Franz Lehár
Der Zarewitsch
Tiberius Simu, Alexandra Reinprecht, Harald Serafin,
Marko Kathol, Sieglinde Feldhofer, Ciro deLuca
Chorus and Orchestra of the Mörbisch Lake Festival
Wolfdieter Maurer, conductor
When Harald Serafin assumed the directorship of this
festival in 1992, the ascent of Mörbisch as the “Mecca
of operetta” began its course. Today, up to 220,000
visitors attend the festival at the open-air stage on
Lake Neusiedler. After an excursion to the neighboring
area of the musical in 2009 (My Fair Lady), this
year’s program again brings an operetta classic to the
stage: Der Zarewitsch by Franz Lehár. Although this
operetta has an unusually tragic plot for the genre and
sends the audience away without the typical happy
end, it became a hit, not only because of Richard
Tauber, for whom the piece was practically customtailored.
In the Mörbisch production, Romanian born
tenor Tiberius Simu sings the role of the Zarewitsch;
Alexandra Reinprechtin, who has made guest appearances
at the Oper unter den Linden, the Munich State
Opera, the Vienna State Opera as well as the Salzburg
and Bregenz Festivals, sings Sonja. She performed the
same role in 2009 at Munich’s Prinzregententheater
with the Munich Radio Orchestra under Ulf
Schirmer.
Der Zarewitsch
Operette in drei Akten
(frei nach dem gleichnamigen Bühnenstück von Zapolska-Scharlitt)
von Bela Jenbach und Heinz Reichert
Musik:
Franz Lehár
(1870–1949)
Einrichtung für die Seefestspiele Mörbisch: Peter Lund
Zarewitsch | | Tiberius Simu |
Sonja | | Alexandra Reinprecht |
Großfürst | | Harald Serafin |
Iwan | | Marko Kathol |
Mascha | | Sieglinde Feldhofer |
Bordolo | | Ciro De Luca |
Hauptmann | | Zoltán Galamb |
Festival Orchestra Mörbisch · Mörbisch Festival Choir
Wolfdieter Maurer, conductor
Bernhard Schneider, Choreinstudierung
Günter Fruhmann, musikalische Einstudierung
A tragedy made palatable
Franz Lehár’s Tsarevich
Actually, it couldn’t be more laudable
that Crown Prince Alexei is so athletic.
But when things go so far that not even love
can keep him away from the playing field,
everything looks dubious. In any event, not
only is the Tsarevich completely uninterested
in womanizing, he is actively hostile
against anything
female. This means that
ballet dancer Sonia must work twice as hard
when the Grand Duke, Alexei’s uncle, has
her infiltrated into Alexei’s circle, disguised
as a man. Although she is exposed – she still
gets through to the soft core of the hardened
Alexei. The fact that things do not turn out
in the end and that the couple’s happiness
ends in sadness is all the more unfortunate.
This says a lot. After all, it is noteworthy
that at age 57, Franz Lehár, whose operetta
production made him one of Austria’s richest
men and one who simply could have rested
on his laurels, extended his creative activities
with new aspects. First performed in 1927,
Tsarevich just about oozes operatic tragedy;
one waits in vain for a happy end, something
that Lehár was bitterly criticized for withholding.
“I have nothing against Lehár’s music,
but audiences shouldn’t be crying when
they watch operetta,” said the composer’s
colleague Oscar Strauss.
In 1917, Lehár’s wife Sophie had seen the
play The Tsarevich by Gabryela Zapolska in
Vienna and was very taken with it. Lehár,
who had already tried his hand with a certain
Russian flavoring in Kukushka, was not immediately
excited about the idea. The same
was true for Pietro Mascagni, composer of
Cavalleria rusticana; Eduard Künneke, who
had also been commissioned to set the material
was likewise not particularly enthusiastic.
Although he had already completed one act,
he gave up the project when Lehár did in fact
warm to the subject.
Lehár’s Tsarevich was a smash with audiences.
This even impressed George Gershwin,
who then met Lehár in Berlin in 1928.
It was also the vocal brilliance of title hero
and celebrated Mozart tenor Richard Tauber
that contributed to the work’s triumph. Both
the composer and the singer entered into
an astonishingly creative union. But despite
the fact that a number of catchy tunes from
Tsarevich circulated throughout the world,
the press was relentless – above all due to the
libretto by Béla Jenbach and Heinz Reichert.
On the other hand, the Volga song Allein,
wieder allein inspired Nobel Prizewinner
Günter Grass for his 1999 book of narratives
Mein Jahrhundert. “Did you forget about
me, up there so high?” Alexei sings about a
soldier in his lonely state. “My heart yearns
for love. You have so many angels in heaven
with you! Send one down to me.” In view
of the unimaginable suffering and gigantic
fields of rubble wreaked by two world wars,
Lehár’s words certainly reflected what people
throughout the world felt from the bottom
of their hearts.
Florian Olters
Translation: Elizabeth Gahbler