L'île de Tulipatan
 

 

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Title   L'île de Tulipatan (The Isle of Tulipatan)
Composer   Jacques Offenbach (1819 - 1880)
Librettists   Henri Chivot and Alfred Duru
Genre   Opéra-bouffe, comic opera (one act).
First performance   Théâtre des Bouffes Parisiens, Paris, 30 September, 1868.
Time of action   The action takes place in the Isle of Tulipatan, at a distance of 25,000 kilometers from Nanterre, 473 years before the invention of the spittoon.
Main parts   King Cacatois XXIII comic baritone (or tenor)
    Romboïdal comic tenor
    Prince Alexius soprano
    Théodorine contralto (or mezzo-soprano)
    Princess Hermosa tenor
Prominence of chorus   Large.
Orchestra   2 flutes, 1 oboe, 2 clarinets, 1 bassoon, 2 French horns,                2 trumpets, 1 trombone, kettle-drums, percussion, strings.
Special demands   There are two travesty-roles; a man figuring as a girl and a woman as a boy.
Full score and orchestral parts   Available.
Level   Not difficult
Length   One act, about 1 hour.
Music   Offenbach obviously enjoyed setting the farcical story to music. He makes the singers imitate various musical instruments (trombone, cello, drum, mandolin) and, as in so many of his works, he makes fun of his colleagues (for example Fromental Halévy, whose opera La Juive was very popular at the time). There is a highly boisterous aria, a song with quack-quacking for accompaniment, a grand ensemble about nothing, a terrific duet for father and "daughter" (two tenors) and a crazy barcarole.
Story   A king reigns in a distant island. He has a son - at least, he thinks he has. The prince is in love with the daughter of the chamberlain. The king does not object, but then there are difficulties. When the royal child was born, the chamberlain did not tell the king that it was the next in a long series of daughters, so it was brought up as a boy, and now the chamberlain, though desperate, dares not reveal the truth. On the other hand we learn that the chamberlain's wife has passed off her little boy as a girl, to protect him from having to do military service, and that she never told her husband. Confusion follows. As may be imagined, eventually a happy ending is achieved.
Costumes   Costumes to be freely chosen.