Written between 1773 and 1791, the years spanning the French Revolution, the three plays, Le Barbier de Séville, Le Mariage de Figaro, and La Mère coupable, show the change in social mores before, during and after the Revolution. In The Barber of Seville, we have the strict guardian who has designs upon his young ward, the free-ranging noble who is able to get his desires, and the conniving barber who follows his own likes and dislikes. In The Marriage of Figaro, a satire on the aristocracy, Count Almaviva has fallen out of love with his Countess, the former Rosina, and is pursuing Suzanne, Figaro’s fiancée. The Count also has a lover in the young Fanchette. This time we also have the character of Chérubin (Cherubini in Mozart’s opera), the Count’s page and godson of the Countess, who is desperately in love with every woman he meets and who the Count finally sends off to be a soldier. In Mozart’s opera, his aria, ‘Voi, che sapete che cosa è amor,’ (You, who know what love means) is emblematic of his youth and desires.
Mozart: Le Nozze di Figaro: Act II Scene 2: Arietta: Voi, che sapete che cosa è amor (Ann Murray, Cherubino (mezzo-soprano); Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra; Riccardo Muti, cond.)
La Mère coupable (The Guilty Mother) is set 20 years after The Marriage of Figaro. The Countess and Chérubin had a night of passion before he left for the army (he dies in battle), and the young Léon is the result. The Count has his own illegitimate child: his daughter Florestine. It’s up to Figaro and Suzanne to save the day, preserve the Count’s fortune from a fortune-hunter, and to get the Count and Countess back together to celebrate the wedding of their (unrelated) children Léon and Florestine, who have been secretly in love.
We know Rossini’s Barber and Mozart’s Figaro¸ but operatic settings of La Mère have not really entered the repertoire. André Grétry (1741-1813) made a start on one but didn’t finish it. It wasn’t until 1966, 180 years after the play was written that Darius Milhaud completed his opera La mère coupable. It remains rarely performed.
Milhaud: La Mère Coupable: Ah Léon! (Frederikke Kampmann, Florestine; Teater an der Wien)
Massenet: Chérubin: Act I: A cette joie, a ce printemps (Michelle Breedt, Chérubin (soprano); Giorgio Surian, The Philosopher (bass); Cagliari Theatre Orchestra; Emmanuel Villaume, cond.)
As you can hear in this excerpt, there’s more dialogue than singing, but we can also hear that Chérubin is no longer the young boy with desires of Mozart’s world, but has grown into a man. The use of dialogue throughout the opera, foreshadowing Richard Strauss’ ‘talking operas,’ made the opera unpopular with French audiences. However, Massenet wrote with the singer Mary Garden in mind for the lead role and Lucien Fugère as The Philosopher and their brilliance carried those first performances to perfection.
For scenes from Massenet’s opera
Mozart’s page is “Cherubino”