Doctor Frankstein
Doctor Frankstein
Doctor Frankstein
Doktor Faust
Opera by Ferruccio Busoni
Contents
1 Performance history
2 Roles
3 Instrumentation
4 Synopsis
4.1 Symphonia
4.2 The poet speaks
4.3 Prologue 1
4.4 Prologue 2
4.5 Intermezzo
4.6 Hauptspiel [Principal Action]
4.6.1 Scene 1
4.6.2 Symphonic intermezzo
4.6.3 Scene 2
4.6.4 Scene 3
4.7 Epilogue
5 Recordings
6 Notes
7 References
8 Further reading
9 External links
Performance history
Doktor Faust was given its world premiere at the Schsiches Staatstheater, Dresden on 21 May
1925 using the version completed by Philipp Jarnach. The premiere was conducted by Fritz Busch,
produced by Alfred Reucker, and designed by Karl Danneman.[3] Over the next few years the opera
was performed in many of the opera houses of Germany including those in Dortmund, Duisburg,
Karlsruhe, Weimar, and Hanover in 1925; Hanover and Wiesbaden in 1926; and Stuttgart,
Dortmund, Hanover, Cologne, Leipzig, Hamburg, and Frankfurt in 1927. The opera finally reached
Berlin on 27 October 1927 with a performance at the Staatsoper am Platz der Republik.[4][5] The
work was performed again in Hanover and in Prague, the first performance outside of Germany, in
June 1928.[6]
Its first performance in England was on 17 March 1937 in a concert version presented at Queen's
Hall, London, conducted by Sir Adrian Boult. The opera was sung in the English translation
prepared by Edward J. Dent, produced by Edward Clark, and starred Dennis Noble as Faust and
Parry Jones as Mephistopheles.[6] A second concert version was presented at the Royal Festival
Hall, London, on 13 November 1959, again conducted by Boult, with Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau in
the title role and Richard Lewis as Mephistopheles.[7] The UK stage premiere did not occur until
1986, when it was mounted in London at the English National Opera beginning on 25 April with
conductors Mark Elder and Antony Beaumont. Thomas Allen sang Faust and Graham Clark,
Mephistopheles. The performance was sung in Dent's translation and used the new ending by
Antony Beaumont.[8][9]
The opera received its Italian premiere at the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino on 28 May 1942 under
the baton of Fernando Previtali and starring Enzo Mascherini as Faust, Renato Gigli as Mefistofele,
and Augusta Oltrabella as the duchess. Previtali conducted another notable production of the opera
at that house in 1964 with Renato Cesari as Faust, Herbert Handt as Mefistofele, and Luisa
Maragliano as the duchess. La Scala staged the opera for the first time on 16 March 1960 under
conductor Hermann Scherchen with Dino Dondi in the title role, Aldo Bertocci as Mefistofele, and
Margherita Roberti as the duchess.[5]
The first performance of Doktor Faust in France occurred at the Thtre des Champs-lyses on 19
June 1963.[5] Shortly thereafter, the work had its United States premiere on 1 December 1964 in a
concert format presented by the American Opera Society at Carnegie Hall. The production was
conducted by Jascha Horenstein and starred Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau in the title role with George
Shirley as Mephistopheles and Ingrid Bjoner as the Duchess of Parma.[10] The first United States
staged performance of the work was given on 25 January 1974 in Reno, Nevada, by the Nevada
Opera Company conducted by Ted Puffer at the Pioneer Center for the Performing Arts. The opera
was given in an English translation by Ted and Deena Puffer and starred Daniel Sullivan as Faust
and Ted Rowland as Mephistopheles.[11]
Although certainly not one of the most frequently performed operas, Doktor Faust has been
produced a number of times over the last twenty-five years. Companies which have staged the work
include: the Teatro Comunale di Bologna (1985), the Palais Garnier (1989), La Scala (1989), the
New York City Opera (1992), the Salzburg Festival (presented by the Opra National de Lyon,
1999), the Staatsoper Unter den Linden (2006), and the Berlin State Opera (2008) among others.[5]
The Metropolitan Opera mounted its first production of the work in 2001 with Thomas Hampson in
the title role, Robert Brubaker as Mephistopheles, and Katarina Dalayman as the duchess.[12][13]
The San Francisco Opera performed the work for the first time in a co-production with the
Staatsoper Stuttgart in 2004 with Rodney Gilfry in the title role, Chris Merritt as Mephistopheles,
and Hope Briggs as the duchess.[14][15] A 2006 performance of the opera at the Zurich Opera was
filmed live and released on DVD. The production starred Thomas Hampson in the title role and was
conducted by Philippe Jordan (see additional details here).
Roles
Premiere Cast, 21 May 1925[3]
Role Voice type
(Conductor: Fritz Busch)
The Poet spoken Erich Ponto [nb 1]
Doktor Faust baritone Robert Burg
Wagner, his famulus,
bass Willy Bader
later Rector magnificus
Mephistopheles, sixth voice,
a man dressed in black,
tenor Theo Strack
a monk, a herald, court chaplain,
courier, night-watchman
The Duke of Parma tenor or baritone Josef Correck
The Duchess of Parma soprano Meta Seinemeyer
Master of Ceremonies bass Adolf Schoepflin
The girl's brother, a soldier tenor or baritone Rudolf Schmalnauer [nb 2]
A lieutenant tenor Ludwig Eybisch [nb 3]
First student from Cracow tenor E. Meyerolbersleben
Second student from Cracow tenor Paul Schffler
Third student from Cracow bass Wilhelm Moy
Theologian baritone Robert Bssel [nb 4]
Law student baritone Wilhelm Moy
Natural scientist baritone Heinrich Hermanns
First student from Wittenberg tenor Heinrich Tessmer [nb 5]
Second student from Wittenberg tenor E. Meyerolbersleben
Third student from Wittenberg tenor Ludwig Eybisch
Fourth student from Wittenberg baritone Paul Schffler
Gravis,[nb 6] first spirit voice bass Heinrich Hermanns
Levis,[nb 6] second spirit voice bass Robert Bssel
Asmodus, third spirit voice baritone Paul Schffler
Beelzebuth, fourth spirit voice tenor Heinrich Kuppinger
Megros,[nb 7] fifth spirit voice tenor Ludwig Eybisch
soprano Erna Berger
soprano Irmgard Quitzow
alto Adelma von Tinty
alto Elfriede Haberkorn
Voices from on high
tenor Ludwig Eybisch
tenor E. Meyerolbersleben
bass Paul Schffler
bass Heinrich Hermanns
Chorus: churchgoers, spirit voices, soldiers, courtiers, Catholic and Lutheran
students, huntsmen, peasants; Dancers: fencing pages
Instrumentation
The orchestra consists of: 3 flutes (piccolo), 3 oboes (English horn), 3 clarinets (bass clarinet), 3
bassoons (contrabassoon); 5 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba; timpani, percussion (triangle,
drum, military drum, cymbals, tam-tam, xylophone, bass drum, glockenspiel, celesta), 2 harps;
organ; strings. Stage music: 3 trumpets, 2 trombones; bells; timpani; strings (violin, viola, cello).
[16]
Synopsis
The opera contains two prologues, an intermezzo, and three scenes.[17]
Symphonia
Orchestral introduction: Easter Vespers and Augurs of Spring. The orchestra begins with bell
imitations; later the chorus, behind the curtain, sings the single word: "Pax".
Prologue 2
Midnight that same evening.
Faust opens the book and follows its directions. He makes a circle on the floor, steps into it and
calls upon Lucifer to appear. A pale light is seen around the room, and then unseen voices
materialize. Faust then wishes, as his 'Will', for spirits at his beck and call. Five flames appear,
servants of Lucifer, but Faust is not impressed at their claims of speed. The sixth flame/voice,
Mephistopheles, claims that "I am as swift as the thoughts of man" ("als wie des Menschen
Gedanke"). Faust then accepts Mephistopheles as a servant. He demands that all his wishes be
granted, to have all knowledge and the power of genius. Mephistopheles, in return, says that Faust
must serve him after death, which Faust recoils from at first. Mephistopheles reminds Faust that his
creditors and enemies are at the door. With Faust's approval, Mephistopheles causes them to fall,
dead. Then, with the chorus in the distance singing a 'Credo' on Easter morning, Faust signs the pact
in blood, wondering what has become of his 'Will'. He faints upon realizing that he has forfeited his
soul. Mephistopheles gleefully takes the contract in hand.
Intermezzo
By this point, Faust has seduced the maiden Gretchen. At a chapel, her brother, a soldier, prays to
find and punish the violator of his sister's honour. Mephistopheles points out the soldier to Faust,
who wants to kill him, but not with his own hands. Mephistopheles disguises himself as a monk and
offers to hear the Soldier's confession. A military patrol, surreptitiously directed by Mephistopheles,
enters and kills the Soldier, claiming that the soldier had murdered their captain. The soldier's death
is then to weigh on Faust's conscience.
Symphonic intermezzo
In modo d'una Sarabanda [In the style of a Sarabande]
Scene 2
At a tavern in Wittenberg
Some students talk of Plato and metaphysics, with Faust present. After Faust has responded to a
question by saying that "Nothing is proven, and nothing is provable", with a citation of Martin
Luther, the Catholic and Protestant students break into quarrel. Once that has subsided, Faust recalls
his affair with the Duchess. Mephistopheles, disguised as a courier, brings the news that she has
died and sent a gift to Faust. This is a baby's corpse, and Mephistopheles tosses it at Faust's feet.
Mephistopheles tells the students of Faust's seduction of the Duchess, and subsequent abandonment.
Mephistopheles then changes the dead infant into a bundle of straw and sets fire to it, from which
comes a vision of Helen of Troy. The students recoil, and Mephistopheles departs. Faust attempts to
embrace the vision, but it eludes him. In her place instead, the three Krakw students materialize, to
demand the return of the magic book. Faust tells them that he has destroyed it. The students then tell
him that he will die at the stroke of midnight.
Scene 3
A Wittenberg street, in the snow, outside the church.
Mephistopheles, in disguise as a Night Watchman, announces that it is eleven o'clock. Wagner, the
successor to Faust as university Rector and now resident in Faust's former home, says good-night to
a group of students. Faust enters, alone, and sees his old home. Voices from the church sing of
judgment and salvation. Faust wants to try to redeem himself with one final good deed. He sees a
beggar woman with a child, and realizes that she is the Duchess. She hands him the child, tells him
that there is still time to complete his work before midnight, then vanishes. Faust then tries to enter
the church, but the Soldier (from the Intermezzo) materializes to block his path. Faust tries to pray,
but cannot remember the words. From the light of the Night Watchman's lamp, Faust sees the figure
of the crucified Christ metamorphose into that of Helen of Troy. "Gibt es keine Gnade?" ["Is there
no mercy?"], he sings. (At this point in the Beaumont version Faust sings "Euch zum Trotze ... die
wir nennen bse.... An dieser hohen Einsicht meiner Reife bricht sich nun eure Bosheit und in der
mir errungnen Freiheit erlischt Gott und Teufel zugleich." ["I defy you ... whom we call evil.... Your
malice breaks on the superior insight of my maturity, and in the freedom gained by me, God and the
Devil together cease to exist."]) In parallel with Prologue I, Faust forms a circle on the ground. He
then steps into it with the child's body and, with one last supreme effort, he transfers his life-force to
the child. The Night Watchman calls out the midnight hour; Faust falls dead; a naked youth arises
with a blossoming branch in his right hand and steps forth into the night. The Night Watchman, now
revealed as Mephistopheles, sees Faust's body on the ground, and asks "Sollte dieser Mann
verunglckt sein?"["Has this man met with some misfortune?"]. In the Beaumont ending
Mephistopheles throws Faust's body onto his shoulders and walks off; distant voices repeat Faust's
final words: "Blut meines Blutes, Glied meines Gliedes, dir vermach' ich mein Leben, ich, Faust,
ich, Faust, ein ewiger Wille." ["Blood of my blood, limb of my limb, I bequeath to thee my life, I,
Faust, I, Faust, one eternal will."]
Epilogue
The poet speaks to the spectators. (This section is often omitted.)
Recordings
Audio recordings
1959: Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (Faust), Richard Lewis (Mephistopheles), Heather Harper
(Duchess of Parma), John Cameron (Duke of Parma), Ian Wallace (Wagner); London
Philharmonic Orchestra, Royal Academy of Music Chorus; Sir Adrian Boult, conductor
(Jarnach version with about 20 minutes of music omitted; complete radio broadcast, 205
minutes [includes 1954 Glyndebourne Arlecchino]: Immortal Performances IPCD 1017-3;
abridged recording of the radio broadcast, 74 minutes: LPO 0056).[18]
1970: Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (Faust), William Cochran (Mephistopheles), Hildegard
Hillebrecht (Duchess of Parma), Anton de Ridder (Duke of Parma), Karl Christian Kohn
(Wagner); Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra and Chorus; Ferdinand Leitner, conductor
(Deutsche Grammophon; Jarnach version, a studio performance for radio broadcast by
Bavarian Radio with European Union funding, from first edition liner notes, with cuts to the
score;[19][20] see additional details here).
1998: Dietrich Henschel (Faust), Kim Begley (Mephistopheles), Torsten Kerl (Duke of
Parma)), Eva Jenisova (Duchess of Parma), Markus Hollop (Wagner/The Master of
Ceremonies), Detlef Roth (The girl's brother), Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (speaker); Orchestre
et Choeur de l'Opra National de Lyon; Kent Nagano, conductor (Erato; Beaumont edition,
with choice of Jarnach or Beaumont final scene via CD player programming; (Grammy
Award for Best Opera Recording of 2001); see additional details here).
Video recording
2006: Thomas Hampson (Faust), Gregory Kunde (Mephistopheles), Sandra Tratmigg
(Duchess of Parma); Zurich Opera House Chorus and Orchestra; Philippe Jordan, conductor
(Arthaus Musik DVD and Blu-ray Disc; Jarnach version, taken from live performances, with
cuts to the score; see additional details here).
Notes
Erich Ponto appeared as a baritone in the premiere of Kurt Weill's The Threepenny Opera,
and as an actor in films, including Die Feuerzangenbowle, Kleider machen Leute, No
Greater Love, Sauerbruch Das war mein Leben, and The Third Man.
Rudolf Schmalnauer also performed in the premiere of Die schweigsame Frau.
Ludwig Eybisch also performed in the premiere of Arabella.
Robert Bssel also performed in the premieres of Arabella and Die toten Augen
Heinrich Tessmer also performed in the recording of The Bartered Bride conducted by
Thomas Beecham.
Gravis and Levis are Latin antonyms meaning "heavy" and "light." Smith, pp. 484 and 633.
7. Megros, a son of Zeus and a Nymphe, escaped the flood in the time of Deukalion, by
ascending Mount Gerania. - Pausanias, Guide to Greece 1.40.1, accessed on 5 February
2009.
References
Notes
1.
Beaumont, p. 312.
Keith-Smith, B., Review "The Libretto as Literature: Doktor Faust by Ferruccio Busoni",
The Modern Language Review, 98(4), 1 October 2003, p. 1078.
Beaumont, p. 311.
Roberge, pp. 342343.
Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Performance history". Almanacco Amadeus (Italian).
Roberge, p. 344.
Roberge, p. 346.
Roberge, p. 352.
Calum McDonald, "Doktor Faust", Tempo, 158, pp. 5255 (1986).
Harold C. Schonberg (December 2, 1964). "Music: Busoni's 'Doktor Faust' Is Presented at
Carnegie Hall; Opera Society Gives It First Hearing Audience Impressed by Unusual
Score". New York Times. Retrieved May 9, 2009.
Roberge, p. 349.
Peter G. Davis, "All Fired Up", New York, 29 January 2001.
Alex Ross, "Ferrucio Busoni/Frank Martin", The New Yorker, 29 January 2001.
San Francisco Opera archives
"San Francisco's Fascinating Doktor Faust", San Diego Magazine, June 25, 2004.
Kindermann, p. 400; Roberge, p. 44; Beaumont, p. 312.
Synopsis is based on Huynh, pp. 8-9, and Beaumont, pp. 312-314.
The recordings of Adrian Boult's 1959 radio broadcast were reviewed in Fanfare magazine
(subscription required). There were two of the complete recording on the Immortal
Performances label: review by James A. Altena, Fanfare 35:5 (May/June 2012), pp. 178
180; review by Adrian Corleonis, Fanfare 35:5 (May/June 2012), pp. 180182; and two of
the abridged recording on the LPO label: review by Adrian Corleonis, Fanfare 35:3 (Jan/Feb
2012), p. 326; review by Ronald E. Grames, Fanfare 35:5 (May/June 2012), pp. 177178.
The recording of the complete broadcast was preferred and highly recommended.
Ronald Stevenson, "Review of recording of Busoni's Doktor Faust ", Musical Times,
112(1535), p. 39 (1971).
20.Calum MacDonald, "Review of recordings of music of Busoni", Tempo (New Series, 50th
Anniversary), 170, pp. 49-50 (1989).
Sources
Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Doktor Faust, 21 May 1925". Almanacco Amadeus (Italian).
Beaumont, Antony (1985). Busoni the Composer, London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-
13149-2.
Holden, Amanda, ed. (1993). The Viking Opera Guide. New York: Viking. ISBN 0-670-
81292-7.
Huynh, Pascal (1993). Booklet notes to the Nagano/Doktor Faust recording. Erato 3984-
25501-2.
Kindermann, Jrgen (1980). Thematisch-chronologisches Verzeichnis der Werke von
Ferruccio B. Busoni. Studien zur Musikgeschichte des 19. Jahrhunderts, vol. 19.
Regensburg: Gustav Bosse Verlag. ISBN 3-7649-2033-5.
Roberge, Marc-Andr (1991). Ferruccio Busoni: a bio-bibliography. New York:Greenwood
Press. ISBN 0-313-25587-3.
Smith, William (1855). Latin-English dictionary: based upon the works of Forcellini and
Freund. London: John Murray. (Accessed on 5 February 2009.)
Further reading
Crispin, Judith Michele (2007). The Esoteric Musical Tradition of Ferruccio Busoni and its
Reinvigoration in the Music of Larry Sitsky: the Operas "Doktor Faust" and "The Golem"
(preface by Larry Sitsky). Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN 0-7734-5407-1.