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Author Message
25 new of 278 responses total.
md
response 202 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 21 11:29 UTC 1999

Me neither.  It's the sort of sugary hackneyed verse 
that makes me ill, so I can't go back a reread it.  Is it 
a translation or something?
rcurl
response 203 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 21 17:11 UTC 1999

Not Sondheim, and it is earlier than either. It is also a translation.
Here is another selection from the same work:

   Sweet avowal, pledge of our love,
   You are mine, our hearts foever are united.
   Ah! do you comprehend this eternal joy
   Of silent hearts?
   Living, to be one in soul, and with a single flight
   To soar to heaven:
   Ah, let my flame
   Bring warmth into your day
   Open your soul
   To the rays of love!
   (stage direction)
   You flee from me? What have I done?
   You do not answer....
   Speak! Have I wounded you? Ah!
   I'll follow your steps!

(..its not all sweetness and light..)
md
response 204 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 21 17:20 UTC 1999

Well, at least that one didn't have zephyrs.
senna
response 205 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 21 17:22 UTC 1999

(just covering my rock opera options)
rcurl
response 206 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 21 17:30 UTC 1999

Zephyrs sell...it might help to know the work has been made into a movie.
davel
response 207 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 22 01:09 UTC 1999

Well, *that* one sounds a bit like Gilbert, but the first one did not.  But
I guess I'll guess him anyway.
rcurl
response 208 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 22 04:24 UTC 1999

Not Gilbert, but you got them both pegged as comic opera librettists, and
they also flourished in the same period. 
remmers
response 209 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 22 11:35 UTC 1999

This response has been erased.

md
response 210 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 22 23:51 UTC 1999

Okay, a dead white male who wrote comic
opera libretti in the late 19th century
in some language other than English.
Does anyone have a list of them guys?
rcurl
response 211 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 23 00:53 UTC 1999

This guy wrote or collaborated on the libretti for at least seven operas,
if that helps....
arianna
response 212 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 23 03:55 UTC 1999

It deosn't sound much like Menotti...he's not quite as cliche...
And I'd guess Kurt Weill, though that's a shot in the dark...
rcurl
response 213 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 23 05:03 UTC 1999

Not Weill.

Maybe if I hum a little of the melody....

mm m mm m | m-m m mm m | m-m m mm m | mmm mm o |
rcurl
response 214 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 23 05:52 UTC 1999

I meant to also say that, while Weill was a composer, this libettist was
not, to my knowledge, a composer (though it is hard to find biographical
information about librettists, as you have probably found out...).
md
response 215 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 23 11:18 UTC 1999

R. Strauss's librettist was Hofmannsthal.
Bizet's librettist for Carmen I don't know,
but it was based on a novel by Merimeee'.

Is it Offenbach's librettist?
rcurl
response 216 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 23 16:12 UTC 1999

Who was Offenbach's librettist?
omni
response 217 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 23 18:37 UTC 1999

who was Lotte Lenya?
rcurl
response 218 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 23 18:49 UTC 1999

Not Lenya.
rtg
response 219 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 24 00:29 UTC 1999

Possibly Berthold Brecht?
rcurl
response 220 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 24 04:53 UTC 1999

A very good notion - an actually well known librettist (and author and
poet...). But a several generations later, so not Brecht.
md
response 221 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 24 10:37 UTC 1999

I think he means Brecht was several generations
later.  Was this person French? 
rcurl
response 222 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 24 15:39 UTC 1999

Yes...this author is several generations *earlier* than Brecht. Sorry. 

Direct questions have not been the traditional way to play this game, but
rather to draw interpretations from quotes, or comparative deductions, and
then have those affirmed or denied. I've been struggling with how to
answer direct yes-no questions (apart from those about the author's name).
Michael asked earlier whether this author was Offenbach's librettist.
Offenbach wrote more than 100 operas and had dozens of librettists....was
this author one of them? OK, yes. [I have already confirmed that in a
Jeopardian manner.] Now, can you deduce from the quotes given, which
librettist of those dozens this is? 

I thought the author's work I've been quoting would have been the best
clue to his identify, but here is an original quote from a different work:

  Rien!.. - En vain j'interroge, en mon ardente veille,
  La nature et le Createur;
  Pas une voix ne glisse a mon oreille
  Un mot consolateur!
  J'ai langui triste et solitaire,
  Sans pouvoir briser le lien
  Qui m'attache encore a la terre!..
  Je ne vois rien! - Je ne sais rien!..

(There are few more famous opening lines in opera.)
remmers
response 223 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 24 21:52 UTC 1999

Another yes/no question: Is this person well known in his own right?
flem
response 224 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 25 00:13 UTC 1999

Jules Barbier?
rcurl
response 225 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 25 01:03 UTC 1999

Jules Barbier it is - or Michel Carre'. The "sugary hackneyed verse"
of the first selection (_O NIght of Love_) is accompanied by the
Barcarolle, from Offenbach's Tales of Hoffman. The second selection
is also from Tales, while the last are the opening area from Gounod's
Faust. Carre is better known as a dramatist and poet, and his
later librettist career was mostly in collaboration with Barbier. 
My RCA Book of the Opera lists only Barbier as the Tales librettist,
while a playbill I have from a recent performance lists both Barbier
and Carre'. I haven't dug further to straighten this out.

You're up, flem. What was your route of deduction?
mcnally
response 226 of 278: Mark Unseen   May 25 02:02 UTC 1999

  I knew those seemed familiar..  (Opera Grand Rapids produced "Tales of
  Hoffmann" this winter and Gounod's "Faust" last year..)  Just couldn't
  place them..
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