The Nightingale (opera)
The Nightingale (Russian: Соловей, romanized: Solovey) is a short opera in three acts by Igor Stravinsky to a Russian-language libretto by him and Stepan Mitusov, based on a tale by Hans Christian Andersen: a nasty Chinese Emperor is reduced to tears and made kind by a small grey bird. It was completed on 28 March 1914 and premiered a few weeks later, on 26 May, by the Ballets Russes conducted by Pierre Monteux at the Palais Garnier in Paris. Publication, by the then Paris-based Éditions Russes de Musique, followed only in 1923 and caused the opera to become known by its French title of Le Rossignol and French descriptor of conte lyrique, or lyric tale, despite its being wholly Russian.
The Nightingale | |
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Opera by Igor Stravinsky | |
Set design for the premiere by Alexandre Benois | |
Description | lyric tale |
Native title | Russian: Соловей |
Librettist |
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Based on | "The Nightingale" by Hans Christian Andersen |
Premiere |
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