A musical-dramatic production, operetta was originally a short comic opera that by the 19th century had become a stage play with music and spoken dialogue of a farcical and satiric nature. It became especially popular in Paris with Jacques Offenbach as its most successful practitioner. His ‘Orpheus in the Underworld', first performed in 1858, and ‘La Belle Hélène' (1864) satirized contemporary Parisian life under the guise of classical Greek mythology. Offenbach's influence spread to London, where the team of William S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan from the end of the 1870s created a characteristic English form in such familiar works as ‘The Mikado', ‘H.M.S. Pinafore', ‘The Pirates of Penzance', ‘Iolanthe', and many others. The English operetta, however, lacked the cynical and daring elements of the French models (see Gilbert and Sullivan). In Vienna from about 1870 operetta of a more sentimental style with warm melodies developed. The chief composers were Johann Strauss the Younger, whose ‘Die Fledermaus' (1874) is the best example, and Franz von Suppé (see Strauss, Johann, the Younger). Toward the end of the century the French style also became more sentimental and less satirical, perhaps from the influence of the gentler Viennese operetta. Viennese successors to Strauss—such as Franz Lehár, Oscar Straus, and Leo Fall—and such French composers as André Messager contributed to the evolution of operetta into what is now known as musical comedy. (See also Musical Comedy.) The operetta traditions of Austria, France, Italy (Puccini contributed ‘La Rondine' in 1917), and England began to wane, but they found new life in the United States. Victor Herbert wrote ‘Babes in Toyland' in 1903, Reginald De Koven offered ‘Robin Hood' (1890), Rudolf Friml wrote ‘Rose Marie' (1924), and Sigmund Romberg contributed to American musical life with ‘The Student Prince' (1924) and ‘The Desert Song' (1926). |