Kosiki
Kosiki is an opéra comique in three acts, with music by Charles Lecocq and words by William Busnach and Armand Liorat. It was first produced at the Théâtre de la Renaissance, Paris, on 18 October 1876, with a cast headed by Zulma Bouffar and Jean-François Berthelier. By the standards of Lecocq's biggest successes its initial run of 75 performances was a disappointment.
The opera is set in Japan at an unspecified historical period, and depicts the attempt of a member of the imperial family to seize the throne by abducting the true heir and substituting a female baby. The abducted heir is found and all ends well.
Background
By 1876 Lecocq had composed four notably successful operas, breaking box-office records with La fille de Madame Angot and supplanting Jacques Offenbach as Paris's most popular composer. In the early 1870s he had been based in Brussels. His first big success to premiere in Paris after his return there was La petite mariée written for the Théâtre de la Renaissance in 1875. Kosiki was its successor on that stage. William Busnach and Armand Liorat, the writers commissioned by Victor Koning, director of the theatre, were experienced librettists, having worked together or separately with composers including Offenbach, Georges Bizet, Léo Delibes and Louis Varney, and in Busnach's case, Lecocq himself.Following the literary success of the account of his travels in the Far East, there was a fashion for Japanese themes in Paris. The piece was originally to be called L'héritier présomptif, a title discarded in favour of Le Mikado. It was widely reported in the French and British press that the latter title was banned by the official censor at the behest of Japanese diplomats. The title Kosiki was adopted shortly before the premiere.
Original cast
- Namitou – Eugène Vauthier
- Fitzo – Félix Puget
- Xicoco – Jean-François Berthelier
- Sagari – M. Urbain
- Soto-Siro – M. William
- Kosiki – Zulma Bouffar
- Nousima – Marie Harlem
- Nankaï – Pauline Lasselin
- Soutza – Mlle. Notermann
- Osaka – Mlle. Davenay
- Tougoum – Mlle. Daucourt
- Nangasaki – Mlle. Ribe
- Tin-Tin – Mlle. Nina
- Lili – Mlle. Darenne
Synopsis
Act 1: The Imperial throne room
The former emperor has been dead for six months, and official mourning is about to come to an end. A crowd are prostrating themselves before the empty throne. The prime minister, Xicoco, bids them rise and prepare to celebrate the coronation of Prince Kosiki as the new emperor. Kosiki, a naïve young person, seems to be under Xicoco's control, and does not raise objections to the latter's suggestion that an emperor needs an empress, preferably Xicoco's daughter, Nousima. She is in love with Xicoco's nephew Sagami, but Xicoco is determined she shall marry Kosiki, and he conducts the wedding ceremony forthwith.Amid the general rejoicing, two characters are in the gravest difficulties: Fitzo, a poor street juggler and Soto-Siro, his father, are under sentence of death. In his enthusiasm to hail the new emperor Fitzo has begun entertaining the crowd before the official period of mourning is over – a capital offence. Kosiki takes an interest in the matter and pardons the two. He is so impressed by Fitzo that he appoints him his official adviser.
Act 2: Kosiki's boudoir
The new empress is disappointed to find her husband uninterested in her charms. Sagami is summoned to instruct Kosiki in the art of wooing, but Kosiki remains indifferent to female charms. It emerges that Kosiki is not a young man, but a young woman. Soon after Kosiki was born the old emperor's wicked cousin, Namitou, who coveted the throne, arranged to have the true heir abducted and a baby girl substituted; women cannot inherit the throne. On discovering the substitution, the old emperor threw Namitou into prison and resolved to thwart the plot to steal the succession. He brought the baby up as a boy, carefully keeping the child ignorant of the difference between the sexes.Namitou escapes from prison, and hopes to claim the throne as the next male heir. Unfortunately for him, he has changed clothes with a senior official who has just absconded with a large sum of the emperor's money, and Xicoco, taking him for the fugitive, has him thrown into the river. He survives, and once ashore denounces Kosiki as a woman, and claims the throne. Kosiki and Fitzo flee the palace.
Act 3: A public garden, near the palace
Fitzo and Kosiki are making their living by juggling. It emerges that the infant boy abducted on Namitou's orders was not killed, as he had instructed: his henchmen recoiled from such a deed and instead handed the child to a poor countrywoman to raise. Xicoco discovers that the child was Fitzo, who is summoned to the throne. He has Kosiki at his side; Nousima marries her Sagami, and Namitou is pardoned.Numbers
- Act 1
- *Overture
- *Ensemble – Chantons l'hymne funéraire
- *Chorus – Gaîment déployons la bannière
- *Couplets – Ah ! que la vie était maussade
- *Duet – Mon petit Sagami
- *Couplets – Ce n'est pas une sinécure
- *Chorus – Le voici, le maître du monde
- *Couplets – Voyez ces beaux cheveux d'ébène
- *Chorus – Elle s'avance
- *Ensemble – Grâce ! grâce!
- *Couplets – J'ai pour émerveiller les foules
- *Chorus – Léger comme l'oiseau
- *Duet – Quoi! Fitzo, malgré la misère
- *Finale – Aux pieds de la divine idole
- Act 2
- *Entr'acte
- *Buffo trio – La bonne place
- *March – Voici le coffre
- *Rondo – Gardez-vous d'être trop rapide
- *Wedding song – C'est une fleur!
- *Trio – Approche un peu
- *Romance – Et moi, moi qui, dans un moment
- *Couplets – Allons, que rien ne t'effarouche
- *Couplets – Jadis certaine altesse
- *Duet and ensemble – Il dit vrai
- *Couplets – Oui, j'abandonne sceptre et couronne
- *Finale – Quelle audace
- Act 3
- *Entr'acte
- *Chorus – Que la joie ici respire
- *Couplets – Par bonheur, j'étais sous la garde
- *Couplets – Dans la forteresse où naguère
- *Chorus – Sautons, dansons
- *Couplets – Admirez sous ces traits bizarres
- *Duet – En toi vais-je trouver
- *Finale – Le plaisir ici nous invite
Revivals
The work was produced in several theatres in Italy, and in Vienna, Hamburg and Berlin, but no London or New York productions were staged.