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1957 production photo from Ariadne auf Naxos

Ariadne auf Naxos 1957

August 14 - 20, 1957

What’s a composer to do…

…when his patron demands the impossible?  Accommodate, of course!  Strauss shows how a marriage of convenience between high-brow opera and low-brow comedy can succeed. Invention triumphs and harmony prevails.

Music By
Richard Strauss
Libretto By
Hugo van Hofmannsthal
English Translation By
Leopold Sachse

Synopsis

Prologue

In the salon of “the richest man in Vienna,” preparations are in progress for a new opera seria based on the Ariadne legend, with which the master of the house will divert his guests after a sumptuous dinner. The Music Master, having heard that a foolish comedy is to follow his pupil’s opera, accosts the pompous Major Domo and warns that the Composer will never tolerate such an arrangement. The Major Domo is unimpressed. No sooner have they gone than the young Composer comes in for a final rehearsal but an impudent lackey informs him that the violins are playing at dinner. A sudden inspiration brings him a new melody, but the Tenor is too busy arguing with the Wigmaker to listen to it. Zerbinetta, pert leader of some comedians, emerges from her dressing room with an Officer just as the Prima Donna comes out asking the Music Master to send for her protector, “the Count.” At first attracted lo Zerbinetta, the Composer is outraged when he learn she and her troupe are to share the bill with his masterpiece. Zerbinetta and the Prima Donna lock horns while dissension spreads. As the commotion reaches its height, the Major Domo returns with a flourish to announce that because of limited time, the opera and the comedy are to be played simultaneously, succeeded by a fireworks display. At first dumbstruck, the artists try to collect themselves and plan: the Dancing Master extracts musical cuts from the despairing Composer, with the lead singers each urging that the other’s part be abridged, while the comedians are given a briefing on the opera’ plot. Ariadne, they learn, after being abandoned by Theseus, has come o Naxos to wait for death. No, says Zerbinetta – she only needs a new lover. The comedienne decides her troupe will portray a band of travelers trapped on the island by chance. Bidding the Composer take heart, he assures him that she, like Ariadne, longs for a lasting romance, but as his interest in the actress grows, she suddenly dashes off to join her colleagues. Now the Prima Donna threatens not to go on, but the Music Master soothes her by promising a triumph, and the heartened Composer greets his teacher with a paean to music. Al the last minute he catches sight of the comics in full cry and runs out in horror.

Artists

Marguerite Willauer

Marguerite Willauer

Soprano

Composer

Joan Carroll

Joan Carroll

Soprano

Zerbinetta

Shirlee Emmons

Shirlee Emmons

Soprano

Ariadne/Prima Donna

William McGrath

William McGrath

Tenor

Bacchus/Tenor

Robert Rue

Robert Rue

Baritone

Music Master

Loren Driscoll

Loren Driscoll

Tenor

Dancing Master/Brighella

Ronald Andrews

Bass

Wigmaker

Joan Moynagh

Joan Moynagh

Soprano

Nyad

Regina Sarfaty

Regina Sarfaty

Mezzo-soprano

Dryad

Carol Bergey

Carol Bergey

Soprano

Echo

Peter Binder

Peter Binder

Baritone

Harlequin

Wayne Whitman

Tenor

Scaramouche

Andrew Foldi

Andrew Foldi

Bass-baritone

Truffaldin

Leonard Potter

Leonard Potter

Bass

Lackey

Richard Gilley

Tenor

Officer

Vernon Hammond

Vernon Hammond

Conductor

Robert Ackart

Robert Ackart

Director

Major-Domo

Patton Campbell

Patton Campbell

Costume Designer

Production Designer