“WHILE A SYMPHONY’S PLAYING, THE TWO SWANS COME SWIMMING ON… TURN THEMSELVES INTO FAIRIES, AND DANCE”: THE SPECTACULAR 1692 FAIRY-QUEEN, AFTER SHAKESPEARE
PURCELL, Henry. The Fairy-Queen: An Opera. Represented at the Queen’s-Theatre By Their Majesties Servants. London: Printed for Jacob Tonson, 1692. Small quarto, nineteenth-century half dark green morocco.
First edition of Elkanah Settle’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s Midsummer Night’s Dream.
The Fairy-Queen, an operatic adaptation of A Midsummer Night’s Dream, was staged in 1692. With music by England’s first great operatic composer, Purcell, it is one of the earliest English operas. It consisted of scenes from Shakespeare’s play, augmented by songs, spectacular scenery, and dancing. A contemporary noted that the production “in Ornaments was Superior… especially in Cloaths, for all the Singers and Dancers, Scenes, Machines and Decorations, all most profusely set off; and excellently perform’d, chiefly the Instrumental and Vocal part Compos’d by the said Mr. Purcel, and Dances by Mr. Priest. The Court and Town were wonderfully satisfy’d with it; but the Expences in setting it out being so great, the Company got very little by it” (Downes, quoted in Spencer, Shakespeare Improved, 116). Shakespeare’s original play had gotten along with minimal scenery and props; the Restoration theatre changed all that. The admired and costly theatrical effects of The Fairy-Queen are vividly described in the printed text. When Titania’s sanity is restored in Act IV, “The Scene changes to a Garden of Fountains. A Sonata plays while the Sun rises, it appears red through the Mist, as it ascends it dissipates the Vapours, and is seen in its full Lustre; then the Scene is perfectly discovered, the Fountains enrich’d with gilding, and adorn’d with Statues… Vast Quantities of Water break out of the Hills… Phoebus appears in a Chariot drawn by four Horses…” Elkanah Settle adapted Shakespeare’s text, and Purcell’s music (not printed in this edition) was widely admired. Additions to the cast not found in Shakespeare include Corydon, Mopsa, “six Monkeys” and “A Chorus of Chineses.” Wing S2681. ookplate of Beeleigh Abbey. Later ink notation (“Anonymous”) to title page.