Paria
Stanisław Moniuszko
Concert version
Opera in three acts
Libretto: Jan Chęciński after Casimir Delavigne’s play
World premiere: 11 March 1869, Teatr Wielki, Warsaw
A Poznań Opera House production
The least frequently staged of Stanisław Moniuszko's works, Paria scores international triumphs more that 150 years after its premiere. The Poznań Opera House production, staged to mark the composer's bicentenary, won the International Opera Award for Rediscovered Work. This concert performance precedes the release of the Poznań opera company's recording of the opera for Naxos.
The history of opera provides many examples of works which were not well received by the audience. In a survey conducted in 2019 – the Moniuszko bicentenary year – by the National Centre for Culture, only 5% of women and 9% of men in Poland said they had heard the title Paria (the question did not delve into the details of the libretto or score). Paradoxically, an opera about exclusion had been marginalised in the debate on Moniuszko’s legacy for years. It was considered an operatic Cinderella, an ugly sister of the more effective Halka or The Haunted Manor, an exotic but not very successful flight of the composer’s fancy.
Moniuszko spent long years writing the opera. It all started with Casimir Delavigne’s play, which captivated the composer. The story of Idamor, the eponymous pariah, who becomes the head of the warrior caste despite caste divisions by concealing his background must have resonated with Moniuszko’s revolutionary symphonies and liberal upbringing. The protagonist also defies social conventions when he takes a fancy with Neala, the daughter of archpriest Akebar, who consents to the young woman’s union with a representative of the warrior caste out of political calculation, not concern for his daughter’s happiness.
The history of opera provides many examples of works which won recognition years after their original staging. Looking at Paria from today’s perspective, we discover its relevance and originality. There were times when Paria was considered a poor imitation of Aida. Those who claimed that clearly did not care to check that Paria opened two years before Verdi’s work. As is the case of many Polish pieces, the fate of Moniuszko’s opera can be summarised in the famous words of poet Wincenty Pol, ‘you glorify the foreign, but don’t known your own’.
Time is measured by
Cast
Credits
Chorus and Orchestra of the Poznań Opera House
Synopsis
Sponsors
-
Mecenas Teatru Wielkiego im. S. Moniuszki w Poznaniu
-
Dofinansowano ze środków Ministra Kultury i Dziedzictwa Narodowego
-
Koncert pod patronatem Polskiego Wydawnictwa Muzycznego w ramach projektu TUTTI.pl promującego wykonawstwo muzyki polskiej.
-
Partnerzy Akademii Operowej
-
Partnerzy Teatru Wielkiego - Opery Narodowej
-
Partner technologiczny
-
Patroni medialni
-
Patron of Poznań Opera House
-
Co-funded by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage of Poland
-
Under the patronage of PWM Edition as part of the TUTTI.pl project that promotes performances of Polish music.
-
Partner of the premiere
-
Partners of the Opera Academy
-
Partners of Teatr Wielki – Polish National Opera
-
Technological partner
-
Media patrons
-
Partner of the event
-
Partners of the reception