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Bizet,
Georges (baptismal names, Alexandre-César-Léopold), great French opera composer; b. Paris, Oct. 25, 1838;
d. Bougival, June 3, 1875. His parents were both professional musicians:
his father, a singing teacher and composer; his mother, an excellent
pianist. Bizet’s talent developed early in childhood; at the age of 9 he
entered the Pans Cons., his teachers being Marmontel (piano), Benoist
(organ), Zimmerman (harmony), and (for composition) Halévy, whose
daughter, Genevieve, married Bizet in 1869. ~n 1852 he won a 1st prize for
piano, in 1855 for organ and for fugue, and in 1857 the Grand Prix de
Rome. Also in 1857 he shared (with Lecocq) a prize offered by Offenbach
for a setting of a 1-act opera, Le Docteur Miracle; Bizet’s setting
was produced at the BouffesParisiens on April 9, 1857. Instead of the
prescribed Mass, he sent from Rome during his 1st year a 2-act Italian
opera buffa, Don Procopio (not produced until March 10,1906, when
it was given in Monte Carlo in an incongruously ed. version); later he
sent 2 movements of a sym., an ovçrture (La Chasse d’Ossian),
and a 1-act opera (La Guzla de l’Emir; accepted by the Paris
Opera-Comique, but withdrawn by Bizet prior to production). Returning to
Paris, he produced a grand opera, Les Pêcheurs de perles (Theatre-Lyrique,
Sept. 30, 1863); but this work, like La Jolie Fille de Perth (Dec.
26, 1867), failed to win popular approval. A 1-act opera, D.jamileh
(Opéra-Comique, May 22, 1872), fared no better. Bizet’s incidental music
for Daudet’s play L’Arlésienne (Oct. 1, 1872) was ignored by the
audiences and literary critics; it was not fully appreciated until its
revival in 1885. But an orch. suite from L’Arlésienne brought out
by Pasdeloup (Nov. 10, 1872) was acclaimed; a 2nd suite was made by
Guiraud after Bizet2~ death. Bizets next major work was his masterpiece,
Carme’il (based on a tale by Mérimée, text by Halévy and Meilhac),
produced, after many difficulties with the management and the cast, at the
Opéra-Comique (March 3,1875). The reception of the public was not
enthusiastic; several critics attacked the opera for its lurid subject,
and the music for its supposed adoption of Wagner’s methods. Bizet
received a generous sum (25,000 francs) for the score from the publisher
Choudens and won other honors (he was named a Chevalier of the Legion
d’Honneur on the eve of the premiere of Carmen); although the
attendance was not high, the opera was maintained in the repertoire. There
were 37 performances before the end of the season; the original cast
included Galli-Marie as Carmen, Lhérie as Don José, and Bouhy as Escamillo.
Bizet was chagrined by the controversial reception of the opera, but it is
a melodramatic invention to state (as some biographers have done) that the
alleged failure of Carmen precipitated the composer’s death (he
died on the night of the 31st perf. of the opera). Soon Carmen
became a triumphant success all over the world; it was staged in London
(in Italian at Her Majesty’s Theatre, June 22, 1878), St. Petersburg,
Vienna, Brussels, Naples, Florence, Mainz, N.Y. (Academy of Music, Oct.
23, 1878), etc. The Metropolitan Opera produced Carmen 1st in
Italian (Jan. 9, 1884), then in French, with Calve as Carmen (Dec. 20,
1893). It should be pointed out that the famous Habanera is not
Bizets own, but a melody by the Spanish composer Yradier; Bizet inserted
it in Carmen (with slight alterations), mistaking it for a folk
song. Bizet also wrote an operetta, La Prêtresse (1854); the operas
Numa (1871) and Ivan le Terrible, in 4 acts (Bordeaux, Oct.
12, 1951; the score was believed to have been destroyed by Bizet, but was
discovered among the MSS bequeathed to the Paris Cons. by the 2nd husband
of Bizets widow); the cantatas David (1856) and Clovis et
Clothilde (1857); Vasco do Gama, symphonic ode, with Chorus
(1859); Souvenirs de Rome, symphonic suite in 3 movements (Paris,
Feb. 28, 1869; publ. in 1880 as a 4-movement suite, Roma); orch.
overture, Patrie (Paris, Feb. 15, 1874); Jeux d’en fonts,
suite for Piano, 4-hands; about 150 piano pieces of all kinds (Bizet was a
brilliant pianist); etc. Bizet’s 1st Sym., written at the age of 17, was
discovered in the Bizet collection at the Paris Cons. in 1933, and was
given its 1st performance anywhere by Felix Weingartner in Basel on Feb.
26, 1935; it rapidly became popular in the concert repertoire. Bizet also
completed Halévy’s biblical opera, Noe (1869).
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