La Gran Via, Federigo Chueca
| Title | La Gran Via |
| English Title | The Boulevard |
| Composer | Federigo Chueca |
| Librettists | Felipe Pérez y Gonzalez |
| Orchestration | Joaquin Valverde |
| Language | Spanish, Dutch translation available |
| Genre | Zarzuela (light opera/operetta) |
| First performance | 2 July 1886, Teatro Felipe, Madrid |
| Time of action | 1886 |
| Place of action | Madrid |
| Main parts |
|
| Prominence of chorus | Considerable |
| Orchestra | 2 flutes, 1 oboe, 2 clarinets, 1 bassoon, 2 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, timpani/percussion, strings |
| Special demands | |
| Full score and orchestral parts | Full score available
Orchestral material in revision, currently not available |
| Level | Not difficult |
| Length | One act, about one hour |
| Music |
Continuous string of lively and catchy numbers. The polka of streets and alleys, the Caballero de Gracia’s waltz, the servant-girl’s gloriously vulgar tango, the Eliseo madrileño mazurka, the sailors’ song: all of them little masterpieces. |
| Story |
Wandering through the city, a street-lounger finds himself in a sort of hospital waiting-room, in the company of the streets, alleys and squares of Madrid. Behind a door, the city is giving birth to La Gran Via, a grand new boulevard, to which, it is feared, many old parts of the town will be sacrificed. The Caballero de Gracia, one of Madrid’s main streets, appears; this conceited personage expresses the wish to contract a marriage with the new boulevard. A doctor announces that the birth is not immediately due. The Caballero the Gracia is then taken on tour of the city by the street-lounger; among the places they visit are suburbs, the docks, a dancing-place, the arena, a skating rink; they meet various colourful characters: a servant-girl, thieves, roller-skaters, sailors, policemen etc. In the end they return to the hospital. Suddenly the new boulevard is born. Such miracles only happen on special days such as this: the thirtieth of February. The spectacle ends with a procession to the music of the opening number. |
| Costumes | Men: policemen and townspeople. Women: sailors and townspeople. |
| Note | |
| Pictures | |
| Link | Wikipedia (es) |
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