|
The Ranums' Panat Times |
Return to opening page of Ranums' Panat Times
Go to the
opening page of Patricia's "Musings"
"Overture" and "Opening": In September 2005, John Powell asked if I had given any thought to why, at the start of Les Amours de Diane et d'Endimion (1681), Marc-Antoine Charpentier specified "Ouverture devant que de lever la toile" ― "overture before the curtain goes up." I hadn't. But my initial thought was that Charpentier was pointing out something atypical. If so, this raises important questions. In the 1680s was an overture usually played during the lifting of the curtain? I began thumbing through our library. There I
found the germ of an answer. But the following observations, which I shared what
John Powell, merit further study by historians of the theater. (I will highlight
in bold type allusions to "opened curtains" and "overtures.")
"Le théâtre [read "stage"] représente une forêt. L'ouverture du théâtre se fait par un bruit agreable d'instruments. Ensuite une Bergère vient se plaindre tendrement de ce qu'elle ne trouve aucun remède pour soulager les peines ... Ils écoutent ses plaintes et forment un spectacle très divertissant." [The "plaintes" in question are Charpentier's "Plainte de la Bergere," Votre plus haut savoir....] This seems to be an important clue. Translated
literally, the stage directions say that "the opening of the stage is done to an
agreeable instrumental sound." In other words, instruments played as
the curtain was being raised. And the "ouverture" involved the curtain,
not the instruments. "L'ouverture se fait par un grand assemblage d'instruments, et dans le milieu du théâtre [read, midstage] on voit un élève du Maître de musique qui compose sur une table ...." The Maître immediately "talks to his
musicians." This suggests that the "large assemblage of instruments" was playing
what we know as an "overture" while the "stage" was being "opened,"
that is, while the curtain was being raised and the stage set was being
revealed. Once the curtain was up and music had stopped, the Maître spoke and
the play proper began. In sum, once again "ouverture" denotes the lifting
or opening of the curtain. "Le théâtre s'ouvre à l'agréable bruit de quantité d'instruments, et d'abord il offre aux yeux une vaste mer ..." The instruments clearly played while the curtain was going up and continued to play while the audience admired the seascape. V ― For Monsieur de Pourceaugnac (1669), Éraste conducts voices and instruments, apparently while the curtain rises: "L'ouverture se fait par Éraste, qui conduit un grand concert de voix et d'instruments, pour une sérénade dont les paroles, chantées par trois voix, en manière de dialogue, sont faites sur le sujet de la comédie." [The song is immediately followed by a dance. In other words, the vocal concert flows into the dance.] The curtain must have been rising as Éraste and the musicians began singing, for it is difficult to imagine them performing with the curtain down. Here again "ouverture" denotes the opening of the curtain. VI ― Le Sicilien (1667) makes
no mention of an "ouverture" of any sort. Hali talks to a group of
musicians in Scene 1, but the musicians do not sing until scene 3. In other
words, the play presumably did not begin with music: the curtain quietly rose as
it would for a play without musical interludes, and Hali declaimed his opening
remarks. At this point it was
seeming increasingly likely that Charpentier was innovating when he instructed
that the "ouverture" to Les Amours de Diane et d'Endymion
should be played before the curtain rose. Should we be crediting him
with a major innovation as far as the spoken theater is concerned? Or was he
imitating performance practices at Lully's Opera?
There I learned (vol. 1, p. 7) that in Lully and Quinault's first opera, Cadmus (1673), "the theater opens" ― that is, the curtain rises ― and the audience contemplates a magnificent sunrise that continues "until the instruments finish playing the overture." It is especially meaningful that the following quotation from the libretto refers to both the "opening" of the stage and the playing of the "ouverture." The two "openings" are not one and the same thing; they do not necessarily coincide: "Le théâtre s'ouvre et représente une campagne ou l'on découvre des hameaux des deux côtés, et un marais dans le fond; le Ciel fait voir une aurore éclantante, qui est suivie du lever du Soleil, dont le globe brillant s'élève sur l'horizon, dans le temps que les instruments achèvent de jouer l'ouverture." Stage instructions can scarcely be more explicit. In this case they state unambiguously that the curtain began to rise, to "open" (more or less when the musical "ouverture" began) and that, as the first measures of the overture were being played, the audience admired the decor as a whole. They then watched Dawn arrive, as the instruments continued to play the overture; and their jaws dropped as the Sun rose above the horizon to the sound of the final measures of the overture. At that point (the stage directions tell us) various wood divinities "come from the wings" and, in song, they "call the bucolic creatures that usually accompany them." That is, the prologue proper has begun. Let me emphasize here that, in a similar vein,
Marc-Antoine Charpentier distinguished the instrumental "ouverture" to
Endymion from the "lifting of the curtain"; but contrary to what took
place in Cadmus, in this instance the curtain did not rise until the
overture had ended. We know that, during the late 1660s and the 1670s ― at both the Opera and in the spoken theater ― the raising of the curtain coincided with the start of the instrumental overture. As the overture continued, the audience admired the stage decor and, perhaps, actors or singers positioned in a mute tableau. In the spoken theater (even in plays with singing or instrumental music), if there was no overture, the curtain rose without music and the play began. Thus, in July 1681, when Marc-Antoine Charpentier specified that his "ouverture" to Les Amours de Diane et d'Endymion should be played "before the curtain is lifted," he seems to have been breaking with at least two decades of theatrical practice. In so doing, Charpentier ― or, perhaps, the directors of the newly created Comédie Française ― may well have been innovating. (Unless it was Lully who did the innovating after 1673 and prior to 1681, but for some reason did not mention this innovation in the stage directions of the published scores and libretti of his operas.) The extent to which Charpentier's apparent innovation of 1681 may have affected theatrical and operatic practice in general ― including subsequent events for which he himself composed ― remains a matter of conjecture, until historians of the theater and the opera delve deeper into the "ouverture," 1670-1693. |