Scant scholarly attention has been paid to the relationship between the musical circles of Russia and Western Europe in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Some general instances of international connections have received coverage, such as the introduction of Italian opera at the Russian court in the mid-eighteenth century, or the activity of Venetian composer Catterino Cavos in St Petersburg in the early nineteenth century.Footnote 1 However, the exact mechanisms behind these early links remain far from fully understood. The reason, in part, is the lack of available evidence. What is more, scholarship is still paying the price of the anti-monarchist bias of Soviet and Soviet-orientated researchers of the twentieth century. To be sure, some studies have been carried out on the mobility of musicians between Russia and the West. Jan Kusber, Matthias Schnettger and Maria Di Salvo, for instance, have explored the career of the castrato Filippo Balatri in Russia;Footnote 2 Mark Ferraguto and Maria Petrova have conducted research on the role of diplomacy in musical exchanges between Vienna and the empire of Catherine the Great;Footnote 3 Marina Ritzarev and Anna Porfir'yeva have tackled the issue of the migration of celebrated Italian musicians to Russia, a topic that is also among my research interests.Footnote 4 The crucial role played by aristocrats and their personal connections, however, remains to be explored in detail. Furthermore, none of these publications delve into the theatrical activities that these figures stimulated outside Russia's main cities.
The tradition of inviting foreign singers and composers to Russia was established during the reign of Anna Ioannovna (ruled 1730–40), when the first permanent Italian opera troupe was founded in St Petersburg under the direction of Francesco Araja (1709–c. 1770). The Russian Imperial Theatres, which constituted the core of operatic life in the two main Russian cities, developed out of this Italianskaya kampaniya and gradually curated a network of connections that facilitated the hiring of (pre-eminently) foreign artists. The process behind the hiring of these individuals is far from fully understood: what we do know is that in the eighteenth century and well into the nineteenth, artists were often personally connected with distinguished figures, such as diplomats or members of the royal family. The reconstruction of these personal relationships and their concrete consequences for the movement of music and musicians depends on archival work, based on material often dispersed across improbable locations. The task becomes doubly complicated when considering theatrical activity beyond the main centres of Moscow and St Petersburg.
This article seeks to understand how these relationships functioned and how they affected the flow of personnel and repertoire, by investigating the international connections of three significant figures in the political and cultural milieus of the Russian Empire: Count Nikolay Petrovich Sheremetev (1751–1809), Prince Nikolay Borisovich Yusupov (1726–1831) and the Grand Duke Pavel Petrovich Romanov – the future Tsar Paul I (1754–1801). As was typical of European aristocrats, these noblemen were involved in musical and theatrical activities, and each of them held positions in politics, diplomacy and foreign affairs, which allowed them to establish contacts with numerous individuals abroad. As it turns out, moreover, all three established important operatic contacts during their grand tours in Western Europe in the 1770s and 1780s. The significance of this kind of early tourism for cultural imports into Russia has mainly been studied in relation to the visual arts.Footnote 5 While the tour of Pavel Petrovich has attracted the interest of music historians, it has not yet been examined as an occasion for establishing relations with professionals and ‘agents’ in music.Footnote 6 As I hope to show, the contacts established during these tours had a notable effect on subsequent operatic activity in Russia.
Sheremetev, a noted patron of theatre, will serve as the article's central case study. His example is exceptional due to his efforts to stage serious French opera, and for the level of detail in which his activities can be reconstructed. His story, what is more, serves to illustrate the importance of private estate theatres in the circulation of foreign personnel and repertoire. The cases of Yusupov and Pavel Petrovich, while similar and related in various ways, complement this picture by revealing that tours and diplomatic activity abroad also generated contacts that brought performers of Italian opera to stages in the Russian capital. Rather than a comprehensive picture, these three case studies offer a series of illustrative glimpses into Russia's entanglement in international cultural networks around 1800. A full reconstruction is still far from being complete, but the elements considered will produce evidence of the connections existing within the Russian Empire, and between the Empire and the rest of Europe.
Nikolay Petrovich Sheremetev and His Theatres
Count Nikolay Petrovich Sheremetev was a descendant of a family of military leaders and diplomatic functionaries and took on numerous high-level positions in his lifetime, including a seat in the Senate from 1795.Footnote 7 He also owned several theatres, as was consistent with the Russian aristocracy's tradition of establishing theatrical activities in their provincial estates (the usad'ba).Footnote 8 Russian historians have recorded instances of private stages from the age of Peter the Great, most of them in Moscow and the surrounding areas. Under Catherine the Great (ruled 1762–96), a wave of theatre mania swept Russia and virtually every member of the Russian aristocracy equipped themselves with a troupe of singers and an orchestra for the production of operas.Footnote 9 These troupes were part of the ancient institution of Russian serfdom – not abolished until 1861 – which granted noblemen total control over the lives of their serfs. On the basis of talents detected in their younger years, some of these serfs were diverted to artistic professions and became involved in performances intended for private or public audiences on aristocratic estates. On family and religious holidays, the serf troupes staged performances to which spectators were only admitted upon invitation. Even though this practice constituted an integral part of Russian musical life, it has received little attention from music historians, who have tended to focus on the two capital cities.
Private theatres were intended for the exclusive pleasure of the owner and his guests and therefore were not subject to the market laws that dominated entrepreneurial theatre in Europe. Their productions did not so much reflect the tastes of the audiences as those of the patron, who administered them unhindered by the financial restrictions of public theatres. Among the undertakings of this kind, those of the Sheremetev family, one of the wealthiest dynasties of the Russian eighteenth century, were the most brilliant.
Nikolay Petrovich's distinguished position brought him into contact with music-making at the highest levels, both within Russia and beyond. In his adolescence, he acquired a taste for music and was given lessons on the violin and clavichord. Around the time of the coup that raised Catherine the Great to the throne, Sheremetev was selected as her son's playmate.Footnote 10 Consequently, the count spent a good deal of time with the Grand Duke Pavel Petrovich, who was a passionate music lover as well. He and the young grand duke would go on to stage numerous productions together.
After the death of his mother, Princess Varvara Cherkasskaya, Sheremetev embarked on an extended grand tour in Western Europe. In 1771–72, he experienced theatrical life in England, Holland and Switzerland, but it was operatic activity in Paris that most caught his attention. He arrived there in March 1772 and attended all the city's main theatres: the Académie royale de musique et de danse (Opéra), the Comédie-Française and the Comédie-Italienne at the Hôtel de Bourgogne. In so doing, he became familiar with the opéras-comiques of composers such as André Grétry, Pierre-Alexandre Monsigny and François-André Danican Philidor. Of all the theatrical genres he encountered, however, the count became most enamoured with French tragédie lyrique, a genre he would continue to pursue once back in Russia.
When he returned to his homeland in 1773, Count Sheremetev took over the troupe founded by his father, Pyotr Borisovich (1713–1788), and became increasingly involved in theatrical activity at his private estates near Moscow: Kuskovo and Ostankino. Nikolay Petrovich became so invested in his theatrical projects that he allowed them to infiltrate his personal life. He took the serf soprano Praskov'ya Kovalyova, nicknamed Zhemchugova from the Russian ‘zhemchug’ (‘The Pearl’), as his mistress, and eventually married her in secret. The romantic intrigue of this story has exerted a strong influence on how the count's theatres have been discussed in the literature, particularly in the Soviet period. Soviet accounts are dominated by the agenda of demonstrating the relevance of the lower social strata to Russia's cultural history, and thus focus on ‘The Pearl’ and her trajectory from peasant to countess as an exemplum of emancipation from slavery by the means of art.Footnote 11 The activities of Sheremetev's theatres, however, are remarkable for several additional reasons: they boasted a high level of artistic quality, stemming from a tremendous investment of labour, finances and infrastructure. All this meant that the Sheremetev theatres could accommodate complex scenic effects, newly imported operas and the production of local works inspired by this repertoire.
With the assistance of experienced musical professionals at home and abroad, Nikolay Petrovich was able to stage productions that outclassed those of Moscow and St Petersburg. He occasionally even beat them to Russian premieres, notably in the genre of tragédie lyrique, which was had not yet been staged at the Imperial Theatres. The composer Stepan Degtyaryov (1766–1813) and the librettist and translator Vasily Voroblevsky (1730–1797) helped the count to become particularly effective at managing his theatres.Footnote 12 As for the provision of new foreign works, a key figure was Marie-François Hivart (1745–1815). An employee of the Opéra, Hivart had given the count cello lessons in Paris during his grand tour, and the two remained in touch almost up to Sheremetev's death in 1809. Hivart never visited Russia, but Sheremetev made him homme d'affaires for all his theatrical needs. In the 1780s and 1790s, Hivart was entrusted with supplying the main needs of the Ostankino and Kuskovo theatres for the staging of French repertoire. Once or twice a year, he packed up large wooden crates on the count's orders. These were then sent by barge up the River Seine to Rouen, where they were placed on ships heading out to sea at Le Havre and from there on to St Petersburg. Hivart (sometimes through the mediation of a certain Monsieur GodinFootnote 13) used this method to dispatch librettos, published or manuscript scores of orchestral and chamber music (sometimes without the composer's permission), and scaled models for costumes and sets from the Paris Opéra and other French theatres. He also sent a number of objects and furniture for sets, drawings, plans and models of theatre buildings.
The count regularly communicated his orders to Hivart through letters in which he explained his needs in detail and sought professional advice. This correspondence consists of a relatively complete set of 77 letters, written in French, concerning many aspects of theatrical production. Through it, we learn of the hiring of artists and the count's critical approach to foreign repertoires and their Russian treatment. The preserved correspondence between Sheremetev and Hivart dates between 1784 and 1792, although its contents make it clear that by 1784 the correspondence was already well established.Footnote 14 A later printed source also includes letters from 1803. These materials were published in Russian translation in a 1944 study by a Soviet theatre historian, Nadezhda Yelizarova,Footnote 15 but no other translations are known to exist, nor are there any publications of the French originals.Footnote 16 Nevertheless, the available materials constitute a rich source on Sheremetev's theatrical practice and help us connect it to its French origins.
With Hivart's help, Nikolay Petrovich supplied his troupe with a series of new theatre buildings designed for the staging of his favourite genres: French tragédie lyrique and reform opera of the Gluck-Calzabigi type. Compared to the prior imported traditions of Italian seria and buffa, these works were decidedly more complex in terms of scenic production, since they involved complex effects and a stage that was wide enough to accommodate them. Hivart offered instructions relating to all his architectural commissions and the purchasing of stage equipment. Construction work on the theatre in Kuskovo, which had been commissioned in the 1760s by Pyotr Borisovich Sheremetev, spanned a period of fifteen years, and a second theatre was built in 1785–87 and 1789–92. Additionally, a theatre en plein air was created in the gardens to take advantage of the natural peculiarities of the site.Footnote 17 Beside these projects, Nikolay Petrovich had a theatre in his palace on Nikol'skaya Street in the centre of Moscow, which existed until 1800,Footnote 18 and a theatre in Markovo, near Kolomna. Finally, with Hivart's help, he had his Palace-Theatre built in Ostankino between 1792 and 1798. After Pavel Petrovich's accession to the throne in 1796, the count's theatrical activities declined due to his increased obligations towards the new tsar; eventually the death of Zhemchugova in 1803 would prompt Sheremetev to disband the troupe altogether.Footnote 19
Sheremetev and the Mobility of Theatrical Personnel
The running and training of Sheremetev's troupe depended on the free movement of personnel between Russia and abroad, and within the Empire. As was typical at that time, the main troupe consisted of the family's serfs. While the cast of singers was not particularly numerous compared with those of other provincial theatres, the orchestra was superior in numbers. At its height, the entire troupe counted as many as 50 artists.Footnote 20 Actors, musicians and technicians were selected from the count's estates, where he periodically sent his administrators.
His singers were usually natives of Borisovka, one of Sheremetev's villages in the Belgorod region in southwest Russia. Nikolay Petrovich's grandfather, Boris Petrovich (1652–1719), had initially gathered a theatre company for his own consumption there, and this became the nucleus of the Kuskovo troupe. During the eighteenth century, the southwest of the Russian Empire served as a nursery for singers: in particular, the town of Glukhovo (in today's Ukraine) was known for nurturing young talent, leading Empress Anna to create a music school there in 1738.Footnote 21 A domestic cappella was also organized in Glukhovo by Kirill Grigor'yevich Razumovsky (1728–1803), the brother of Empress Elizabeth's favourite, Aleksey (1709–1771). During Elizabeth's reign (1741–62), professional singers were sent to Ukraine to recruit new voices for the Imperial Theatres and the Court Cappella of St Petersburg, a system that Sheremetev was to imitate in his private activity.
Once they arrived in Kuskovo, serf-singers, musicians and workers were taught various disciplines by experienced maestros. In line with Enlightenment ideas on education, Pyotr Borisovich had created a school in his estate, where young serfs received general instruction. Nikolay Petrovich developed this school, focusing teaching on the skills necessary for the various theatrical professions. This activity took place in Kuskovo until 1801; in 1802 the school was transferred to Ostankino.Footnote 22 The count privately hired instructors for this purpose, thus motivating professionals to move either from Moscow – particularly from the Petrovsky Theatre of the impresario Michael Maddox – or directly from St Petersburg. Some of the instructors were Russian, including the aforementioned composer Stepan Degtyaryov, who had studied with Giuseppe Sarti in 1791, and according to some documents may have followed his teacher to Italy in the early 1790s to complete his education. Documents also reveal the names of singers such as the soprano Yelizaveta Semyonovna Fyodorova (nicknamed ‘Uranova’, 1772–1826) and her husband Sila Nikolayevich Sandunov (1756–1820), who had been active in St Petersburg before moving to Moscow.Footnote 23 The French repertoire staged in these theatres required excellent skills in stage acting: actress Mariya Stepanovna Sinyavskaya (1762–1829) was charged with teaching Zhemchugova and directed the female part of the troupe from 1790 to 1797.Footnote 24
The teaching of foreign languages, meanwhile, required the hiring of native professionals: French teachers included Madame Dyuvrii and Sheval'ye (Duvrilly and Chevalier) – the latter was possibly the same Chevalier who worked at the French Court troupe from 1798 onwards and gained the favour of Emperor Paul IFootnote 25 – while a Signor Torelli was hired in 1789 to teach Italian. Other foreign professionals featured in Sheremetev's documents were involved in areas more closely related to the stage. For example, the documents include the names of the Frenchman Floridor, a tragic actor of the Court troupe,Footnote 26 singers such as Torelli (perhaps the same Torelli who worked as language instructor),Footnote 27 a Barbarini, the castrato Adamo Solci and the tenor Vincenzo Alippi.Footnote 28 The artistic paths of these artists in Russia (and beyond) can be pieced together by tracing their names through Sheremetev's documents and various playbills, although variants in transliteration can complicate matters. Vincenzo Alippi appears in the Sheremetev documents and in Russian secondary literature as Alimpi or Olimpy.Footnote 29
For a better understanding of their movements, we can take the example of Adamo Solci. Solci had been active in Italian theatres since the 1760s before he joined Sheremetev's troupe.Footnote 30 He was among the cast of the operas given for the celebration of the wedding of Austrian Archduke Ferdinand and Maria Beatrice d'Este in 1771 (Hasse's Il Ruggiero ovvero L'eroica gratitudine and Mozart's Ascanio in Alba)Footnote 31 and had served as first soprano at the Ducal Chapel of Santa Barbara (Mantua), where he had been appointed in 1777. In the summer of 1784 he arrived in St Petersburg: his name appears in the correspondence with the Imperial Cabinet led by Sarti, who reached the capital in the same period.Footnote 32 In accordance with his prior experience, he was hired for the Court troupe of Italian seria.Footnote 33 In the late 1780s, however, this company experienced a crisis due to a shift in the Court's interests towards comic genres, a fact that partly explains Solci's relocation to Moscow, where he appears to have remained until his death.Footnote 34 Traces of his activity in the ancient capital can be found in two concerts given with one Lady Gattoni in 1789 and in the publication of a Russian romance in a Muscovite periodical in 1794.Footnote 35 Under Sheremetev, he probably served as a music teacher, as indicated by the count in a letter to Voroblevsky, in which he gives instructions for managing the company during his absence.Footnote 36 Yelizarova suggests that Solci taught the girls of the troupe fortepiano, but in light of his experience it seems highly probable that his subject was actually singing.Footnote 37
Vincenzo Alippi covered the same route in the opposite direction. In his hometown of Parma, he was featured among the singers in Giovanni Paisiello's dramma giocoso Il re Teodoro in Venezia at the Regio Ducale in the 1788 Carnival season.Footnote 38 A short time later, he was active in Milan, performing at La Scala up to the summer of 1790 (in Paisiello's La modista raggiratrice and Domenico Cimarosa's Giannina e Bernardone).Footnote 39 That winter, he moved to Russia and appears to have worked for Sheremetev both as a teacher and a performer, but his engagement lasted no more than four months. Alippi seemingly left his post without giving the count any notice and moved to St Petersburg to join a new opera buffa troupe that arrived from Italy in 1793. As we shall see, the troupe was hired by Nikolay Borisovich Yusupov at his own expense in order to replace the disbanded Italian court troupe.Footnote 40
Among dance instructors, the Sheremetev archives feature the names of Franz [sic] Morelli and Charles Le Picq;Footnote 41 Giuseppe Salomoni and his wife Angelica Caselli, who were by that time employed in the Petrovsky Theatre,Footnote 42 as well as the dancers Pinucci (1797) and Alessandro Guglielmi (up to 1799).Footnote 43 In 1791, Sheremetev succeeded in hiring one Cianfanelli, who at that time worked as baletmeyster at the St Petersburg Imperial Theatres. To be exempted from engagements in the capital, he seems to have adduced health claims and took the opportunity to move to the Sheremetev estates. Once there, in 1792 he signed a contract with a higher salary than the one he had received in St Petersburg, and this lasted at least until 1795.Footnote 44
As for composers and instrumentalists, a few names of foreign origin appear in the Sheremetev documents. Sarti, Degtyaryov's instructor, likely moved to work for Count Sheremetev in 1791 after the death of his patron Grigory Potyomkin (1739–1791), a former favourite of Empress Catherine.Footnote 45 The Sheremetev archives also include the names of naturalized Russian instrumentalists of German origin, such as the violinist I. A. Feyer,Footnote 46 the cellist Johann-Heinrich Facius,Footnote 47 one Meier,Footnote 48 the oboist Wenzel May and the clarinettist Beer.Footnote 49
Taken as a whole, this information suggests that artists, including foreign ones, were far from sedentary within Russia, even when they enjoyed stable positions at Court. They would work for private theatres not only in the intervals between contracts, but also as attractive alternatives in and of themselves. Within the Moscow area, a sort of osmosis can be observed between the theatres of the country estates and the Maddox-Petrovsky, the most active theatre of the city at that time and the ancestor of today's Bol'shoy Theatre. This practice is also documented in reference to other private organizations: Aleksey Yemel'yanovich Stolïpin (1744–c. 1810), a landowner of the governorate of Saratov, often rented his orchestra to the Petrovsky Theatre before eventually selling it to the Imperial Theatres in 1806.Footnote 50 Fragmentary as it is, the evidence attests to several levels of circulation among opera artists, between international centres, between Russia's two capitals Moscow and St Petersburg, and between different theatres in the ancient capital and its periphery.
Sheremetev and the Mobility of Opera
It was through this rich network of personnel that Sheremetev was able put on a remarkable variety of repertoires. His single company staged works side by side that in Paris would be produced in separate theatres by separate troupes. During the regency of Pyotr Borisovich, the repertoire of the Sheremetev theatres had included French opéras-comiques by composers such as Grétry, Sacchini, Monsigny and Dalayrac, early Russian comic operas (operï komicheskiya) and several Italian buffas, though in lesser percentage. Later, under the supervision of Nikolay Petrovich, the activity of the troupes received new momentum due to the count's desire to stage grand French tragédies en musique. This fact itself stands out as an exception in comparison to the Russian theatrical landscape, notably to the Imperial Theatres of St Petersburg, which preferred comic or sentimental subjects. It was a genre, moreover, that only the foremost European theatres could afford. Largely through his connection with Hivart, Nikolay Petrovich was among the first in Russia to receive such scores as Echo et Narcisse, Alceste and Armide by Gluck, Cleopatra by Cimarosa and Renaud by Sacchini. Nikolay Petrovich and Hivart also discussed producing Gluck's Iphigénie en Tauride, Niccolò Piccinni's Didon, Atys and Roland and Antonio Salieri's Dardanus and Les Danaïdes.
Among these titles, Salieri's Les Danaïdes and Grétry's Les mariages samnites may serve as representative examples for the activity of the Sheremetev theatres as recorded in his correspondence. The tragédie lyrique Les Danaïdes was premiered at the Paris Opéra on 26 April 1784, more than a decade after Nikolay Petrovich had left the French capital. Nevertheless, news of its brilliant premiere must have reached this inveterate mélomane, and producing the work became something of an obsession for him. Although his attempts at staging the opera were ultimately unrealized, he made detailed preparations by discussing sets, effects, costumes and acting with Hivart.Footnote 51 The following extract from the correspondence, concerning the horrifying final scene of the opera, sheds some light on the measures the count would go to in preparing his stagings:
La décoration change et représente les Enfers, on voit le Théâtre [coulant] des flots de sang, sur les bords, et au milieu du Théâtre. Danaüs paroit enchainé sur un rocher. Les entrailles sanglantes, sont dévores par un vautour, les Danaydes sont les unes enchainée par groupes, tourmantes par des furies et des Serpens. C'est aussi dans cette scene que se fait l'inondation: quoique j'ai déjà une idée, il ne me seroit pourtant pas inutile de me [la] rendre encore plus claire [ … ]Footnote 52
The sets change and represent Hell, one can see the stage turning red for the gushes of blood, on the edges and in the centre. Danaos appears chained up on a rock. His bleeding innards are devoured by a vulture, the Danaids are chained in groups, tortured by furies and snakes. It is also in this scene that the flooding occurs: although I do already have an idea [of how this mechanism works], it would be not useless to make this clearer to me.
Evidently, the count was concerned about understanding the technical details that would make for the most effective staging of this scene. Further on, he even asks Hivart to send the actual props used in Paris for the sake of accurately recreating the production in his own theatre. Rather than ‘a drawing … of the dagger’, he writes, ‘it would be better to send a couple of real daggers, the ones that you use in the Theatres [my emphasis]; what does Pelagus use to strike Danaos – the sword or the dagger?’Footnote 53
Some further exchanges reveal the count's awareness of the differences between the theatre buildings in Paris and Kuskovo, and his consequent doubts about the feasibility of importing French repertoire. Responding to Hivart's observations concerning the disparity in size (the theatre in Kuskovo being three times smaller than the Paris Opéra), the count appears to have been determined to solve any technical problems:
ce que Vous ditte des Danaydes est trés juste, qu'il faut beaucoup de monde sur le Théatre, mais tout cela peut s'arranger, je dois seulement avoir un detail exacte des decorations, et du reste apres avoir recû tout je ferai mon possible, pour l'aproprier sur notre petit theatre.Footnote 54
What you say about the Danaïdes is quite right: in the play on the stage there is a large number of people, but all this can be done. I just need to have the exact details of the decorations … and, once I receive these, I will do everything possible to represent [this work] in our small theatre.
Sheremetev continually requested Parisian sketches of sets and machines: in some cases, his workforce was required to adapt to his venues in order to obtain the most faithful possible replication of the Opéra's productions.
While the count appears to have been particularly concerned with exact recreation in terms of visual effects, the scores and libretti underwent loose adaptation. At a time when the inviolability of artworks was a concept yet to appear, this approach to opera translation was typical in Russia and, indeed, across Europe.Footnote 55 Translators so freely altered the original texts that they were often confused for being the original authors. In Russia, translations typically entailed the Russification of characters’ names, shifts of the action to Russian locations and the replacement (or removal) of passages using realia or jargon, resulting in ‘remakes with adaptations to our [Russian] customs’ (peredelki so skloneniyem na nashi nravï), as theorized in the field of dramatic theatre by the playwright and translator Vladimir Lukin (1737–1794). This approach had consequences for the development of Russian comic opera (opera komicheskaya): playwrights used these adaptations as a means of appropriating foreign models and producing a national repertoire of Russian plays with music intended for local audiences. This practice was particularly common in the Moscow area, possibly due to its audiences being less cosmopolitan than those of St Petersburg.Footnote 56
At Sheremetev's theatres, performances were mostly given in Russian, using translations provided by Vasily Voroblevsky (see n. 12), and the discussion and staging of their repertoire suggest that a similar process was applied to French opera. Grétry's Les mariages samnites, which was produced as Braki samnityan starting from 1785 (24 November), offers a representative case of a foreign title being confused for a local one. The French ambassador to Russia Louis-Philippe de Ségur witnessed one performance, and in his memoirs clearly assumed the opera was Russian:
On joua sur un très beau théâtre un grand opéra russe [my emphasis]; tous ceux qui comprenaient le poème le trouvaient intéressant et bien écrit. Je ne pouvais juger que la musique et les ballets; l'une m’étonna par son harmonieuse mélodie; les autres par l’élégante richesse des costumes, la grâce des danseuses et la légèreté des danseurs.Footnote 57
They performed on a very beautiful stage a grand Russian opera [my emphasis]; all those who understood the text found it interesting and well written. I could only judge the music and the ballets; the former surprised me with its harmonious melodies; the latter with the elegant richness of the costumes, the grace of the female and the agility of the male dancers.
Loose adaptation principles were also applied to the music. This is evident from an entry in the private journal of Slanisław Poniatowski, which recalls a production of the same opera in 1797. The former king of Poland was then living in St Petersburg as a virtual prisoner, and, having accompanied Tsar Paul I on his coronation journey to Moscow, recorded that the opera was given to receive the guests visiting Sheremetev's estate. Poniatowski, who did apparently recognized the original, alludes to interventions in the score, with possible interpolations of new music:
A la levée de la toile, on a vu donner en langue russe une représentation des mariages Samnites, musique de Grétry mêlée seulement de quelques airs d'autres maîtres.Footnote 58
When the curtain was raised, we saw a staging of Les mariages samnites in the Russian language, with music by Grétry merged with some numbers of other masters.
The insertions mentioned by Poniatowski are apparent when comparing the printed French original to the Russian score, which shows that some parts were customised for Kovalyova, who played the protagonist Eliane. It is unclear whether the ‘other masters’ mentioned were Russian. Most likely, the edits were made by the music director, Degtyaryov, since he was usually charged with the task of adapting the scores to suit Sheremetev's cast.
The broader push in those years to build a repertoire that catered to Russian audiences also resulted in the creation of original works expressly for these theatres. Kuskovo inspired the composition of librettos that were directly related to the location in which they were staged. These librettos, ascribed to Voroblevsky, included Tshchetnaya revnost’, ili Perevozchik kuskovskoy (The worthless jealousy, or The carrier of Kuskovo, 1781) and its sequel Gulyan'ya, ili Sadovnik kuskovskoy (The promenades, or The gardener of Kuskovo, 1785).Footnote 59 These were small-scale comic operas following the dramaturgical scheme of French opéra-comique: the action was carried out in spoken dialogue, which was interspersed with closed musical numbers. The subjects, however, were directly related to one of Kuskovo's theatres and their owner, the count.Footnote 60 While Gulyan'ya was set to music by Ivan Kertselli,Footnote 61 Tshchetnaya revnost’ was set to music of other plays of the same kind, to which new words were added in a process that later was called ‘podtestovka’ in Russian. This method was used in the case of Braki samnityan, as well as in the translations of several foreign Italian buffas.
Another local commission was the libretto for a three-act opera entitled Tomyris, reine des Massagets (Tomyris, queen of the Massageteans). Judging from Hivart's references, the opera was commissioned to Louis Hurtaut Dancourt (1725–1801), the author of several librettos set to music by Gluck. Hivart first mentioned Tomyris in a letter of 14 December 1790, and in the following March he announced that the text was ready, the author having respected the instructions received from his commissioner:
Les paroles du grand opera avec des récitatifs melées de chœurs et de danses telles que vous m'avez ordoné de le faire faire, vient enfin d'etre terminées. En consequence, j'ai l'honeur de vous les envoyer ci jointes en attendant les dessins des decorations et des costumes nécessaires de cet opera qui ne son pas encore près. Il a pour titre Tomiris Reine des Massagetes. Opera heroïque en trois actes. Cet ouvrage serieux et politique comportoit nécessairement un plus grand genre de spectacle que les mariages samnites qui n'est qu'un opera comique. Il y a de quoi faire briller le talent du compositeur à qui MLC donnera ce Poëme à mettre en musique.
C'est à Monsieur Le Comte à juger si l'auteur de cet opera, Monsieur Dancourt, en observant bien toutes les convenances nécessaires, à rempli les intentions de Monsieur Le Comte dans cet ouvrages: en rappellant les actions glorieuses et mémorables qui caractérisent si dignement le reigne de Cathérine II, surtout celle qui ont raports aux circonstances actueles et qui font tant d'honneur à ses vertues et à son rare mérite.
Voici les quatre persones auguste qu'on a eut l'intention de figurer dans cet opera.
Sa Majesté Imperiale sous le role de la Reine Tomiris.
Son Altesse Le Grand Duc et La Grande Duchesse sous ceux de Phédor et de Pentasilée.
Monsieur LC sous celui du gouverneur Barces.
Je sens d'avance toute la satisfaction qu'eprouveroit Monsieur Le Comte, si comme il l'espere cette année sa Majesté venoit encoure honorer par sa presence le spectacle de MLC et qu'elle put y voir la premiere representation de Tomiris.
Les decoration et les habit seront aussi brillants que le costume scythe peut le permettre.Footnote 62
The libretto for the grand opera, with recitatives mixed with choruses and dances, as you ordered, has finally been finished. As a result, I am only awaiting the drawings of the sets and costumes, which are not quite ready, before sending it to you. The opera is titled Tomyris Queen of the Massegeteans: A Heroic Opera in Three Acts. This serious and political work entails, by its nature, a greater level of spectacle than Les Mariages Samnites, which is just an opéra-comique. There is enough material to emphasize the talent of the composer who will set this libretto to music on Your commission.
It will be for you to judge to what extent the author of the opera, Mr Dancourt, in taking note of the necessary properties, has respected these works: in immortalizing the glorious and monumental actions that characterize the reign of Catherine II with such dignity, notably in reference to the contemporary circumstances, which honour her virtues and merits.
The four main dramatis personae are Her Imperial Majesty, in the guise of Queen Tomyris; Their Imperial Highnesses the grand duke and duchess under the names of Phédor and Pentasilée; and Your Excellency, under the name of Governor Barces. Permit me to say that I already feel some of the pleasure that you are experiencing knowing that Her Majesty may well visit you once again this year and will see the premier of Tomyris.
The sets and costumes will be as luxurious as possible for a Scythian costume.
According to Hivart's description of the libretto, the main characters of this play were Empress Catherine the Great, her family and the commissioner, who were represented allegorically in the spirit of French Baroque opera. The empress was hidden within the figure of Queen Tomyris as well as being depicted in the role of defender of the Muses; her son Pavel Petrovich and his wife were represented as the Prince Fyodor and Pentazileya, while Count Sheremetev was embodied in the governor of Borus. Due to the scarcity of information, the details of this project cannot be examined more deeply;Footnote 63 the alleged celebrative character of the libretto is not supported by any evidence, neither is the identity of the composer known. This suggests that the staging never took place. However, Hivart's testimony does indicate plans to celebrate Catherine's achievements in the Russo-Turkish War of 1787–92 in an allegorical frame similar to her own play with music Nachal'noye upravleniye Olega (The Early Reign of Oleg, 1790), in which Sarti took a direct part.Footnote 64 Sarti had accompanied the empress to Sheremetev's residence when she visited the count during her journey in the southern territories of the Empire, in 1787. As mentioned above, Sarti worked for Sheremetev for a period in 1791. Having gained experience writing celebratory music, he could well have been a suitable candidate. Sheremetev's control over operatic productive means, as well as the breadth of subject of this projected opera, clearly shows a step forward from the style of the librettos of Pyotr Borisovich's time in the direction of an increased level of grandeur.
In 1795, a similarly ‘Eastern-themed’ project, imitating the French tradition but turned to a local audience, finally came to fruition. On 22 July, a liricheskaya dramma (most likely a calque from the French ‘drame lyrique’) was staged at Sheremetev's theatre in Ostankino: Zel'mira i Smelon, ili Vzyatiye Izmaila (Zelmira and Smelon, or The capture of Izmail).Footnote 65 Every element of this production was local: an original Russian text written by a Russian author, Pavel Sergeyevich Potyomkin (1743–1796), cousin of the renowned Grigory Aleksandrovich; a subject that was directly related to recent Russian history (the Russo-Turkish War); and original music by the composer Osip Kozlovsky (1757–1831), a naturalized Russian musician of Polish origin. The surviving libretto reveals a plot based on the opposition between love and duty (as was typical of French tragedy) but used as an allegory to legitimate the subjugation of all peoples (including the Turkish) to the Russian Crown. Had activity at his theatres not diminished after Paul I's ascension to the throne in 1796, it is likely that Sheremetev would have continued developing Russian operas of this kind.
Although sources surrounding the works discussed in this section are sparse, the available information shows that the importation of musical and literary sources from Paris to Russia, via the personal connection between Sheremetev and Hivart, not only instigated faithful copies of productions, but also opened up new horizons for creativity in the country, developed by foreign musicians as well as by local ones.
Nikolay Borisovich Yusupov and Grand Duke Pavel Petrovich
Pavel Petrovich Romanov and Nikolay Borisovich Yusupov, in a sense, acted as counterparts to Sheremetev. Many of their contacts overlapped and interlinked, and this is perhaps unsurprising considering the similarities in the relationships they formed. Like Sheremetev, Yusupov and the grand duke established their high-level cultural contacts during European grand tours. And these contacts were cultivated both as a result of and in order to fuel their own special musical interests. In what follows, however, it will become apparent that, if not anchored in a single theatrical enterprise as in Sheremetev's case, the connections between the Russian nobility and foreign musicians could be complex and numerous, and at the same time fragile and ephemeral.
Yusupov, like Sheremetev, fulfilled various high positions in state service, including being a member of the Senate from 1788.Footnote 66 He worked as a diplomat from 1783 to 1789 and during these years he built up a wide range of connections in various countries (France, Prussia, Austria and Italy).Footnote 67 He spoke five languages, which he learned during his travels. These included a personal grand tour in 1774–77, followed by a journey as a member of the entourage of Pavel Petrovich in 1781–82.
Later, Yusupov could enjoy this friendship in fulfilling his duties in St Petersburg. Among his various offices, Yusupov served as the director of the St Petersburg Imperial Theatres from 1791 to 1799. At this time, their Directorate employed various opera troupes distinguished by nationality, including Italian, French and Russian.
In 1791 Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais seemingly acted as a mediator for Nikolay Borisovich when he hired the actor Louis Montgautier (Lui Mongot'ye) for the French Court troupe.Footnote 68 The prince had become acquainted with the playwright in 1776 during his grand tour, and in 1782 he organized a reading of his play Le mariage de Figaro for Grand Duke Pavel Petrovich, who was travelling throughout Europe. Thus in 1792 Montgautier started working in St Petersburg, where he was active along with the company up to the year 1806, at least.Footnote 69
As for the Italian Court troupe, it was disbanded in 1790.Footnote 70 This partly corresponded to the wish of the central authorities to support the development of native genres; still, the disbanding of the company was mainly due to financial troubles that had plagued the institution since the beginning of the reign of Catherine the Great.Footnote 71 The decision was certainly not due to any lack of popularity with St Petersburg audiences. Prince Yusupov himself was particularly fond of Italian opera and in his capacity of director did all he could to reintroduce its performance. These efforts included personally funding a troupe. With his support, a troupe arrived in the capital in 1793, and it was this troupe that the tenor Alippi joined when he left Sheremetev for St Petersburg. For the most part, they staged comic operas that were still unknown to Russian audiences, and the level of novelty seems to have paid off: according to some memoirists, the performances were extremely popular, even though the admission fee was high.Footnote 72
In 1795, the troupe was replaced by a new one headed by Gennaro Astaritta (1745 or 1749–after 1803), a composer not new to Russia. He had moved from Naples to St Petersburg in 1784 under the impression that he was to replace Paisiello as court composer, but upon arrival had found the position occupied by Sarti, who by that time had signed his first contract with the Directorate. Consequently, Astaritta became kapel'meyster at the Petrovsky Theatre in Moscow, where his ballet La Vengeance de Cupidon, ou La fête offerte par Vénus à Adonis was staged on 20 January 1785. Once more, Moscow represented a good alternative when things did not work out in the capital. Astaritta possibly returned to St Petersburg by the end of 1786 when Sarti's contract was set to expire. He may have worked for the Russian Theatre of Karl Knipper, given that his Russian opera Pritvornaya sumasshedshaya (The feigned madwoman) was staged at the wooden theatre of Tsaritsïn Lug in the summer of 1789. It was probably at this time that Yusupov became associated with him. It is unlikely that Astaritta was in Russia between 1791 and 1794, as his opera I capricci d'amore was produced in Venice in 1791.Footnote 73 In 1795, however, he had returned to St Petersburg and finally signed a contract with the Imperial Theatres under Yusupov. According to the Directorate, the Court provided the logistical needs for his troupe and received part of the revenues with the rest serving to pay the singers.Footnote 74 The success was due to the support of the influential Yusupov and to the high quality of the staff (which included such singers as Teresa Saporiti, Giulia Gasperini, Stefano and Paolo Mandini and Santi Nencini). Along with the aforementioned Solci and Alippi, who were in Sheremetev's service, all these artists had previously worked at La Scala in Milan, which suggests that they may have remained in contact with each other.Footnote 75
Astaritta's role within this enterprise was not destined to last long. He abandoned his directorship in 1799, handing it over to Antonio Casassi.Footnote 76 The troupe continued its activity up to 1800 and was generally successful, which possibly led the Directorate to integrate it back into its workforce.Footnote 77 However, this continuity in the activity of Italians at the Russian Court was also due to the support of the influential figure of Yusupov: although he had resigned from the post of Director in 1799 – when he was replaced for a short time by Nikolay Sheremetev – he personally purchased the scores necessary for this troupe's performances.Footnote 78
In his effort to support Italian opera at Court, Yusupov could count on the contacts he had acquired through his diplomatic activity. At the same time, the numerous connections he had created in his public activities were subsequently turned to private use. As a nobleman, he too possessed a provincial estate in Arkhangel'skoye (Moscow), where he had a private theatre built in 1810. Here, at his personal service, he hired architect Pietro Gonzaga (1751–1831), who represents yet another aspect of circulation between Western Europe and Russia. Gonzaga worked as chief decorator at the St Petersburg Imperial Theatres, where he had been invited by Giacomo Quarenghi in 1786 to become a stage designer for the newly erected Hermitage Theatre. Yusupov remained his patron until his death in 1831. Like the singers mentioned above, the architect had previously been active at La Scala in Milan and had also leant his expertise to Sheremetev. This suggests the existence of a network of theatre professionals attached to Yusupov as an individual. Contacts were surely fostered by grand tours and diplomatic activities of noblemen who were able to move through Europe and establish a circulation of people that supported their private theatrical enterprises. Yusupov stands out as a significant example in this respect, though many further individuals remain to be investigated.
A similar dynamic can be observed in the case of Pavel Petrovich. In September 1781, the grand duke set off on a 14-month journey across Europe, where he visited a number of countries and met sovereigns and diplomats.Footnote 79 He was accompanied by his spouse Mariya Fyodorovna and by a retinue of Russian noblemen captained by Yusupov. The tour had no official purpose and the couple travelled incognito under the evocative name ‘Counts Severny’ – ‘of the North’. Their secret, however, seems to have been poorly kept. Throughout the tour, they received welcomes consistent with their rank. In the knowledge that the tsarevich and his wife were passionate music lovers, their hosts often centred their reception on musical performances.Footnote 80 During their visits, the couple were able to meet artists and see and hear works that had not yet reached Russian stages. For example, in Vienna, Emperor Joseph II presented them with operas by Gluck and with concerts in which Clementi and Mozart directly took part.Footnote 81
In Milan (between 4 and 9 April 1782), Pavel attended the Cathedral where Sarti directed the cappella; and in Parma, Sarti's opera Alessandro e Timoteo was premiered for the reception of the Russian princes. It is highly indicative that Sarti, who met the grand duke during his stay in Italy, enjoying his appreciation, subsequently moved to St Petersburg. As discussed above, he was invited by Catherine the Great (Pavel Petrovich's mother) to cover the position of kapel'meyster in 1784, and once his first contract expired, he spent time in the service of Grigory Potyomkin. This was not the end of his Russian career, though. In 1793, during Yusupov's regency, the composer signed another contract with the Imperial Theatres. In this period Sarti composed mainly sacred or occasional music – including for Catherine's The Early Reign of Oleg (1791) – and was employed as the music teacher of Pavel Petrovich's daughters. Possibly due to a long-standing familiarity, when Pavel took the throne in 1796, the composer received many concrete signs of acknowledgement. One of these was the commission of operas according to the tsar's preferences: Andromeda (1798), Enea nel Lazio (1799) and the French opéra-comique La famille indienne en Angleterre (1799). Considering his advanced age, it may be no coincidence that he left Russian service in the same year as Paul was murdered (1801).Footnote 82
Sarti was only one of various musicians who performed before Pavel Petrovich during his European visit and ended up in Russia shortly thereafter. The notion that the Russian heir's tour was perceived as an occasion for initiating professional networking has already been put forward by John A. Rice in relation to the composer Cimarosa. According to Rice, Cimarosa conceived Il convito (particularly the quartet ‘Amore mio bellissimo’) with the intention of impressing the ‘Counts of the North’ so that he might be summoned to Russia, given the tradition of hiring Italian composers as music directors there.Footnote 83 The opera was staged at the Teatro della Pergola in Florence on 7 April 1782 and seems to have produced the desired effect: when Sarti's first contract in St Petersburg expired in 1787, Cimarosa was called upon to replace him.
Vicente Martín y Soler, too, successfully exploited the opportunity for self-promotion with the Russian guests. For the grand dukes’ visit to Naples, Martín y Soler composed the music of Partenope, a componimento drammatico to a libretto by Metastasio, which was staged at the Nobile Accademia di musica di Dame e Cavalieri in Santa Lucia, while the San Carlo Theatre gave an encore performance of his Ifigenia in Aulide. He moved to St Petersburg in 1789, where he was to remain (apart from a brief stay in London) until his death in 1806.
The singers Luigi Marchesi (1755–1829) and Luísa Todi (1753–1833), for whom, Juan Bautista Otero argues, Martín y Soler had tailored his opera, also took the opportunity to relocate to Russia.Footnote 84 As in the case of various musicians mentioned above, Marchesi had been active in Milan.Footnote 85 He was familiar with Sarti's operas, which he sang in Florence (1779) and London (1785). When he went to St Petersburg, he performed his Armida e Rinaldo to inaugurate the Hermitage Theatre (1786).Footnote 86 The Portuguese mezzo-soprano Luísa Todi had already enjoyed successes in London, Paris, Madrid, Berlin and Vienna, when she was called to St Petersburg. Since Empress Catherine showed no personal interest in opera, she may have been informed about Todi's success by her son, who had heard her in Naples. In the Russian capital, Todi also became familiar with Sarti's music. She was Marchesi's partner in Armida e Rinaldo and had enormous success with Castore e Polluce.
Of course, news about the talent and success of these artists would also have reached Russia through other channels by word of mouth. However, once again this spread of information can be traced through the individual acquaintances of powerful individuals. The invitations of Cimarosa and Martín y Soler to Russia, for instance, were supported by Joseph II, who frequently wrote to the Russian tsarina, and mentions them and their works in his correspondence with the members of Catherine's retinue. His letters confirm the personal relationship created between artists and members of the aristocracy, and the role of their recommendations in the artists’ careers. This can be seen in the following extract from a letter by the Austrian emperor to his Minister to Russia, Ludwig Cobenzl, relating to Martín y Soler's first attempt to take up the post of kapel'meyster in Russia:
Mon cher Comte de Cobenzl. Il ne vous arrive plus de Maitre [sic] de Chapelle sans être porteur d'une de mes lettres. Celui qui vous remettra la présente est un nommé Martin qui se rend à Pétersbourg. Il s'est signalé par trois jolis opera [sic] qui ont eu du succés [Una cosa rara (1786), Il burbero di buon cuore (1786) and L'arbore di Diana (1787)]. Il n'est pas aussi bouffon que Cimarosa, mais sa composition n'est pas moins agréable, ce qui me fait croire qu'il réussira également chez vous.Footnote 87
My dear Count Cobenzl, every Kapellmeister you receive has a letter from me with him. The name of the carrier of the present letter is Martin. He is going to Petersburg. He gained some reputation thanks to three nice operas that were successful [Una cosa rara (1786), Il burbero di buon cuore (1786) and L'arbore di Diana (1787)]. He is not as comic as Cimarosa, but his compositions are not less pleasant, and this makes me believe that he will also be successful in Russia.
Conclusion
In exploring the channels of exchange aristocrats used to import foreign music, musicians and musical products, my study reveals some of the ways in which Russia was entangled in international cultural networks at the threshold of the nineteenth century. Significantly, the international connections of Sheremetev, Yusupov and Pavel Petrovich were rooted in their European grand tours. The tradition of travelling for the sake of education enabled these Russian noblemen to expand their awareness of European culture, and consequently to contribute to its transferral to Russia, establishing repertoires that reflected their personal interests, sometimes – as in the case of Sheremetev – in remarkable combinations of genres. Yusupov's passion for opera buffa, the grand duke's nurturing of Italian seria and the peculiar taste of Sheremetev for tragédie lyrique had repercussions for the repertoire staged in their respective spheres of influence. At the same time, the adaptation to local audiences – a practice that was itself connected to wider European traditions of this period – helped to naturalize these foreign repertoires, and the case of Les mariages samnites gives an insight into the way European operas were translated and re-worked to fit their new Russian context.
Mobility went beyond the importation and adaptation of libretti and scores. These individuals’ operatic interests fostered a circulation of operatic professionals (singers, composers, set designers), who were in high demand in Russia and were able to find employment and recognition in Moscow and St Petersburg as well as on private estates. Once these noblemen returned to their homeland, their contacts enabled them to develop artistic activities, while the musicians themselves could benefit from lucrative long-term appointments. This process, it seems, functioned for private and public theatres alike: while the participation of members of the Russian elite such as Yusupov, the Grand Duke Pavel Petrovich and Nikolay Sheremetev in theatrical activity responded in great measure to their quest for personal pleasure, these noblemen relied on their personal networks and the ‘team’ they had created for private purposes in their public functions, too. This was most obviously the case for Yusupov during his tenure as director of the Imperial Theatres, but it also applies to Pavel Petrovich: as I have argued above, the musical experiences he enjoyed during his European tour seem to have affected the choice of personnel and repertoire of the Imperial Theatres for many subsequent years. It should be observed that these personal musical networks were not independent of each other: their members crossed, met and together formed a single, dense (though wide and pervasive) network that seems to mirror the diplomatic environment.
While the reconstruction of these networks requires further systematic analysis, the stories of these three individuals have shed some light on activity in the Russian Empire that has been previously ignored. All in all, these cases serve to displace the myth that a cultural fracture existed between the musical worlds of Eastern and Western Europe. The evidence gathered here rather suggests the existence of a common space in which musicians and musical products circulated. As for music theatre in Russia, this circulation had intensified substantially since the first operatic performances in the 1730s and gained popularity among members of the highest social spheres who had the capacity and means to cultivate it. Thanks to the persistence of the Ancien régime in Russia long after the French Revolution, these dynamics were actively functioning at the end of the eighteenth century and would continue well into the nineteenth.