Show artwork for Pelléas and Mélisande

Pelléas and Mélisande Pelléas and Mélisande

Composed by Claude Debussy

Conducted by James Conlon

March 25 – April 16, 2023

Production new to Los Angeles

At the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion

An enigmatic tale of hidden longing and lingering suspicion.

Lost in the forest, a prince encounters an ethereal beauty with a mysterious past (and lush locks that would make Rapunzel envious). But after she's brought home to his family, she begins to grow increasingly close to his handsome younger brother. 

Debussy's sensual, exquisitely nuanced score casts a hypnotic spell, capturing an enigmatic dream world where forbidden love blossoms. 

Conducted by James Conlon, this fascinating lyric masterpiece stars two riveting young performers, soprano Sydney Mancasola and baritone Will Liverman, as the doomed lovers, and Kyle Ketelsen as the jealous prince. The magnificent Susan Graham makes her role debut as Geneviève, mother of the two rival brothers, and the legendary bass Ferruccio Furlanetto returns as King Arkel, the family patriarch unable to grasp the tragedy unfolding before him.

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One hour before each performance begins, join Music Director James Conlon for a pre-show talk about Pelléas and Mélisande in Stern Grand Hall, on the second floor of the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. Admission is complimentary with your ticket.

A personal invitation from Maestro James Conlon to Pelléas and Mélisande:

"A consistently excellent cast"

LA Times

Watch "Maestro James Conlon on Debussy, the first Impressionist composer" a Hammer Channel video from March 05, 2023. Watch Here >>

Listen to this haunting clip from Act 1 of Pelléas et Mélisande:

Cast

Pelléas
Will Liverman
Mélisande
Sydney Mancasola
Golaud
Kyle Ketelsen
King Arkel
Ferruccio Furlanetto
Geneviève
Susan Graham
Yniold
Kai Edgar
A Physician
Patrick Blackwell

Creative Team

Conductor
James Conlon
Production
David McVicar
Stage Director / Movement
Leah Hausman
Scenery and Costumes
Rae Smith
Lighting
Paule Constable
Projections
Jack Henry James Fox
Chorus
Jeremy Frank

Read the synopsis

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Synopsis

Act I
Scene 1 – In a forest
Prince Golaud of Allemonde has been out hunting but is now lost. He notices a young girl by a pool. There is a crown in the water. The girl refuses to let Golaud retrieve it for her. Golaud gradually learns that she too is lost, having fled an unknown place, and that her name is Mélisande. Golaud persuades her to leave the forest with him.

Scene 2 – A room in the castle, six months later
Geneviève, mother to both Golaud and his half-brother Pelléas, reads a letter to the almost-blind Arkel, King of Allemonde. It has been written by Golaud to Pelléas and relates how Golaud has married Mélisande but knows as little about her now as when they met in the forest. Golaud is worried that Arkel, his grandfather, will not accept the marriage, so he asks Pelléas to send a sign that all is well: a light in a tower signifies that Arkel blesses the couple.

Pelléas enters, crying. He wants to visit his dying friend, Marcellus, but Arkel reminds him that his own father is very ill too and that he must stay at home. Geneviève tells Pelléas he must light the lamp in the tower for Golaud.

Scene 3 – In front of the castle
Geneviève and Mélisande walk together in the dark gardens, where they encounter Pelléas. They watch a ship put out to sea. Mélisande recognizes it as the one that brought her. She believes it will sink. After Geneviève has left to look after Yniold, Golaud’s son from his first marriage, Pelléas offers Mélisande his hand to guide her. He says that he may have to go away the next morning. She asks him why.

Act II
Scene 1 – A well in the castle gardens
Pelléas brings Mélisande to a shaded well, out of the oppressive heat. As she reaches out into the well, Mélisande’s long hair falls into the water. Pelléas asks her about her first meeting with Golaud, but she is unwilling to answer his questions. She plays with the ring Golaud gave her; she throws it too high and it falls into the well. Mélisande asks Pelléas what she should do. He replies that she should tell Golaud “the truth.”

Scene 2 – A room in the castle
Mélisande sits beside Golaud, who is in bed, injured. He was thrown from his horse as the clock chimed noon, the same time Mélisande lost the ring in the well. Mélisande says she is unhappy in the castle and wants to leave. As Golaud seeks to comfort her, he notices her wedding ring is missing. Mélisande says she must have lost it in a cave by the sea where she went looking for shells for Yniold. Golaud demands that she find the ring, and that she take Pelléas if necessary to help her.

Scene 3 – A cave
At night, Pelléas accompanies Mélisande to the cave. The moon casts light inside, revealing sleeping beggars. Pelléas explains that there is a famine in the land, and that these impoverished people have sought refuge in the cave.

Act III
Scene 1 – A tower of the castle
Mélisande combs her long hair at a high window. Pelléas appears. He intends to leave the following day and would like to kiss her hand. As Mélisande leans out, her hair falls, and he kisses that instead, trapping her by tying it to the nearby branches of the trees. Golaud suddenly arrives. He angrily tells the pair to stop behaving like children and leads Pelléas away.

Scene 2 – The castle vaults
Golaud forces Pelléas to look into a stagnant well.

Scene 3 – The entrance to the vaults, noon
Golaud warns Pelléas not to continue his childish games with Mélisande. She may be pregnant and mustn’t have any unexpected shocks. Pelléas should avoid her as tactfully as possible.

Scene 4 – In front of the castle, dawn
Golaud questions Yniold as to what he knows about Pelléas and Mélisande. Yniold offers few answers. Golaud lifts him onto his shoulders so that he can see into Mélisande’s room. She is there with Pelléas. Yniold reports that they are looking at the light. Frightened, he struggles and begs to be let down. They leave.

Intermission

Act IV
Scene 1 – A room in the castle
Pelléas tells Mélisande that his father is recovering his health and has urged Pelléas to leave on his travels. Pelléas and Mélisande arrange to meet for a final time at the well in the gardens.

Scene 2 – The same room
Arkel tells Mélisande that he felt deeply sorry for her when she first arrived with Golaud, but now hopes for a brighter future. Golaud storms in, bleeding—wounded apparently by a thorn. When Mélisande tries to help him, he demands his sword. Mélisande is terrified. Mocking her innocent demeanor, he grabs his wife by her hair and drags her across the floor. With her husband out of the room, Mélisande tells Arkel that Golaud doesn’t love her any more.

Scene 3 – A well in the castle gardens
Yniold is trying to free a ball from under a stone. He sees a shepherd approach with his flock. The sheep are bleating in fear. He calls out to the shepherd to ask why. A voice replies that this isn’t the way to the fold. Frightened, Yniold runs off.

Scene 4 – The same well, night
Pelléas is joined by Mélisande. They finally declare their love for each other. They hear the castle doors being locked and are resigned to their fate. As they kiss, Golaud emerges from the shadows. He kills Pelléas. Wounded, Mélisande flees, pursued by Golaud.

Act V
A room in the castle
Mélisande has given birth to a baby girl. A doctor is bewildered as to why she is fading away when her wounds are so slight. Alone with her, Golaud asks for Mélisande’s forgiveness. Mélisande maintains her innocence, though Golaud continues to press her for the truth. Arkel returns with the baby. Mélisande sees that the baby doesn’t cry. Mélisande dies.

Synopsis courtesy of Scottish Opera

Estimated running time: three hours and 20 minutes, including one intermission

Performed in French with English subtitles

Click here to read James Conlon's program note on Pelléas and Mélisande. Click here to learn about James Conlon's personal history with the opera.

Click here to read the digital program.

A Scottish Opera production

Production made possible by generous support from  
Dunard Fund USA   
GRoW @ Annenberg  

With special appreciation to
Gregory and Régina Annenberg Weingarten
 

 

Artwork for Pelléas and Mélisande
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2022/23 Season