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Oscar STRAUS (1870-1954)
The Chocolate Soldier - Operetta in three acts (1908)
[88:10]
Bumerli, a young ‘soldier’ - Johannes Martin Kränzle
Nadina Popoff, a Bulgarian maiden - Caroline Stein
Colonel Kasimir Popoff, Nadina’s father - Helmut Berger
Alexius Spiridoff, soldier and Nadina’s fiancé - John Dickie
Aurelia Popoff, Nadina’s mother - Gertraud Wagner
Mascha, a young relative - Martina Borst
Captain Massakroff - Walter Raffeiner
Händel Collegium Köln and WDR Rundfunkorchester Köln/Siegfried
Köhler
rec. broadcast, Westdeutschen Rundfunks, Cologne, 1993
CAPRICCIO C5089 [34:11 + 53:59]
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Oscar Straus (note the spelling of Straus – only one ‘s’ at
its end) was born in Vienna on 6 March 1870 but was not related
to the famous Strauss dynasty.
He began his career emulating the satirical Offenbach, with
Die Lustigen Nibelungen (The Merry Nibelungs).
Richard Traubner in his excellent book, Operetta, A Theatrical
History, suggests that it was “too musically advanced for
Viennese ears” and national-socialist pro-Wagnerians were not
amused. Those who relish the idea of lampooning of The Ring
might like to know that Capriccio have a one-CD Köln recording
of Oscar Straus’s The Merry Nibelungs again conducted
by Köhler (C5088). Noticing the great success of Lehár’s
The Merry Widow, in 1905, Straus decided to capitulate
to public taste and entered the comfortable dream world of sentimental
Viennese operetta with his smash success - in Austria and Germany
if not in America and England - of Ein Waltztraum (A
Waltz Dream) of 1907.
Straus’s The Chocolate Soldier (German
title: Der tapfere Soldat or Der Praliné-Soldat)
followed in 1908. It was based on George
Bernard Shaw's 1894 play, Arms
and the Man and the libretto was by Rudolf Bernaur and Leopold
Jacobson. G.B. himself was not at all keen on such an adaptation
of his play which had been successful in its Viennese run and
only accepted the situation provided that Straus’s operetta
was promoted as an unauthorized parody of his play and that
he received no royalties for it. A bad mistake - because the
show was a big hit in London and New York - but not quite so
in Europe because of political sensitivities surrounding the
Balkans where the action of the story was set. Later, Shaw tried
to recoup some of his financial losses when M-G-M approached
him for the film rights for The Chocolate Soldier. Louis
B. Mayer refused Shaw’s exorbitant demands and the film went
ahead with a mix of Straus’s and other’s music but to a different
plot based on Ferenc
Molnár's play Testor
. The 1941 film starred Nelson Eddy and Risë Stevens – although
Jeanette MacDonald had originally been pencilled in to star
with Eddy.
There’s a very good Wikipedia
article on Straus’s The Chocolate Soldier that also
details all the songs. Briefly the story is set in Bulgaria
in 1885 during the war between Serbia and Bulgaria. Nadina,
her friend Mascha and her mother are missing their menfolk away
at the hostilities. Suddenly a soldier, handsome and charming
bursts into her bedroom. He is Bumerli, a Swiss mercenary serving
in the Serbian army. He is an ordinary soldier quite unlike
her supposedly heroic fiancée Alexius. Bumerli carries chocolates
in his pouch instead of ammunition! His charm captivates the
ladies and as Act I closes all three are smitten. They all give
him photographs of themselves inscribed with loving messages.
He puts all three in his great coat and promptly forgets them.
But he cannot forget Nadina. Six months later he returns for
her but the three photographs are produced. Jealousy flare up
between Nadina and Mascha, Bumerli is thought to be fickle and
faithless and comic complications ensue. All is happily resolved
at the end.
The big hit of the show is the well-known and popular waltz
song, ‘Komm, komm, Held meiner Träum’ (‘Come, come hero
of my dreams’). Here it is sung most beguilingly by sweet-voiced
Caroline Stein as Nadina. She is singing about her Alexius in
Act I, her fiancée and imagined hero, who turns out to be nothing
of the kind. The lower tenor timbre of Kränzle makes Bumerli
sound just that little bit too mature for Nadina. However the
charm of their duet ‘Weill’s Leben suss und herzlich ist’ (‘Because
life is sweet and beautiful’) cannot be diminished. Much of
the music comprises ensemble writing - quartets, quintets, and
sextets and soloists with choir. The Act I ensemble song with
comic material for the soldiers searching for Bumerli and an
interpolated stirring patriotic song lustily sung by Nadina
is a highlight – so, too, is the following charming waltz-song
trio for Nadina, Mascha and Aurelia They sing ‘Tiralala’ as
all besotted, they dream of their Chocolate soldier. This number
has some lovely orchestral felicities in the strings and woodwinds.
Kränzle’s wistful Act II song ‘If one can, as one wants’
has an introduction that echoes the ‘Tiralala’. Kränzle
has another charming if argumentative duet ‘Es war einmal ein
Fräulein’ (‘There was once a maiden’) with Nadina before
Act II’s exuberant finale closes with a ringing reprise of the
big number, ‘Komm, komm, Held meiner Träum’ (‘Come, come
hero of my dreams’). Conductor, Köhler consistently delivers
telling sentimental and witty accompaniments to all the numbers.
Mention should be made of the delicious irony of the orchestral
accompaniments to the waspish numbers of Act II like the bickering
between Nadina and Bumerli in ‘Pardon, pardon pardon! Ich steig
ja nur auf den Balkon’ (Pardon, I rise only on the balcony)
A charming recording of a delightful operetta.
Ian Lace
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