[Met Performance] CID:49510

World Premiere, New Production, In the presence of the composer

K?nigskinder
Metropolitan Opera House, Wed, December 28, 1910

Debut : Edna Walter, Lotte Engel




K?nigskinder (1)
Engelbert Humperdinck | Elsa Berntsein
Goosegirl
Geraldine Farrar

King's Son
Hermann Jadlowker

Witch
Louise Homer

Fiddler
Otto Goritz

Woodcutter
Adamo Didur

Broommaker
Albert Reiss

Broommaker's Child
Edna Walter [Debut]

Broommaker's Child
Lotte Engel [Debut]

Innkeeper
Antonio Pini-Corsi

Innkeeper's Daughter
Florence Wickham

Stable Maid
Marie Mattfeld

Gatekeeper
Herbert Witherspoon

Gatekeeper
William Hinshaw

Councillor
Marcel Reiner

Tailor
Julius Bayer


Conductor
Alfred Hertz


Director
Anton Schertel

Set Designer
Burghart & Co.

Set Designer
James Fox

Costume Designer
Louise Musaeus

Costume Designer
Blaschke & Cie

Composer
Engelbert Humperdinck

Engelbert Humperdinck



K?nigskinder received sixteen performances this season.
Whenever he sang the brief role of a Gatekeeper, Witherspoon used the pseudonym Ernst Maran.

Review 1:

Review of Henry Krehbiel in the New York Tribune

A German opera can generally stand severer criticism than one in another language, because there is a more strict application of principles in Germany when it comes to writing a lyric drama than in any other country, so in the present instance there is no need to conceal the fact that there are outbreaks against the German language which are none the less flagrant and censurable because they are, to some extent, concealed under the thin veneer of the allegory and symbolism which every reader must have recognized as running through the play. This is, in a manner, Wagnerian, as so much of the music is Wagnerian-especially that of the second act, which because it calls up scenes from the "Meistersinger" must also necessarily call up music from the same comedy. But there is little cause here to quarrel with Professor Humperdinck. He has applied the poetical principle of Wagner to the fairy tale which is so closely related to the myth, and he has with equal consistency applied Wagner's constructive methods musically and dramatically. It is to his great honor that, of all of Wagner's successors, he has been the only one to do so successfully. . . Though the composer hews to a theoretical line he does it freely, naturally, easily and always with the principles of musical beauty as well as that of dramatic truthfulness and propriety in view. His people's voices float on a symphonic stream, but the voices of the instruments, while they sing in the endless melody, use the idiom which nature gave them. There is an admirable characterization in the orchestral music, but it is music for all that; it never descends to mere noise, designed to keep up an irritation of the nerves.

With what exquisite charm an artist like Miss Farrar might invest a character like that of the Goose Girl her admirers could easily fancy before they entered the theatre, but it is doubtful if anyone's imagination quite reached the figure which she bodied forth. It was a vision of tender loveliness which she presented, and as perfect in conception as in execution.

Note: "At the close of the opera Miss Farrar caused "much amusement" by appearing before the curtain with a live goose under her arm. The composer, who had viewed the performance from the auditorium, was summoned to the stage and was presented with a silver laurel wreath by Manager Gatti-Casazza on behalf of the company."

Alfred Hertz, Engelbert Humperdinck, and Giulio Gatti-Casazza around the time of the world premiere of Humperdinck's K?nigskinder. Photography by Herman Mishkin.

Geraldine Farrar and Hermann Jadlowker in K?nigskinder. Photograph by White Studio.



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