Music
Michael William Balfe (born Dublin, 15 May 1808; died Rowney Abbey, Herts., 20 October 1870)
Text
Edward Fitzball (1792-1873).
Source
Novel Le Siège de la Rochelle by Madame de Genlis, adapted by Gaetano Rossi for Luigi Ricci's opera Chiara di Rosembergh (1831).
Premieres
First performance: London (Drury Lane), 29 October 1835.
First performance in Scotland: Edinburgh (Royal Edinburgh Theatre), 2 March 1877.
Scottish Opera premiere: N/A.
Background
The Siege of Rochelle was Balfe's first opera in English. He had already achieved a successful career on the continent as a baritone (performing Figaro in Paris in Rossini's presence in 1827) and having his first opera premiered in Palermo. His next English opera, The Maid of Artois, was a variant on the plot of Manon Lescaut and, featuring Malibran in the title role, also had a great success. However both these works were eclipsed by the enormous success of The Bohemian Girl in 1843. Balfe himself sang the role of Michel, who is a dominant figure in the drama, even though ostensibly only part of the sub-plot.
Main Characters
Clara (soprano)
Marquis de Valmour (tenor)
Count Rosenberg (bass)
Michel, a farmer and miller, formerly in the Count's service (baritone)
Marcella, Michel's wife (soprano)
Montalban (bass-baritone)
Plot Summary
The plot is somewhat complicated. Some years before, Count Rosenberg secretly married one Princess Euphemia, and they had a child. This child, Clara, has been brought up in ignorance of her true parentage, and believes herself to be the daughter of Montalban. The Marquis de Valmour is a widower, bringing up a child. He and Clara love one another, but this relationship is jeopardised by the suspicious death of the child. Clara is aware that Montalban is the guilty party, but convinced that she is his daughter, she conceals the knowledge to the point where suspicion falls on herself. She is condemned for the crime, and is only exonerated, in the nick of time, as the result of the revelation of her true parentage, and the exposure by Michel of Montalban's true villainy.
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