Le 66

Le 66 is an opérette in one act of 1856 with music by Jacques Offenbach. The French libretto was by Auguste Pittaud de Forges and Laurencin (Paul Aimé Chapelle).[1] Gänzl describes the work as "in the rustic vein of Le violoneux and Le mariage aux lanternes".[2]

Performance history

The premiere was at the Théâtre des Bouffes Parisiens (Salle Lacaze) Paris, on 31 July 1856, one of nine one-acters produced by the Bouffes Parisiens that year. Le 66 remained in the Bouffes Parisiens repertoire, and was played by them in Vienna in 1862. It had already been seen at the Carltheater in that city in 1859, was produced in Budapest in 1860, and mounted in London in 1865 and 1876. It was revived in Paris in 1984 at the Studio Bertrand alongside Pépito.[2]

Contemporary critics particularly admired in the score the romance and tyrolienne and the entry song of the colporteur.[3]

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere Cast, 31 July 1856[3]
(Conductor: Jacques Offenbach)
Frantz, a young Tyrolean, travelling singer tenor Gerpré
Grittly, his cousin, travelling singer soprano Maréschal
Joseph Berthold baritone Guyot

Synopsis

En route for Strasbourg two starving travellers reach the outskirts of Stuttgart. Grittly has learnt that her sister is in great distress and set off to see her; Frantz has gone with her. On meeting a pedlar on the road Frantz wins 100,000 florins in a lottery with the ticket 66. He borrows money from the pedlar and goes off to the town on a spending spree, returning in expensive grotesque clothes. Grittly and he argue – and then discover that the ticket is actually 99. However, the pedlar turns out to be a rich long-lost relation (and husband of Grittly's sister) who wanted to give Frantz a lesson in the dangers of extravagance.[3]

Musical numbers

References

Notes
  1. Lamb A. Jacques Offenbach (List of stage works). In: The New Grove Dictionary of Opera. Macmillan, London and New York, 1997.
  2. 1 2 Gänzl K. Le 66. In: The Encyclopaedia of the Musical Theatre. Blackwell, Oxford, 1994.
  3. 1 2 3 Yon, Jean-Claude. Jacques Offenbach. Éditions Gallimard, Paris, 2000.

External links

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