Written on Skin

Written on Skin
Opera by George Benjamin
Scene from a 2018 performance by Opera Philadelphia
LibrettistMartin Crimp
LanguageEnglish
Based onlegend of Guillaume de Cabestanh
Premiere
7 July 2012 (2012-07-07)

Written on Skin is an opera by the British composer George Benjamin, with a libretto written by Martin Crimp.

Benjamin's first full-length opera, it was premiered at the 2012 Aix-en-Provence Festival by the Mahler Chamber Orchestra as a commission from five opera centres,[1] and received its British premiere at the Royal Opera House in London in March 2013 and its Paris premiere at the Opéra-Comique in November that year; Benjamin conducted for all of these premiere seasons.

The libretto by Martin Crimp, who also wrote the libretto for Benjamin's first opera Into The Little Hill, is based on legend of the troubadour Guillaume de Cabestanh;[2] the story is also repeated in The Decameron of Giovanni Boccaccio. The action takes place in 13th-century Provence.

The opera is divided into 15 scenes. The Protector (a rich land-owner) pays the Boy (an artist) to create and illustrate a manuscript about his family. The Boy and the Protector's wife Agnès are attracted to each other. Incensed by the reawakened independence of his wife, the Protector murders the Boy and forces Agnès unwittingly to eat his heart. Agnès commits suicide. 'Angels' comment throughout on the action from a modern-day perspective.[3]

The success of the opera in performance motivated the Royal Opera to commission a second full-length opera by Crimp and Benjamin, Lessons in Love and Violence, premiered at the Royal Opera House in May 2018.[4]

  1. ^ John Allison. Review of operas performed at the Aix-en-Provence Festival. Opera, September 2012, Volume 63 No 9, pp. 1087–88.
  2. ^ Royal Opera House website, Written on Skin, accessed 16 March 2013
  3. ^ Written on Skin, review by Andrew Clements in The Guardian, 8 July 2012, accessed 16 March 2013
  4. ^ Royal Opera House website, "New opera by George Benjamin and Martin Crimp announced", 31 January 2017 (accessed 6 April 2018).