Tragédie lyrique in one prologue and five acts (1678)
Libretto by Thomas Corneille and Bernard Le Bovier de Fontenelle
Concert performance in French
Kindly supported by the Institut français d'Autriche on the occasion of the "Night of Ideas"
Cast
Synopsis / About the opera
In his Metamorphoses – today otherwise known as The Golden Ass – the poet Apuleius (123 – c. 170 AD) made Amor and Psyche the main protagonists in the only novel from ancient Rome that has survived in its entirety. No Greek source material is known, so it is likely that Apuleius created it himself, and for once a metamorphosis has an ending that is entirely happy. In Baroque-era Paris Molière turned his attention to the story and in 1671 was working on the tragédie-balletPsyché for which his long-time musical partner Lully was to write the music. Molière was pressed for time, so he engaged the authors Pierre Corneille and Philippe Quinault to help him with the libretto. However, Molière and Lully fell out, and the composer subsequently worked with Quinault as his librettist. Following Molière’s death in 1678, Lully returned to the material. Corneille’s younger brother Thomas, himself a noted poet at that time, and Fontenelle, the early proponent of the Enlightenment, shortened the work, turning the rigid alexandrines of the spoken dialogue into verses suitable for recitative and creating a new text to which to set the music. For the tragédie lyrique they also altered Molière’s plot: Venus schemes against the mortal Psyché who throws herself into a river out of grief and lovesickness. However, Jupiter commands that Psyché be allowed to ascend to the heavens where she experiences eternal love with Amor. Historical reports of the success or otherwise of the premiere at the Paris opera differ wildly. The magazine Le Mercure galant describes the opera as another perfect work by Lully. But this assessment can be doubted since the one of the magazine’s publishers was Thomas Corneille, the librettist. On the other hand, the Parfaict brothers, distinguished 18-century theatre historians, spoke of Psyché with nothing but contempt. However, as admirers of Quinault their appraisal may owe a great deal to their opposition to Thomas Corneille. These views meant that Psyché was long overlooked and it was not until the 21st century that conductors began to take an interest in this unusual work of Lully’s which contains not only the obligatory homage to the Sun King, but also the satirical spirit of late Molière.