
Perséphone 1961
Perséphone descends to the Underworld…
…in compassion for the hapless Shades, there to become Pluto’s wife. Springtime accompanies her ascent back to terrestrial life and a second marriage.
(presented on a double-bill with The Santa F Opera Ballet performing Maurice Ravel’s Clarissa and Johann and Josef Strauss’ Le Wagon Couvert)
Synopsis
Part I
The Abduction of Persephone. Eumolpus, the priest of Demeter, a Greek goddess of summer and harvest, narrates: Demeter has entrusted her daughter Persephone, goddess of spring, to the care of the Nymphs.
Persephone appears, playing happily with the Nymphs among flowers on the first morning of the world. Eumolpus calls the narcissus the most beautiful flower of all. Whoever breathes its fragrance will see the unknown Underworld. The Nymphs warn Persephone not to approach and pluck the narcissus. Eumolpus, however, appeals to her compassion for the poor people of the Underworld, Shades without hope under the reign of Pluto. Persephone must console them by bringing spring to their eternal winter. She bends over the chalice of the narcissus. “How can I still laugh and sing with you, my sisters, now that I have seen people suffering …,” Persephone exclaims to the Nymphs. She plucks the narcissus and descends to the Underworld.
Artists

Vera Zorina
Director and Actress
Perséphone

Loren Driscoll
Tenor
Eumolpus

Thomas Andrew
Director/ Choreographer
Mercury

Igor Stravinsky
Conductor
(July 19)

Robert Craft
Conductor
(July 15)

Hans Busch
Director

Mme. Vera Stravinsky
Original costume sketches

Henry Heymann
Designer
Scenery and Costumes

Robert L. Benson
Lighting Designer

John Moriarty
Chorus Master