Béla Bartók’s first ballet, The Wooden Prince (1916) takes us to the story land of princes and princesses, and, of course, evil fairies. But, to get it on stage, Bartók had to contend first with the evil management of the opera house where it was to be staged. He had presented the Royal Opera House in Budapest with his first opera, Bluebeard’s Castle, in 1911. They accepted it but put it aside and looked elsewhere for operas. Finally, in 1916, when Bartók had completed The Wooden Prince and had it successfully staged at the Royal Opera House as a ballet, the Royal Opera House put on Bluebeard’s Castle in 1918.
The Prince, by G.B.M.
The story line for The Wooden Prince was written by Béla Balázs, who had also written the libretto for Bluebeard’s Castle. The story appeared in the Christmas 1912 issue of the journal Nyugat (The West). The story starts with, as it always does, a prince spying a princess playing in the forest. He, of course, falls in love and she knows nothing of this. Then it all goes sideways: a fairy in the forest sees the prince and wants him for herself. She causes the trees to make the obstacles to the prince’s quest, then the forest stream rises against him. All the time, the princess sits in her castle, spinning yarn. Finally, to fool the fairy, the prince makes a wooden mannequin that he dresses in his cloak, puts his crown on it, along with a lock of his hair. The fairy brings the Wooden Prince to life and the princess, of course, falls in love with it. The real prince is left behind in despair. The fairy relents, makes the Wooden Prince lifeless again, and the princess finally beholds the real prince.
The Princess, by G.B.M.
It’s mystical and magical, and like many stories, has a happy ending. Bartók’s music carries the magical side of the forward, beginning with a quite aetherial opening, which is often compared to the opening of Wagner’s Das Rheingold.
would you be so kind and tell me where did you find all these amazing curiosities? I’ve just started doing some research about the Wooden Prince, and your contribution has been spectacular! From the interpretation by the conductor and orchestra you’ve given as preview, across the sketches (who is G.M.B. ?, what is their origin?), all the way to your beautiful article!
Salut Mislav, Thank you for your kind words, we are very lucky to have amazing contributors! G.M.B. stands for Gróf Bánffy Miklós (Count Miklós Bánffy), he designed the sets and costumes of the Wooden Prince. Source: https://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_f%C3%A1b%C3%B3l_faragott_kir%C3%A1lyfi for the information on Bánffy, and the British Library catalogue for the illustrator of this particular book. Best Wishes, Juliette
Salut Juliette;
would you be so kind and tell me where did you find all these amazing curiosities? I’ve just started doing some research about the Wooden Prince, and your contribution has been spectacular! From the interpretation by the conductor and orchestra you’ve given as preview, across the sketches (who is G.M.B. ?, what is their origin?), all the way to your beautiful article!
Thank you so much for this!
Mislav Kuzmanic
Salut Mislav,
Thank you for your kind words, we are very lucky to have amazing contributors!
G.M.B. stands for Gróf Bánffy Miklós (Count Miklós Bánffy), he designed the sets and costumes of the Wooden Prince.
Source:
https://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_f%C3%A1b%C3%B3l_faragott_kir%C3%A1lyfi for the information on Bánffy, and the British Library catalogue for the illustrator of this particular book.
Best Wishes,
Juliette