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8 - Carmen the Gypsy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 January 2023

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Summary

She is of the middle stature, neither strongly nor slightly built, and yet her every movement denotes agility and vigour. As she stands erect before you, she appears like a falcon about to soar, and you are almost tempted to believe that the power of volition is hers. And were you to stretch forth your hand to seize her, she would spring above the house-tops like a bird. Her face is oval, and her features are regular but somewhat hard and coarse, for she was born among rocks in a thicket, and she has been wind-beaten and sun scorched for many a year, even like her parents before her; there is many a speck upon her cheek, and perhaps a scar, but no dimples of love; and her brow is wrinkled over, though she is yet young.

George Borrow, The Zincali

Juxtaposing the opera with the Mérimée sources has so far compared novella and libretto and their transformation into opera. It has also identified a few possible sources of Bizet’s ‘inspiration’, but do these really get to the heart of the characters of this spectacle? Counteracting the accusations that Bizet’s opera slightens the novella, a reverse approach stemming from French nineteenth-century gypsophiles – amongst whom Mérimée was one of the most committed – reveals the seriousness with which the two librettists approached their commission, transferring the essence, spirit and locations into a text ripe with ‘realism’ and a visceral presentation of this troubled tale. Halévy’s notebooks reveal him combing the first published collection of Mérimée’s correspondence, which appeared exactly in the year he and Meil-hac were transforming Carmen into a libretto.Above all, his notes reveal a search for an understanding of Mérimée’s deep attachment to Spain. Examination of both the first run and Albert Carré’s ‘remake’ of 1898 further unveil considerable team-efforts to capture these essential Spanish qualities – Don Preciso’s ‘El chiste y la sal de España’ – both on the stage and in the pit.

Frowned upon by some modern theatre analysts is the old-fashioned and dubious method of the ‘character sketch’, which was the backbone of school-level study. This has been attempted many times in relation to Carmen, but perhaps without much regard to Carmen’s foils, Micaëla, José and Escamillo,

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2021

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