Adelheit von Veltheim

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| Mehmet, ''overseer of the Seraglio'' || Johann Friedrich Helmuth
| Mehmet, ''overseer of the Seraglio'' || Johann Friedrich Helmuth
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| Slaves, Black People, Eunuchs ||
| Adolph von Posen || Anton Steiger
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| Turkish Women in the Seraglio, White and Black Slaves, <br> Janissaries, German Knights || unnamed <br>
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Revision as of 19:48, 1 July 2023

SeiN 10

Schauspiel mit Gesang, premiered in Frankfurt am Main, 23 September 1780

Libretto by Gustav Friedrich Wilhelm Großmann

Overview

Neefe and Großmann wrote this extensive four-act Singspiel for their troupe's guest season at the 1780 Autumn Fair at Frankfurt's Theater in der Junghof, their second short residence that year. In its first performance at the Bonn court a few weeks later, Adelheit was given pride of place on 11 October during the pomp around Archduke Maximilian Franz's election as Coadjutor (i.e. Maximilian Friedrich's successor as Elector of Cologne). The Archduke was duly impressed, and "honored Großmann with a precious gold watch and 50 new Louis d'or to divide among the company."(footnote: [1])

The dramatis personae, and the actors and singers from Großmann's company who created the roles, are as follows:


Role Premiere Cast
Achmet, Bassa of Tunis Heinrich Christian Pleißner
Adelheit von Veltheim, a German woman Anna Christiane Josephi
Donna Velaska, a Spanish woman Maria Franziska Helmuth
La Feuquiere, a French woman Christiane Brandt
Miss Flovr, an English woman Henriette Huber
Donna Olivia, an Italian woman Susanna Neefe
Franz von Veltheim Gustav Friedrich Wilhelm Großmann
Karl von Bingen, under the name Osman Franz Brandt
Mehmet, overseer of the Seraglio Johann Friedrich Helmuth
Adolph von Posen Anton Steiger
Turkish Women in the Seraglio, White and Black Slaves,
Janissaries, German Knights
unnamed

The libretto is often compared to Christoph Friedrich Bretzner's contemporaneous Belmont und Constanze, which Mozart set as Die Entführung aus dem Serail two years later. Both deal with abducted European women held captive in Middle Eastern harems, who then are saved by their European fiancés. Großmann's libretto, however, deals explicitly with noblewomen. The Bassa's harem includes several other abductees of various European backgrounds – along with the stereotypical personality traits to match: the delicate and haughty La Feuquiere, the stoic and caustic Donna Velaska, the spirited and bossy Donna Olivia, and the proper and diplomatic Miss Flovr.

Sources

Libretto:

Further Reading

Notes

  1. Theater-Journal für Deutschland, no. 20, p. 16