Roles
Role | Voice type | Premiere cast, 30 September 1791 (conductor: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart) |
---|---|---|
Tamino | tenor | Benedikt Schack |
Papageno | baritone | Emanuel Schikaneder |
Pamina | soprano | Anna Gottlieb |
The Queen of the Night | coloratura soprano | Josepha Hofer |
Sarastro | bass | Franz Xaver Gerl |
Three ladies | 2 sopranos, mezzo-soprano | Mlle Klöpfer, Mlle Hofmann, Mme Elisabeth Schack |
Monostatos | tenor | Johann Joseph Nouseul |
Three boys | treble, alto, mezzo-soprano | Anna Schikaneder; Anselm Handelgruber; Franz Anton Maurer |
Speaker of the temple | bass-baritone | Herr Winter |
Three priests | tenor, 2 basses | Johann Michael Kistler, Urban Schikaneder, Herr Moll |
Papagena | soprano | Barbara Gerl |
Two armoured men | tenor, bass | Johann Michael Kistler, Herr Moll |
Three slaves | 2 tenors, bass | Karl Ludwig Giesecke, Herr Frasel, Herr Starke |
Priests, women, people, slaves, chorus |
The names of the performers at the premiere are taken from a preserved playbill for this performance (at right), which does not give full names; "Hr." = Herr, Mr.; "Mme." = Madame, Mrs.; "Mlle." = Mademoiselle, Miss.
While the female roles in the opera are assigned to different voice types, the playbill for the premiere performance referred to all of the female singers as "sopranos". The casting of the roles relies on the actual pitch range of the part.
These singers perform with an orchestra consisting of two flutes (one doubling on piccolo), two oboes, two clarinets (doubling basset horns), two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, three trombones (alto, tenor, and bass), timpani and strings. The work also requires a four-part chorus for several numbers (notably the finales of each act); and a glockenspiel to perform the music of Papageno's magic bells.
Read more about this topic: The Magic Flute
Famous quotes containing the word roles:
“Modern women are squeezed between the devil and the deep blue sea, and there are no lifeboats out there in the form of public policies designed to help these women combine their roles as mothers and as workers.”
—Sylvia Ann Hewitt (20th century)