The Chocolate Soldier

The Chocolate Soldier is an operetta by Oscar Straus based on George Bernard Shaw's 1894 Arms and the Man. The libretto was by Rudolph Bernauer and Leopold Jacobson. It premiered in 1908 in Vienna with a German libretto, and titled Der tapfere Soldat, but had only moderate popularity. The first English-language version premiered in New York, translated by Stanislaus Stange, on 13 September 1909, where it was the hit of the Broadway season. It was revived in 1910, 1921, 1930, 1931, 1934, and 1947. Its London premiere in 1910 was also considered a phenomenal success. The operetta was filmed (as a silent movie) in 1915. When Shaw had given Leopold Jacobson the rights to adapt the play, he had given three conditions: none of Shaw's dialogue, nor any of the character's names could be used; the libretto must be advertised as a parody, and Shaw would accept no monetary compensation. Shaw despised the result, calling it "a putrid opera bouffe in the worst taste of 1860," and grew to regret not accepting payment when, despite his opinion of the work, it became an international success. When Shaw heard, in 1921, that Franz Lehr wanted to set his play Pygmalion to music, he sent word to Vienna that Lehr be instructed that he could not touch Pygmalion without infringing Shaw's copyright and that Shaw had "no intention of allowing the history of The Chocolate Soldier to be repeated" (Pygmalion was eventually adapted by Lerner and Loewe as My Fair Lady, but this was possible only because they were, at least in theory, adapting a screenplay co-authored by Shaw, with rights controlled by the film company.) Metro Goldwin Mayer tried to make a filmed version of The Chocolate Soldier in 1940, but were refused permission (or at least permission at a reasonable price) by Shaw. Instead, Louis B. Mayer bought the rights to Straus's music, and used the plot from Ferenc Molnar's play Testr (also known as Playing With Fire and Where Ignorance is Bliss, and ultimately adapted by Philip Moeller as The Guardsman with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne) as the plot of The Chocolate Soldier starring Nelson Eddy and Ris Stevens, incorporating music from other works as well.

Plot

The operetta is set in 1885, near the Dragoman Pass, in Bulgaria.
   
A Swiss mercenary in the Serbian army, Lieutenant Bumerli, hides from the Bulgarians in the bedroom of Nadina Popoff, the daughter of a Bulgarian colonel, setting female hearts on fire. Nadina's wedding is ruined when Bumerli is recognized as a fugative, but in the end Nadina finds true love with Bumerli. While Arms and the Man carried a pacifist message, and had political overtones, The Chocolate Soldier does not. The operetta was continually reworked during Straus's lifetime. Among those songs that were dropped is the (now) amusingly titled "Why Is It Love Makes Us Feel Queer?"; the more well-known songs include "My Hero", "Thank the Lord the War Is Over", "Sympathy", "Seek the Spy", "Tiralala", "The Chocolate Soldier", and "Forgive". The plot of the 1941 film concerns the jealousy of a pair of Viennese singers, Maria and Karl Lang. To test her loyalty, Karl masquerades as a Russian guardsman and tries to seduce Maria. Complications ensue. The film includes the following non-Straus selections: *"While My Lady Sleeps" by Bronislau Kaper

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
nez perce national forest
kouprey
dut
the 20 minute workout
clearwater national forest
black black
netta
eo navia (asturian comarca)
treble charger
trs 80 mc 10
on being sane in insane places
yuki yokosawa
samson et dalila
exorcist: the beginning
sanctuary arts
parody advertisement
cuesta
nesl
sunlight park
strongly typed programming language
hanlan's point stadium
wudaokou
modern school
maple leaf stadium
yulia nesterenko
achille urbain
pirate tv
catgut
rapso
douglas marland
four tet
set theoretic programming
adrian lyne
palmdale regional airport
pmd
headset (bicycle part)
pero cameron
freemason conspiracy theories
bicycle fork
obsidian entertainment
paul spong
telegraph avenue
lavernock point
bos aegyptiacus