Proserpin is a Swedish-language opera by Joseph Martin Kraus to a libretto by the poet Johan Henrik Kellgren following a plot drafted by Gustav III himself from Philippe Quinault's Proserpine. The opera was premiered at Ulriksdal Palace on 6 June 1781 for one performance. The opera was revived at the Drottningholm Theatre in 1980 under Arnold Östman.[1][2] The opera was performed with a new German libretto at the Schwetzingen Festival in 2006.[3]

Kraus wrote to his parents on 20 June 1780 that he had received from the King's secretary a text by "the best poet in Sweden"; by 14 September he wrote again that he had almost finished the score. By the following March Kraus was able to report that his opera was in rehearsal, although there were subsequent delays before the June premiere.[4]

Roles edit

Role[5] Voice type Premiere Cast
(Conductor: – )
Proserpin, Daughter of Jupiter and Ceres soprano
Ceres, Proserpin's mother soprano
Cyane, Proserpin's nymph soprano
Atis, Cyane's lover, also in love with Proserpin tenor
Pluto, god of the Lower World and Jupiter's brother, also in love with Proserpin baritone
Jupiter, the highest god baritone
Mercurius, Jupiter's messenger tenor
A Bacchant / Faun tenor
Sicilians, nymphs, bacchants

Synopsis edit

The opera is set in Sicily. There, young mortal Atis has fallen in love with the goddess Proserpin (Proserpina), daughter of Jupiter and the fertility goddess Ceres, and for her finally abandons his fiancée Cyane. Pluto, god of the underworld, hears her fury, is also in love with Proserpin and abducts her to his realm after locating her with the help of Cyane. In Sicily, everyone is searching in vain for Proserpin. Ceres appears in a deep sorrow when she discovers what has happened, and fails to start the summer. Atis's grief at her loss is such that he jumps into Mount Etna to end his life. Cyane follows him to the underworld hoping for a concession from Pluto, who had promised her a reunion with Atis for her betrayal. She is able to emerge from the underworld with Atis and inform Ceres about her daughter's new home there. As Ceres neglects her tasks on earth because of her grief and the harvests get worse, Jupiter has a plan. He allows his messenger Mercury to announce that Proserpin will in future live alternately with him and with her mother on earth. In the closing scene, he descends from heaven to personally bless the marriage between Pluto and Proserpin and ensures a general reconciliation.

Recording edit

  • Stephen Smith (tenor), Anna Eklund-Tarantino (soprano), Jan Stromberg (tenor), Hillevi Martinpelto (soprano), Johan Christensson (tenor), Lars Arvidson (bass), Susanne Ryden (soprano), Peter Mattei (baritone) Stockholm Chamber Choir, Stockholm Chamber Orchestra, conductor Mark Tatlow. Musica Sveciae 2CD

References edit

  1. ^ Schedule for 1980 Festival at the Drottningholm Court Theatre, Opera, May 1980, p427.
  2. ^ Wadsworth, Stephen. Drottningholm – Recreating the 1780s. Opera, Annual Festival issue, Autumn 1980, p115-6.
  3. ^ Koegler, Horst. Report from Schwetzingen. Opera, November 2006, p1337-8.
  4. ^ Swanson, Alan. Kellgren's Libretto to Prosperin. In: Gustav III and the Swedish stage – Opera, theatre, and other foibles. Essays in Honor of Hans Åstrand (ed. van Boer, Bertil H, Jr). The Edwin Mellen Press, Lewiston/Queenston/Lampeter, 1993, p193.
  5. ^ Joseph Martin Kraus (1756–1792) Proserpin VB 19 at Swedish Musical Heritage / Svenske Levande Musikarv accessed 10 March 2020.