The Wreckers (opera)

The Wreckers
Opera by Ethel Smyth
Ethel Smyth, no later than 1903
Librettist
  • Ethel Smyth
  • Henry Bennet Brewster
LanguageFrench
Premiere
11 November 1906 (1906-11-11)
Neues Theater, Leipzig (in German)

The Wreckers is an opera in three acts, composed by Dame Ethel Smyth to a libretto in French by Henry Brewster. After spending considerable energy in trying to get the work performed in French, the first performance took place in a German translation by John Bernhoff, under the title of Strandrecht, at the Neues Theater, Leipzig on 11 November 1906. Smyth persisted in her attempts to see it staged elsewhere, but it was not until the conductor Thomas Beecham championed the work that a complete, staged performance was achieved in England in 1909 with funding support from her friend Mary Dodge.[1]

Describing the opera in the New Grove Dictionary, Stephen Banfield notes "Its greatest strength is in its dramatic strategy, strikingly prophetic of (Britten's) Peter Grimes in details such as the offstage church service set against the foreground confrontation in Act 1."[2] However, Amanda Holden makes the point that, musically, Smyth is "no Wagnerite, she makes use of his motivic technique, while the texture, orchestration, and even some of the music's dramatic density, show knowledge of the works of Richard Strauss ... but it also slips too readily into operatic convention."[3]

  1. ^ Fuller, Sophie. "Dame Ethel Smyth, The Wreckers". American Symphony Orchestra. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  2. ^ Banfield, p. 1181
  3. ^ Holden, p. 863

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