k 2020

"Enemy to the Muses!" : The Generic Challenge of the Early 18th-Century Ballad Opera

MIKYŠKOVÁ, Anna

Basic information

Original name

"Enemy to the Muses!" : The Generic Challenge of the Early 18th-Century Ballad Opera

Authors

MIKYŠKOVÁ, Anna (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution)

Edition

11th Brno International Conference of English, American and Canadian Studies : "Breaking the Boundaries : In Between Texts, Cultures and Conventions", 12–14 February, 2020, Brno, Faculty of Arts, Masaryk University, 2020

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Prezentace na konferencích

Field of Study

60206 Specific literatures

Country of publisher

Czech Republic

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

References:

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14210/20:00114232

Organization unit

Faculty of Arts

Keywords in English

ballad opera; pantomime; Italian opera; satire; Henry Fielding; James Ralph; popular genres

Tags

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 18/2/2021 12:47, Mgr. Zuzana Matulíková

Abstract

V originále

The first three decades of the 18th century mark a peculiar period in the development of English music theatre. In the 1720s, London was swept by the grandeur of Italian opera which remained a musical and theatrical highlight for many years. However, partially due to the growing elitism of the London productions of Italian opera, popular taste slowly changed, and a new satirical version of Italian opera emerged: the uniquely English genre of ballad opera. The new genre was famously inaugurated by John Gay and Johann Christoph Pepusch’s The Beggar’s Opera (1728), whose success was achieved by the employment of popular songs, a highly efficient parody of Italian operas and the unprecedented metatheatrical response to contemporary anti-opera sentiments. The multiple ballad operas that kept flooding London theatres for the next ten years were to a great extent attempts at repeating Gay and Pepusch’s financial success. Nevertheless, the aim of this paper is to go beyond the generally known story of The Beggar’s Opera and to focus on later ballad operas which developed the original criticism further. An interesting case in point is James Ralph’s ballad opera The Fashionable Lady; or Harlequin’s Opera (1730) which provides an intriguing comment on the genre of ballad operas itself (especially in the underlying conflict between Mr. Ballad, opponent of Italian “squeakish Recitatives” and “paltry Eunuchs”, and Mr. Drama and other critics who despise the modern English entertainment business). The presentation will demonstrate that the genre of ballad operas, which was based on its satiric mode, also became a subject of its own parody.

Links

GA19-07494S, research and development project
Name: Anglická divadelní kultura 1660-1737
Investor: Czech Science Foundation