Énée et Lavinie (Dauvergne)

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Title page of the score

Énée et Lavinie (Aeneas and Lavinia) is an opera by the French composer Antoine Dauvergne, first performed at the Académie Royale de Musique (the Paris Opéra) on 14 February 1758. It takes the form of a tragédie lyrique in five acts.

It is a resetting of a libretto by Bernard Le Bovier de Fontenelle, which was originally set by Pascal Collasse in 1690. The story is taken from the later books of Virgil's Aeneid.

Roles

Cast Voice type Premiere
Junon (the goddess Juno) soprano Marie-Madeleine Chefdeville (née Jendrest)
Venus (the goddess Venus) soprano Marie-Jeanne Larrivée Lemière
Iris soprano Marie-Jeanne Larrivée (née Lemière)
Le roi, the King of Latium basse-taille (bass-baritone) Henri Larrivée
La reine, the Queen soprano Mlle Davaux
Lavinie (Lavinia), their daughter soprano Marie Fel
Turnus, King of the Rutuli basse-taille (bass-baritone) Nicolas Gélin
Ilionée (Ilioneus) basse-taille (bass-baritone) Person
Camille (Camilla) soprano Mlle Rivier
L'ombre de Didon (the ghost of
Dido
)
soprano Mlle Sixce
Énée (Aeneas), a Trojan prince haute-contre François Poirier
Le grand prêtre de Janus (the high priest of Janus) haute-contre Jean-Pierre Pillot
Premier faune, the first faun haute-contre Jean-Pierre Pillot
Second faune, the second faun basse-taille (bass-baritone) Albert
L'oracle de Faunus, the oracle of Faunus basse-taille (bass-baritone) Desbelles
Une troyenne, a Trojan woman soprano Sophie Arnould
Hébé (the goddess Hebe) ballerina Mlle Puvignée
Chorus: Priests of Janus, Rutulian soldiers, Trojan soldiers, Latin peoples
Ballet: Latin peoples, fauns and dryads, bacchantes, gamblings and pleasures, Hébé's retinue, sylvan divinities

Synopsis

Bacchus
also inspires Lavinia with a hatred of the Trojans and she announces she will marry Turnus. Aeneas reproaches her for her choice and tells her he only abandoned Dido because the god Jupiter told him to. Lavinia admits she loathes Turnus and was only persuaded to marry him by a divine fury sent by Bacchus. Turnus arrives and Aeneas challenges him to single combat. Turnus accepts. The goddess Venus brings Aeneas special armour. Aeneas and Turnus fight (offstage) and Aeneas is victorious. Juno renounces her hatred for the Trojans and the opera ends with the wedding of Aeneas and Lavinia.

Sources

  • David Charlton Opera in the Age of Rousseau: Music, Confrontation, Realism, Cambridge University Press, 2012.
  • Félix Clément and Pierre Larousse Dictionnaire des Opéras, Paris, 1881.
  • (in French) Benoït Dratwicki, Antoine Dauvergne (1713—1797): une carrière tourmentée dans la France musicale des Lumières, Editions Mardaga, 2011.

External links