Das kleine Hofkonzert

Das kleine Hofkonzert (The Little Court Concert) is a musical comedy in three acts (ten scenes) "from the world of Carl Spitzweg", music by Edmund Nick, libretto by Paul Verhoeven and Toni Impekoven. It premiered on 19 November 1935 at the Munich Kammerspiele.[1]

Nick also wrote a 'Fantasy' based on material from this work.[2]

Roles

Synopsis

In "a small German ducal principality, about 1840", the singer Christine Holm has been invited by His Serene Highness to the small town of Immendingen to give a "little court concert". On that occasion, she also intends to make inquiries who her father might be. Her only clue is the song "When the evening's dark veil..." ("Wenn des Abends dunkler Schleier...") which her mother sang 25 years ago for this man.

Walter, son of Earl Marshal von Arnegg, has immediately fallen in love with Christine. When nasty rumours about Christine begin to circulate in the small town, Walter supports Christine and is even prepared to leave the town with her. His Serene Highness, learning that his concert has to be cancelled because Christine has been driven out of town, recalls her. She gets introduced to the sovereign, who is impressed by her charm and promises to help with the search for her father.

She also mentions her mother's song, and the old man remembers his affair with a handsome singer 25 years ago. He decides to treat Christine from now on as his own daughter and make her a noblewoman. Even the poor poet Knipp gets a knighthood because his poetry has brought so many couples together. Now there are no more barriers to the marriage of Christine and Walter, nor to the "little court concert".

Notable arias

Films

References

  1. "Das kleine Hofkonzert (details and brief synopsis, print version)" (in German). Felix Bloch Erben Verlag. Retrieved 19 October 2007.
  2. ASIN B000024QR8, Fantasie (Disc 2, track 4)
  • Reclams Operettenführer, Anton Würz (ed.), Stuttgart 1962

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.