Le postillon de Lonjumeau
Le postillon de Lonjumeau is an opéra comique in three acts by Adolphe Adam to a French libretto by Adolphe de Leuven and Léon Lévy Brunswick.
The opera has become the most successful of Adam's works, and the one by which he is best known outside his native France. The opera is "in the mainstream of French opera comique, jam-packed with Gallic style and charm and musically quite sophisticated, with parody and pastiche lightly touched in". The well-known tenor Act one aria "Mes amis, écoutez l'histoire" includes the demanding high D, or D5, at the end.
Performance history
The opera was premiered by the Opéra-Comique at the Salle de la Bourse in Paris on 13 October 1836. Performances followed at the St James's Theatre, London, on 13 March 1837, and in New Orleans at the Théâtre d'Orléans on 19 April 1838.Recent productions have been mounted in the Berlin Staatsoper Unter den Linden and at the Grand Théâtre, Dijon,. The latter was a co-production of Opéra Paris-Sud and Opéra de Dijon. The work was performed in Paris for the first time in 125 years in a new production at the Opèra Comique in March 2019 with Michael Spyres in the title role, in a production by Michel Fau. Sébastien Rouland conducted, with Florie Valiquette as Madeleine.
Synopsis
Act 1Chapelou, the just-wedded postillion, or horse-backed coach-guider, and his innkeeper wife Madeleine decide to consult a clairvoyant to ensure that their marriage will be joyous. The latter foresees however that it will not go smoothly without indicating exactly what will occur when.
At first alarmed, the couple soon banish anxiety in order to enjoy their wedding night. Days into the marriage the Marquis de Corcy, who is director of the Paris Opera, arrives at the couple's inn and is immediately smitten by Madeleine, but doesn't say anything to her. Later he overhears Chapelou singing his usual song with other guests and is impressed by his voice. He decides to invite the young postillion to join the opera company, but they must leave immediately. Excitedly Chapelou asks his friend Biju to tell Madeleine where he has gone and why. Then he and the Marquis depart leaving Madeleine in shock.
Act 2
Ten years later. Madeleine has come into an inheritance and is known as Madame Latour; Chapelou is an opera star. One evening the Marquis holds a post-performance cast reception to which he has invited Latour. Upon meeting her, Chapelou falls in love, not recognising the wife he abandoned. He proposes, she accepts, and a wedding occurs.
Act 3
The Marquis has informed the police and denounced this apparent bigamy. On the wedding night Madeleine appears in her old peasant clothes and Chapelou now recognises her. She then transforms before his eyes into Latour, the heiress. When the Marquis arrives with the police, she reveals her deception to all: the couple have married twice and vow from that day on to love like good village people. This induces a hearty response from the chorus to provide a stirring finale.
Film
In 1936 the opera was loosely adapted into an Austrian-Swiss comedy film The Postman from Longjumeau directed by Carl Lamac.Recordings
- Reinhard Peters conducting the RIAS Orchestra and Chorus with Stina-Britta Melander, John van Kesteren, Ernst Krukowski, Ivan Sardi, and Fritz Hoppe. Eurodisc 300 073-420. Used as sound track of television film - cut.
- 17-25 September 1985, Salle Garnier, Monte-Carlo : Thomas Fulton conducting the Orchestre philharmonique de Monte-Carlo, with John Aler, François Le Roux, Jean-Philippe Lafont, June Anderson, Daniel Ottewaere, Balvina de Courcelles.
- DVD: 2020, filmed at the Opéra-Comique, Paris : Sébastien Rouland conducting the Orchestre de l'Opéra de Rouen Normandie and Accentus chorus, with Michael Spyres, Florie Valiquette, Franck Leguérinel, Laurent Kubla, Julien Clément, Michel Fau. Naxos Cat: NBD0112V