Henry wrote of ‘many liturgical chants ingeniously employed: Ave verum, Pange lingua, Laudate pueri Dominum and even a well-known carol les Anges dans les [sic] campagnes, which Monsieur Bruneau has sung during the Corpus Christi procession — I don't know why — accompanied by a drum.‘ Review of Le Rêve, L'Echo de Paris, 29 September 1900.Google Scholar

35 In ‘A Propos du “Rêve”: Chez M. Zola’, Revue et gazette des théâtres, 5 07 1891.Google Scholar

36 Review of Le Rêve, La Liberté, 22 June 1891.Google Scholar

37 A l'Ombre d'un grand cœur (see n. 6), 32.Google Scholar

38 On this point see Kelkel, , Naturalisme, vérisme et réalisme (see n. 33), 98–9.Google Scholar

39 Ibid., 304.

40 Le Rêve (see n. 1), 868.Google Scholar

41 Le Rêve (see n. 1), 994.Google Scholar

42 Musiques d'hier et de demain (see n. 16), 120.Google Scholar

43 Ibid., 165.

44 Letter of 20 June 1891 to Charles Lecocq in Chabrier, Emmanuel, Comspondance, ed. Delage, R., Durif, F. and Bodin, T. (Paris, 1994), 897.Google Scholar

45 Guieu, Jean-Max, Le Théâtre lyrique d'Emile Zola (see n. 6), 96.Google Scholar

46 ‘Ulysse Revealed’, forthcoming in Regarding Fauré, ed. Gordon, Tom.Google Scholar

47 Unsung Voices (see n. 8), 118.Google Scholar

48 Letter of 6 February 1900 to Pierre Louÿs, in Debussy, Claude, Correspondance, ed. Lesure, F. (Paris, 1993), 156.Google Scholar