Der Evangelimann

Der Evangelimann (The Evangelist) is an opera in two acts by the Austrian composer Wilhelm Kienzl. The libretto, by the composer, is based on Leopold Florian Meissner's short story Aus den Berichten eines Polizeikommissärs.[1] It was adapted in 1924 as a silent film The Evangelist.

Composition history

Kienzl composed the opera in a relatively short space of time during 1894 in Graz and in the little Austrian town of Vöcklabruck. When he played extracts from the score to conductor Karl Muck and Count Hochberg (then artistic director of the Berlin Opera), they immediately secured the rights to the premiere.[2] The score was published by Musikverlages Bote & Bock Berlin GmbH, now part of Boosey & Hawkes.[1]

Performance history

The opera was first performed at the Neues Königliches Opernhaus, Berlin on 4 May 1895.[1][3] It was a triumphant success. Within only a few years most German and Austrian opera houses had the work in their repertory. Famous conductors such as Felix Mottl, Gustav Mahler, Franz Schalk and Richard Strauss gave it their support, and the title role of the Evangelist Mathias was sung by prominent tenors.[2] On 17 January 1927, Kienzl celebrated his 70th birthday by conducting the work at the Vienna State Opera, with Lotte Lehmann, and Richard Tauber in the leading roles. The cast also included Hermann Wiedemann, Bella Paalen and Franz Markhoff. [See Neue Freie Presse, Vienna, 17 January 1927, page 10.]

Roles

Role[1] Voice type Premiere Cast[3]
4 May 1895
(Conductor: Karl Muck)
Friedrich Engel, magistrate in the monastery of St. Othmar bass Josef Mödlinger
Martha, his niece and charge dramatic soprano Bertha Pierson
Magdalena, her friend contralto Marie Goetze
Johannes Freudhofer, school teacher in St. Othmar baritone Paul Bulss
Mathias Freudhofer, his younger brother, clerk in the monastery dramatic tenor Eloi Sylva
Xaver Zitterbart, tailor buffo tenor Julius Lieban
Anton Schnappauf, gun-smith buffo bass Rudolf Krasa
Friedrich Aibler, an older citizen baritone Hermann Bachmann
Aibler's wife mezzo-soprano
Frau Huber lyric soprano
Hans, a farmer's boy lyric tenor
Voice of the "skittle boy" lyric soprano
Voice of the night-watchman bass
Ragwoman mezzo-soprano
Boy soprano

Synopsis

Act 1

Place and time: the Benedictine monastery St. Othmar in Lower Austria, in the year 1820.

Mathias, clerk in the monastery of St. Othmar, is in love with Martha, the foster daughter of the magistrate Friedrich Engel. Mathias’s brother Johannes is jealous of Martha’s affection and starts an intrigue against him. When the magistrate is informed of what is happening between his charge and Mathias, he dismisses the clerk and expels him from the monastery. Martha resists Johannes’s intrusiveness. When Johannes witnesses Martha and Mathias swearing fidelity to each other at their farewell, his jealousy turns into blind hate and he sets the monastery on fire. It is not he, however, but Mathias, who is arrested as the alleged wrongdoer.

Act 2

Place and time: Vienna, 1850

Mathias has served a twenty-year sentence and, having been denied re-integration into society, travels the country as an itinerant preacher (this act contains the most popular piece in the opera: Selig sind, die Verfolgung leiden um der Gerechtigkeit willen, sung by Mathias and a children's chorus). Martha took her life after his imprisonment, Johannes has become rich by dishonest means and lives in Vienna, now a severely ill man. Thirty years after the events at St. Othmar the brothers meet again. Mathias forgives Johannes, who can thus die in peace.

Recordings

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Wilhelm Kienzl - Evangelimann - Opera". United Kingdom: Boosey & Hawkes. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  2. 1 2 Scherle, Arthur (1981). Der Evangelimann (Media notes). Wilhelm Kienzl. EMI Classics. 566370-2.
  3. 1 2 "Musical events 4 May 1895". Italy: AmadeusOnline. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  4. "Review - Kienzl - Der Evangelimann". United Kingdom: Gramophone. September 1989. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
  5. "Wilhelm Kienzl: Der Evangelimann (DVD)". Germany: JPC. 2006. Retrieved 15 August 2010.
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