Libretto: Written by Bernard Stambler, based on the play by Arthur Miller, German Translation by Thomas Martin Synopsis: The story is Arthur Miller's impassioned parable of witchcraft and intrigue in colonial Salem; a story of good and evil, in which bigoted men and women used the cry of "witch" to destroy those they hated or envied. The town of Salem has been seized by a wave of hysteria. The slave, Tituba, is accused by the wily and pretty Abigail, who uses the situation to destroy the community. When the witch trial begins under the administration of the terrifying zealot, Judge Danforth, Abigail accuses Elizabeth, the wife of John Proctor, of witchcraft. Abigail hopes thereby to get Elizabeth out of the way and regain John's affection. John remains loyal to his wife, however, even admitting in court to his adultery with Abigail in order to expose her fraud. He is not believed, however, and is himself arrested and, along with Tituba and other innocents, condemned to the gallows. In a blaze of courage at the opera's end, John refuses to sign the false confession that would free him. Duration: ~2 hours Roles: | Betty Parris | Mezzo Soprano | Reverend Samuel Parris | Tenor | Tituba | Contralto | Abigail Williams | Soprano | Ann Putnam | Soprano | Thomas Putnam | Baritone | Rebecca Nurse | Contralto | Francis Nurse | Bass | Giles Corey | Tenor | John Proctor | Baritone | Reverend John Hale | Bass | Elizabeth Proctor | Mezzo Soprano | Mary Warren | Soprano | Ezekiel Cheever | Tenor | Judge Danforth | Tenor | Sarah Good | Soprano | Chorus of Girls | 1 mezzo soprano, 1 coloratura, 2 contraltos, 2 sopranos | Chorus ad lib. | |
Premier: October 26, 1961, New York City Opera Awards: Winner, Pulitzer Prize - Music, 1962 Winner, New York Critics Circle Citation, 1962 Notable Performances: The New York City Opera San Francisco Opera Belgrade National Opera Peabody Conservatory, Baltimore Chamber Opera Chicago Boston Opera Collaborative Cincinnati Conservatory of Music Juilliard School Eastman School New England Conservatory University of Michigan Manhattan School of Music Aspen Music Festival Reviews:
At last week's performance... I was able to get a clearer idea of this opera, which is, of course, a study of the human conscience based on Arthur Miller's play about the Salem witch trails. Again, the beauty, nobility, skill, power, and utter sincerity of Mr. Ward's music bowled me over. If a finer opera has been written since the days of Strauss and Puccini, I have not heard it. ... The Crucible is comparable to the great masterworks of the classical repertory, and I like to think of it also as an example of the true music of the future. It is, in short, music of the most inspired sort, written by a master of his craft. -Winthrop Sargeant, THE NEW YORKER
Mr. Ward's hit is "The Crucible," his brilliant operatic adaptation of Arthur Miller's play about the Salem witch trials as a metaphor for the McCarthy hearings. The Crucible has a superb libretto, lightly adapted from the Miller by Bernard Stambler. And it has a score that balances folkish Americana with the driving devil-possession effects also used by Prokofiev in "The Flaming Angel" and Krzysztof Penderecki in "The Devils of Loudon" and the elegiac nobility evoked by Poulenc in "The Dialogues of the Carmelites." -John Rockwell, THE NEW YORK TIMES
For my money it is the finest American opera of the century, with a libretto good enough to inspire a Verdi or Mussorgsky. -George Stowe, THE HARTFORD TIMES Click here to read a review of The Crucible at 2016 Glimmerglass Festival by DC Theatre Scene.com! | Â Â |
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