On the surface, the opera "John Donne" is about the life of a genius
(John Donne, English poet, 1572-1631) in a time of great societal changes.
Donne's poetry shows a modernism that strongly impressed writers like
T. S. Eliot and Ernest Hemingway. The rhythms of many of his works, too,
are surprisingly well-suited for modern musical adaptation.
Certainly one of the points of this composition is the revealing of Donne's
poetic intentions through showing historical contexts, but also exhibiting
the historical situation of the time through Donne's eyes. In this sense,
"John Donne" is indeed an historical opera.
"John Donne" has three acts and will last about 2 1/2 hours.
Act one
sees Donne as he grew up as son of a traditional Catholic family in
Anglican England. He was raised in highly subversive surroundings, and he
attempts to stand up against the pressure put upon him by them. The death
of his brother in prison is the decisive event which leads to his
determination to take the path of an Elisabethan gentleman.
The second act
deals with his wild years as a student and as secretary to Thomas Egerton.
Apparently, his concern with religious ideologies is successfully tilted.
One love affair follows another and his friends crown him "king of
the orgies." His subversive lifestyle has basically remained - only
having transformed itself into new forms. In his erotic poetry, he provokes
his environment with the astounding realism of his language. The traditional
flowery lyricism of his times is agressively undermined and even twisted.
Finally, he falls in love with Ann More, whom he secretly marries. Again,
he is discarded from "good society" and even thrown into prison.
His way up has apparently come to an end.
Act three:
Donne is in his most difficult crisis. Despite a happy marriage,
he must experience poverty, the life of an outcast, the death of many of
his children, and inner desperation. After the death of his wife and a
long inner struggle, he begins to turn to Anglicanism, and finally accepts
the offer of King James 1 to become Dean of St. Paul's Cathedral in London
- now an Anglican preacher. His sermons remain on an incredibly high literary
level and continue to provoke and warn society, all classes included.
He sets his talents to work for a society in which compromise and peace
are leading components. He dies as an enemy of Cromwell and his revolution,
which will soon after break out.
"No man is an island, entire of itself -
therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls;
IT TOLLS FOR THEE."
"John Donne" is not only an opera about the life of a genius -
it asks questions about the results of (all varieties of) political
repression, and about the moral limits of adaptability; but also about
the power of compromise and self-sacrifice. In his love poems, Donne
took women out of the heavenly spheres and back down to Earth -
a debatable kind of equality. Much of the contradictory life of John Donne
can inspire and provoke, especially inasmuch as he found an intelligent and
personal way to play an important role in a radically changing society.
The plot of the opera has, of course, elements of fiction; but historical
and biographical contexts are carefully observed. The traditional operatic
points of tension and relief (love, erotic, war, struggle, tragedy, humor)
have been generously placed; but John Donne is no hero - his virtue is
having been human enough to have sought the path betwenn the extremes.
"John Donne" is scored for:
2 piccolos, 2 flutes, 2 Bb clarinets, 1 bass-clarinet, 3 tenor saxophones,
2 bassoons, 1 counter-bassoon, 4 French horns, 3 trompets, 3 trombones,
1 tuba, percussion (military drum, 2 tom-toms, snare, tympani, gong,
temple-block, cymbals, and whip), harp, piano, celesta and strings.
The vocalists include a large chorus and soloists: John Donne, bariton;
his mother Elisabeth Heywood, alto; Thomas Egerton, tenor; Donne's wife,
Ann More, soprano; Henry Donne, bass; Lucy, mezzo soprano; Julia, soprano;
Henry and John as boys, sopranos; King James 1, counter-tenor;
solo passages from the chorus such as: ale-house guests, messenger,
William Shakeapeare, students, and merchants.