Louise | |
---|---|
Opera by Gustave Charpentier | |
Librettist | Gustave Charpentier |
Language | French |
Premiere | 2 February 1900 Opéra-Comique, Paris |
Louise is a “musical novel,” or “roman musical,” in four acts and five scenes by Gustave Charpentier. It can be considered an opera. The composer himself penned the French libretto with contributions from Saint-Pol-Roux, a symbolist poet and the inspiration of the surrealists.[1] It is an atmospheric story of working-class life in Paris, with the city itself invoked along the way:[2] young Louise, a seamstress living with her parents, loves Julien, an artist; she desires freedom, associated in her mind with him and the city. (Charpentier would later write a sequel, the opera Julien, describing the artist's aspirations.) Musically the work is considered an example of verismo, and marks the beginning of naturalism in French opera.