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''La Haine'' ''(Hatred)'' is a drama in five acts and eight tableaux by Victorien Sardou, premiered at the Théâtre de la Gaîté in Paris on 3 December 1874. Jacques Offenbach, director of the theatre, composed extensive
incidental music Incidental music is music in a play, television program, radio program, video game, or some other presentation form that is not primarily musical. The term is less frequently applied to film music, with such music being referred to instead as t ...
for chorus and orchestra to accompany the play.


Background

Offenbach had composed songs and
incidental music Incidental music is music in a play, television program, radio program, video game, or some other presentation form that is not primarily musical. The term is less frequently applied to film music, with such music being referred to instead as t ...
for eleven classical and modern dramas for the Comédie Française in the early 1850s, gaining valuable experience in writing for the theatre. Sardou and Offenbach created their first joint work in 1872 with the opéra-bouffe-féerie ''
Le Roi Carotte ''Le roi Carotte'' (''King Carrot'') is a 4-act opéra- bouffe-féerie with music by Jacques Offenbach and libretto by Victorien Sardou, after E. T. A. Hoffmann. The libretto, written before the French defeat in the Franco-Prussian War, lampooned ...
'', which ran for 195 performances, and this encouraged the two to renew their collaboration. By 1874, Jacques Offenbach had become the director of the Théâtre de la Gaîté. To follow a revival of '' Orphée aux Enfers'' on 7 February, he decided to mount Sardou's drame using the under-used theatrical troupe at the theatre.


Rehearsal

''Orphée aux Enfers'' closed on the 18 November to allow the rehearsals for ''La Haine'' to start, directed by Sardou himself who did not spare his efforts. '' Le Figaro'' reported that "Sardou is the most meticulous director in the world" and that he "places particular importance on the extras being actively involved as much as any of the actors." Rehearsals increased and the dress rehearsal took place on 27 November. The premiere was announced for the 29 November, but was postponed on the day itself, due to the flu epidemic in the capital which indisposed two principal actors, Lafontaine et Clément Just. First of all it was postponed until 30 November but only took place on Thursday 3 December,Le Figaro n°324, 5 December 1874, but as the actors had not completely recovered, Sardou cut the final scene.


Reception

The premiere audience marvelled at the magnificence of the production. The scenery was especially dazzling. Francisque Sarcey noted "It is only right to recognize that, of the décors, several are masterpieces of exquisite taste; the cathedral dome is a marvel of lightness and grave; the inside of the church is superb."Quarante ans de Théâtre (Feuilletons Dramatiques), article ''La Haine'', 7 December 1874, Francisque Sarcey, Bibliothèque des Annales, Paris 1901. Everything was done to dazzle : dramatist and composer went so far as to transport a Cavaillé-Coll organ into the theatre. The settings were grand and impressive: the stage accommodated 535 persons.:''Le Gaulois'' n°2243 of 5 December 1874. "The war-cries of the soldiers, the moans of the terrified women, the clanking of armour, the booming of guns, the conquerors' entrance in the city, the sacking of the palace, all was of an exact and admirable motion." The words of Victorien Sardou were also noted, but critics commented that the direction was rather against the drama. Francisque Sarcey regretted that the principal roles appeared crushed : "The supernumeraries and props are too prominent. The crowd is the principal character. Tableaux follow tableaux, and in this new work, they are equally dark." For
Auguste Vitu Auguste-Charles-Joseph Vitu (7 October 1823 – 5 August 1891) was a 19th-century French journalist and writer. Biography The natural son of a Parisian rentier, Vitu began his career as a typographer-worker before becoming a journalist. In 1 ...
the play evoked painful memories of
1870 Events January–March * January 1 ** The first edition of ''The Northern Echo'' newspaper is published in Priestgate, Darlington, England. ** Plans for the Brooklyn Bridge are completed. * January 3 – Construction of the Broo ...
: "Streets full of bodies, palaces in flames, the homeland forsaken in the presence of the dumbfounded foreigner, and as if scandalized by so many distractions, such are the unforgettable sights which our consciousness is still soured, and of which our hearts still bleed. The widows and orphans in black, I have seen them bowed in our churches, the air rent with their sobs. The door of deathly memory re-opens wide within us; and sadness envelops us with its great black wings." While receipts came to around 8,000 francs per performance in mid-December, they fell to around 5,000 francs during the second fortnight On 28 December ''Le Figaro'' printed a letter from Sardou requesting that Offenbach recall his piece from the stage; Offenbach replied that as the public prefer lively art he would bring back ''Orphée''. The announcement had the effect of filling the theatre for the last performances of ''La Haine''. After 27 performances the play closed on 29 December 1874 and ''Orphée aux Enfers'' was brought back. The short run left the theatre in a parlous financial position. Some costumes were used in the revised version of '' Geneviève de Brabant'' which opened on 25 February 1875. Despite the failure, Sardou and Offenbach did contemplate a further collaboration on a spectacular production of the playwright's ''Don Quichotte''. A modern performance with reduced text but complete score took place on 19 July 2009 at the Festival de Radio France et Montpellier Languedoc Roussillon, with Fanny Ardant and
Gérard Depardieu Gérard Xavier Marcel Depardieu, CQ (, , ; born 27 December 1948) is a French actor, filmmaker, businessman and vineyard owner since 1989 who is one of the most prolific thespians in film history having completed over 250 films since 1967 alm ...
playing Cordelia and Orso. The concert was broadcast on France Musique on 30 July 2009.Concert notice on France Culture site.
Accessed 25 July 2013.


Pictures from the original production

File:La_Haine,_décor,_1874_-_1.jpg, Scenery sketch for ''La Haine'' File:La_Haine,_décor,_1874_-_2.jpg, Scenery sketch for ''La Haine'' File:La Haine, estampe, décor de l'acte 3.jpeg, Scene from Act III of ''La Haine'' File:La Haine estampe acte 3 tableau 2 scène 2 Orso et Cordelia.jpeg, Orso and Cordélia, Act III, tableau 2, scene II


First cast

Guelph chiefs , , Scipion , - , SPLENDIANO , , J. Vizentini , - , UGONE , , Antonin , - , SOZZINI , rowspan="4" Ghibelline chiefs , , Sudrac , - , PICCOLOMINI , , Alexandre fils , - , TOLOMEI , , Bilhaut , - , MALAVOLTI , , Henri , - , BUONOCORSO , rowspan="3" Guelph soldiers , , Galli , - , ZANINO , , Barsagol , - , SCARLONE , , Chevallier , - , colspan="2" , MASTINO , , Gaspard , - , colspan="2" , LE LOMBARD , , Henri , - , colspan="2" , LE PÉROUSIEN , , Barsagol , - , colspan="2" , LE FLORENTIN , , Meyronnet , - , colspan="2" , LE LUCQUOIS , , Colleuille , - , colspan="2" , LE BOLONAIS , , Mallet , - , colspan="2" , LE PISAN , , Gaspard , - , colspan="2" , CRISTOFORO , , Paulin , - , colspan="2" , UN CHANOINE , , Seligny , - , colspan="2" , UN MOINE , , Bilhaut , - , colspan="2" , CORDELIA, sister of Giugurta and Ercole Saracini , ,
Lia Félix Lia Félix (6 July 1830, Saumur - 15 January 1908, Paris) was a French actress. Biography She was the fifth of six children of Jacques Félix and Esther Thérèse Hayer, all of whom became actors, and a 9-year younger sister and pupil of the grea ...
, - , colspan="2" , UBERTA, her nurse , , Laurence Grivot , - , colspan="2" , ANDREINO, son of Uberta, 15 years old , , Marie Godin , - , colspan="2" , PORCIA , , Angèle


Music

In 2006 the autograph orchestral score of the incidental music was found in the archive of the Offenbach family. Some early sketches preserved in the Archives Historiques de la ville de Cologne were destroyed in an accident on 3 March 2009. Jean-Christophe Keck, responsible for the 2009 critical edition, commented that "Offenbach composed a rich score of 30 numbers. The first sketches were noted down while travelling in his barouche where he had set up a work-table - the manuscripts bear witness to the jumping pen as it rode over Parisian cobbles. It consists of many mélodrames, off-stage choruses, interludes...". During Offenbach's tour of the US, he conducted with much success the Marche religieuse from ''La Haine'' for American audiences.Édition critique sur le site Boosey & Hawkes
/ref> Keck notes that just before he died, Offenbach recalled the opening of the overture to ''La Haine'' in the opening bars of the finale of the Venetian act from ''
Contes d'Hoffmann ''The Tales of Hoffmann'' (French: ) is an by Jacques Offenbach. The French libretto was written by Jules Barbier, based on three short stories by E. T. A. Hoffmann, who is the protagonist of the story. It was Offenbach's final work; he died in ...
''.


Synopsis

The action takes place in Siena in 1369. Historically, the Republic of Siena has passed through much civil unrest and political upheavals at that period, and in general Siena tended to be Ghibelline, in opposition to Florence's Guelph position. The play's specific events and its main characters are, however, fictional. In the 13th century, (this conflict formed the backdrop for some of Dante Alighieri's '' Divine Comedy'', completed in 1320).


Act I

A crossroads near the rue Camollia. On the outskirts of Sienna, the banned Guelphs and the reigning Ghibellines fight. The Guelphs are led by Orso who had been banished for having dared to throw a garland to the Ghibelline Cordelia Saracini. From the battle the guelfes emerge victorious at the portcullis of the Saracini palace. Orso demands that Cordelia appear at the balcony and open the gates to the town. Cordelia replies to him: « … now is not the time to open the gates, when thieves are in the town! » Orso give orders for an assault, the gate rises and he enters the Saracini palace bent on vengeance. Rather than throw Cordelia from the window as the screaming crowd demands, he drags her half-strangled back into the palace.


Act II

Premier tableau – a great hall in the Seigniory palace. Despite their apparent victory, the Guelphs only control but half of the city. Among the dead on the Ghibelline side is Andreino, the fifteen-year-old son of Uberta, Cordelia's old nurse. The Guelphs request a truce in order to tend to the injured and bury the dead : plague is feared. The Saracini palace is on fire. Cordelia comes back, alive, but tells her brothers Ercole and Giugurta, as well as her nurse, that she has been raped by a man of whom all she can remember is the voice. Deuxième tableau – the cathedral square. Guelphs and Ghibellines attend the solemn mass for the Virgin in the cathedral. At the point of coming to blows, the Bishop Azzolino steps forward and upbraids them : « Siennois, is this what you call a truce for the Virgin ? Church is God's house alone ! – Faithless and unworthy Christians put your weapons down or I will close these doors and will open them only to admit your coffins! » They defer in the face of the threat; Orso only speaking a word but it is enough for Cordelia to recognize as she follows the men into the church.


Act III

Premier tableau – a cloister. While Cordelia recognizes Orso as her torturer, Uberta learns by chance that the killer of her son is also Orso ! The two women argue over which should kill him. Cordelia decides with her plea : « You only mourn a death; I, I mourn myself, alive! ». Cordelia strikes Orso, and he falls to the ground, his throat cut with a dagger thrust. As a fight ensues, his men carry him, still breathing, to the shade of a church porch. When Cordelia and Uberta retrace steps to finish their vengeance, they cannot find the body and wonder if he was only injured. Cordelia cries out : « God of vengeance ! let him be dead ! I will not finish the task ! ». Deuxième tableau – the square. Cordelia discovers Orso in agony and pleading for a drink. Faced with this suffering, she pities him and pours fresh water on his lips.


Act IV

Premier tableau – a room in the Saracini palace. Cordelia has concealed Orso in the burnt palace. Giugurta, beaten, must flee the town. He wants to leave the palace by the gardens but to do that must pass through the room where Orso is hiding, convalescent. Cordelia puts him off with such insistence that Uberta becomes suspicious. A horrific explanation finally reveals the truth to Uberta, but Cordelia asks for mercy in the name of Andreino who would have condemned this bloody sacrifice. Cordelia and Orso find themselves alone. Two images alternate in the mind of Orso : the woman who stabbed him and the woman who saved him. The two make one victim of him; his repentance bursts forth and to restore her honour he asks to marry her. Cordelia replies that he is also guilty to his country riven by war. Orso promises her : « You will see me again when I have triumphed over discord and vanquished hatred! » He leaves the palace and it is announced that Giugurta has been arrested by the Guelphs, masters of the city. Deuxième tableau – ruins of the old Seigniory palace. The captured Ghibelline prisoners including Giurgurta are about to be executed. Orso enters and proposes to the people that the prisoners be freed, in order to march against the Emperor laying siege to the city and demanding 50,000 florins to lift the siege. The people accept. As they set off for battle Giugurta catches a glance and words from Cordelia to Orso, and says that he will return and question her after the battle.


Act V

Sienna cathedral. The Siennese return victorious. Cordelia, frightened by her brother's threats has taken refuge in the cathedral. Giugurta find her there having extracted the information before killing Uberta. After proud protests, Cordelia faints on the altar steps, and he takes advantage to make her swallow poison. The victors come in with Orso at their head. Cordelia has convulsions which are mistaken for the plague. The crowd disperses in horror, and Orso takes Cordelia in his arms. So doing, he condemns himself to be trapped with her in the place tainted by the plague. At their pleas, Azollino joins them in marriage. Alone, they exchange parting words : Orso's wound has re-opened, and the two lovers die side by side.


Notes and references


Full text of ''La Haine'' in French


External links


''La Haine'' – Livret 1974
pdf of libretto, accessed 24 July 2013. ''As created this page was a translation of the equivalent page in French Wikipedia.'' {{DEFAULTSORT:Haine 1874 plays Plays by Victorien Sardou Compositions by Jacques Offenbach Siena Plays adapted into operas