Le déserteur


Le déserteur is an opéra comique by the French composer Pierre-Alexandre Monsigny with a libretto by Michel-Jean Sedaine. It was first performed on 6 March 1769 by the Comédie-Italienne at their public theatre, the Hôtel de Bourgogne in Paris.
The work was Monsigny's greatest musical success and is one of the key operas of late 18th century French opéra comique. It was popular in Germany and was performed in New York City in 1787. At the Paris Opéra-Comique it was performed over 300 times throughout the 19th century and up to 1911. The work mixes serious and comic elements, an example of the latter being the behaviour of the drunkard Montauciel. The theme of a last-minute reprieve from execution influenced later rescue opera.

Roles

CastVoice typePremiere, 6 March 1769
Alexis, a soldierbaritoneJoseph Caillot
Louise, his fiancéesopranoMarie-Thérèse Laruette
Jean-Louis, Louise's fathertenor
Alexis's auntsopranoMme Bérard
Bertrand, Alexis's cousinhaute-contreAntoine Trial
Jeannette, a young peasantsopranoPétronille-Rosalie Beaupré
Montauciel, a dragoontenorClairval
Courchemin, a brigadierbasse-taille M Nainville
Three guardshaute-contre, tenor, tenorRobert Desbrosses, M Lemoyne etc.
The jailerspoken role

Synopsis

Alexis, a young soldier, is engaged to be married to Louise, a farmer's daughter. On the orders of her father, she plays a trick on him by pretending she is going to marry her cousin Bertrand instead. Alexis falls for the deception and deserts the army in despair. He is captured and thrown into jail to await execution. Louise goes to see the king to beg for mercy for Alexis. She receives a letter of reprieve but faints from exhaustion before she is able to deliver it. All ends happily, however, when the king arrives in person and frees Alexis.

Recording