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Athalia (Handel)

Athalia (HWV 52) is an English-languageoratorio composed byGeorge Frideric Handel to a libretto bySamuel Humphreys based on the playAthalie byJean Racine. The work was commissioned in 1733 for the Publick Act inOxford – a commencement ceremony of theUniversity of Oxford, which had offered Handel an honorary doctorate (an honour he declined).[1] The story is based on that of the Biblical queenAthaliah.Athalia, Handel's third oratorio in English, was completed on 7 June 1733,[2] and first performed on 10 July 1733 at theSheldonian Theatre in Oxford.[3] TheBee (14 July 1733) reported that the performance was "performed with the utmost Applause, and is esteemed equal to the most celebrated of that Gentleman's Performances: there were 3700 Persons present".[3]

George Frideric Handel

Athalia was first given in London on 1 April 1735 atCovent Garden Theatre.

Dramatis personae

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Anna Maria Strada, creator of the role of Josabeth
Roles, voice types, and premiere cast
RoleVoice1733 Oxford cast1735 London cast
Athalia, Baalite Queen of Judah and Daughter of Ahab and JezebelsopranoMrs. WrightCecilia Young
Josabeth, Wife of JoadsopranoAnna Maria StradaAnna Maria Strada
Joas, King of Judahboy sopranoMaster GoodwillWilliam Savage
Joad, High PriestaltoWalter PowellGiovanni Carestini
Mathan, Priest of Baal, formerly a Jewish PriesttenorPhillip RochettiJohn Beard
Abner, Captain of the Jewish ForcesbassGustavus WaltzGustavus Waltz
Chorus of Young Virgins
Chorus of Israelites
Chorus of Priests and Levites
Chorus of Attendants
Chorus of Sidonian Priests

Synopsis

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Sheldonian Theatre, Oxford, whereAthalia was first performed

Athalia, daughter of King Ahab of Israel and Queen Jezebel, had been married to Jehoram, King of Judah. After her husband's death, Athalia was determined to stamp out the Jewish line of kings descended from David. She caused, so she believed, all the heirs to the throne to be murdered. She took the throne and ruled Judah herself, and began to devote the country to the idolatrous worship ofBaal instead of the God of Israel. However, the child Joas, rightful heir to the throne, had been saved from death by Joad the High Priest and his wife Josabeth and raised as their own son under the name "Eliakim".[4]: 53 

Act 1

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In the Temple during a religious festival, the Jewish people offer their prayers to God. The High Priest Joad laments Queen Athalia's blasphemy in seeking to force the worship of Baal. All join in prayers for deliverance from her tyrannous rule. At the Palace, the Queen is disturbed by a dream she has had of a young boy dressed as a Jewish priest plunging a dagger into her heart. The high priest of Baal, Mathan, calms her by saying it was only a dream and suggests she have the Temple searched. Abner, Captain of the Guards, loyal to the God of Israel, go to the Temple to warn of the upcoming search just as Joad the High Priest and his wife Josabeth are preparing to reveal to the nation that the boy "Eliakim" whom they have raised as their own son is in fact Joas, descendant of David and rightful King. Josabeth is alarmed and despondent at the news of the search but her husband tells her to trust in God.

Act 2

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The Jewish people in the Temple offer magnificent songs of praise to God. Athalia enters and is alarmed to see in "Eliakim" the very image of the child who stabbed her in her dream. She interrogates the boy and when he tells her he is an orphan she offers to adopt him, but he rejects with revulsion the idea of such close association with an idolator such as she. Athalia is enraged and departs, vowing that she will have the child regardless. Once again Josabeth, close to despair, is counseled by Joad to trust God. The chorus comment that the guilty are sure to be punished.

Act 3

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Athaliah Expelled from the Temple by Antoine Coypel

Joad, inspired by God, prophesies the downfall of Athalia. He and Josabeth explain to the boy ""Eliakim" that he is really Joas, rightful King, and crown him, to the acclaim of the people. Athalia enters, demanding that the boy be given to her, and when she learns that he has been crowned, orders the treason to be punished, but her soldiers have all deserted her. Even Mathan, High Priest of Baal, declares that the God of Israel has triumphed. Athalia knows she is doomed, but goes to her death declaring that she will seek vengeance even from the grave. All praise the rightful King and the true God.[4]: 67 [5]

Theme of the libretto

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The Death of Athaliah byGustave Doré

The biblical story of Athalia, with its tale of deposing a usurping and tyrannous monarch, was used by supporters of theJacobite cause as justification for restoring theStuart monarchy. Oxford was then a centre ofHigh church and Jacobite sentiment, which has caused the choice of subject for this oratorio by a supporter of theHanoverian monarchy such as Handel to seem strange to some writers.[4]: 55  However the libretto by Samuel Humphreys alters Racine's original by placing great emphasis on removing "idolatry" from the land, clearly referring to removing Catholic influence, and is thus supportive of the Protestant Hanoverian monarchy.[4]: 72  The subject of the oratorio was most likely a conscious choice on Handel's part of a subject that would appeal to the Jacobite supporters in Oxford without being disloyal to his Hanoverian patrons.[4]: 73 

Musical features

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The work is scored for strings, 2 recorders (or flutes), 2 oboes, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, 2 trumpets, timpani and continuo.[5]Athalia shows flexibility and originality in form on Handel's part, combining solos with chorus in new ways. Its vivid characterisation through music contributed to its immense success at its premiere.[6]

Recordings

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Athalia discography
YearCast:Athalia,
Josabeth,
Joad,
Joas,
Mathan,
Abner
Conductor,
orchestra
and chorus
Label
1986Joan Sutherland,
Emma Kirkby,
James Bowman,
Aled Jones,
Anthony Rolfe Johnson,
David Thomas
Christopher Hogwood
Academy of Ancient Music
and Choir ofNew College, Oxford
CD:Decca
Cat:475 6731 dc8
1998Elisabeth Scholl,
Barbara Schlick,
Annette Reinhold,
Friederike Holzhausen,
Markus Brutscher,
Stephan McLeod
Joachim Carlos Martini
Frankfurt Baroque Orchestra
and Junge Kantorei
CD:Naxos
Cat:8.554364-65
2005Simone Kermes,
Olga Pasichnyk,
Martin Oro,
Trine Wilsberg Lund,
Thomas Cooley,
Wolf Matthias Friedrich
Peter Neumann
Collegium Cartusianum
and Kölner Kammerchor
CD:MDG
Cat:332 1276-2
2010Geraldine McGreevy,
Nuria Rial,
Lawrence Zazzo,
Aaron Mächler,
Charles Daniels,
David Wilson-Johnson
Paul Goodwin
Kammerorchester Basel
and Vocalconsort Berlin
CD:Deutsche HM
Cat:88697723172

See also

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References

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Citations

  1. ^Smither 1977, pp. 204–205.
  2. ^Smither 1977, p. 204.
  3. ^abSmither 1977, p. 205.
  4. ^abcdeRooke, Deborah W. (2012).Handel's Israelite Oratorio Libretti: Sacred Drama and Biblical Exegesis. Oxford University Press, USA.ISBN 978-0199279289.
  5. ^abGerbrandt, Carl (2006).Sacred Music Drama: The Producer's Guide Second Edition. AuthorHouse.ISBN 978-1425968472.
  6. ^Lee, Jonathan Rhodes= (14 April 2009)."Handel's Little-Known Third Oratorio: The Juicy, Murderous Athalia".San Francisco Classical Voice. Retrieved13 September 2013.

Sources

External links

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