THE TSAR’s BRIDE (Rimsky-Korsakov) Moscow 1983 Vedernikov Mozorov Kovaleva
THE TSAR’s BRIDE by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Bolshoi Theatre, Moscow, Russia
1983
CAST
Vasiliy Stepanovich Sobakin – Alexander Vedernikov
Marfa – Lydia Kovaleva
Grigory Gryaznoy – Yuri Grigoriev
Malyuta Skuratov – Boris Morozov
Ivan Sergeyevich Likov – Evgeny Shapin
Lyubasha – Nina Terentieva
Yelisey Bomelius, the Tsar’s Physician – Konstantin Pustovoi
Domna Ivanovna Saburova, a merchant woman – Larissa Yurchenko
Dunyasha, her daughter, and Marfa’s girlfriend – Marina Shutova
Petrovna, the Sobakins’ Housekeeper – Nina Grigorieva
The Tsar’s Stoker – Vladislav Pashinsky
A Maiden – Nina Larionova
A Young Lad – Nikolai Vasiliev
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Yuri Simonov, conductor
Orchestra of the Bolshoi Theatre
Chorus of the Bolshoi Theatre
Stage Director: Oleg Moralev
Production Design: Fedor Fedorovsky and Nonna Fedorovskaya
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The Tsar’s Bride (Russian: Царская невеста, romanized: Tsarskaya nevesta listenⓘ) is an opera in four acts by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, the composer’s tenth opera. The libretto, by Ilia Tyumenev, is based on the drama of the same name by Lev Mey. Mey’s play was first suggested to the composer as an opera subject in 1868 by Mily Balakirev. (Alexander Borodin, too, once toyed with the idea.) However, the opera was not composed until thirty years later, in 1898. The first performance of the opera took place in 1899 at the Moscow theater of the Private Opera of Savva Mamontov.
Rimsky-Korsakov himself said of the opera that he intended it as a reaction against the ideas of Richard Wagner, and to be in the style of “cantilena par excellence”.
The Tsar’s Bride is a repertory opera in Russia, although it is not part of the standard operatic repertoire in the West.
Synopsis
Time: Autumn, 1572 Place: Aleksandrovsky settlement, Moscow, Russia
Act 1: The Feast
The Oprichnik Gryaznoi loves Marfa, daughter of the merchant Sobakin, even though Gryaznoi already has a mistress, Lyubasha, whom he has neglected of late. Marfa is already betrothed to the boyar Lykov. In a jealous rage against Lykov, Gryaznoi arranges to cast a spell on Marfa with a magic potion from Bomelius, the Tsar’s physician. Lyubasha has overheard Gryaznoi’s request.
Act 2: The Love Philtre
Lyubasha in turn obtains from Bomelius another magic potion with which to cancel any feelings of Gryaznoi for Marfa. Bomelius consents, but at the price of an assignation with Lyubasha for himself.
Act 3: The Best Man
In the meantime, the Tsar of the title, Ivan IV (known as “Ivan the Terrible”), is looking for a new bride from the best aristocratic maidens in Russia, through the newly adopted custom of bride-show. The Tsar settles upon Marfa. At the celebration of the engagement of Marfa to Lykov, everyone is surprised when the news arrives of the Tsar’s choice of Marfa as his bride. Gryaznoi had slipped what he thought was the love potion from Bomelius into Marfa’s drink at the feast.
Act 4: The Bride
At the Tsar’s palace, Marfa has become violently ill. Lykov has been executed, at the instigation of Gryaznoi, on charges of attempting to kill Marfa. When Marfa learns that Lykov is dead, she goes insane. Eventually, Gryaznoi admits that he had slipped a potion into her drink, and after learning that it was poisonous, asks that he himself be executed. Lyubasha then confesses that she had substituted her potion from Bomelius for Gryaznoi’s. In a rage, Gryaznoi murders Lyubasha, and is then taken to prison eventually to be executed. In her madness, Marfa mistakes Gryaznoi for Lykov, inviting him to return the next day to visit her, then dies.
Quoted from Wikipedia