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The Most Important Man

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The Most Important Man
Opera by Gian Carlo Menotti
The composer in 1944
LibrettistGian Carlo Menotti
LanguageEnglish
Premiere
March 12, 1971 (1971-03-12)

The Most Important Man is an opera in three acts with music and libretto by Gian Carlo Menotti. Commissioned by Julius Rudel for the New York City Opera, the work premiered at Lincoln Center in 1971 in a production directed by Menotti with sets designed by Oliver Smith and costumes by Frank Thompson.[1][2] An opera focusing on racial tensions in Africa with a central black hero, the work was poorly received by most critics.[3] However, Menotti personally believed that this was one of his best operas on par with The Consul and The Saint of Bleecker Street.[3] The work's first European performance was at the Teatro Lirico Giuseppe Verdi in Trieste, Italy, on January 17, 1972.[4] The opera uses Menotti's characteristic lyrical style which is inspired by Puccini and the Italian verismo opera tradition. In this work he infuses African percussion and rhythms, much in the way Puccini infused Asian inspired melodies and musical practices into his opera Madama Butterfly.[1]

Roles

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Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 12 March 1971[4]
Conductor: Christopher Keene
Toime Ukamba, a scientist and Native African baritone Eugene Holmes
Dr. Otto Arnek, a white scientist and Toime's teacher tenor Harry Theyard
Leona Arnek, Otto's wife mezzo-soprano Beverly Wolff
Cora Arnek, Otto and Leona's daughter soprano Joanna Bruno
Eric Rupert, Dr. Arnek's laboratory assistant baritone Richard Stilwell
Mrs. Agebda Akawasi soprano Delores Jones
Professor Clement, a scientist tenor John Lankston
Professor Risselberg, a scientist tenor Joaquin Romaguera
Professor Bolental, a scientist baritone Thomas Jamerson
Professor Grippel, a scientist bass Don Yule

Plot

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Setting: Racially segregated 20th-century colonial Africa[1]

Native African Toime Ukamba is a scientist and former pupil of Dr. Arnek, a white man who is one of few white individuals who treats the African natives with respect, kindness, and dignity.[1] Unable to find work due to racial prejudice, Toime drinks heavily and becomes a thief. Dr. Arnek confronts Toime on his self destructive behavior, and encourages him to pursue his significant intellectual gifts.[1] Toime stops drinking and stealing and applies himself to his studies in chemistry, leading to the discovery of a valuable scientific formula that will bring wealth to his nation and enable him to become "the most important man".[4] After revealing the formula which will enable him to alter the world to a group of white scientists, a power struggle over how the formula will be used and who will take credit for it ensues as the scientists attempt to take the formula from Ukamba. Ukamba flees into the wilds of the African savannah with Cora, the daughter of Dr. Arnek, with whom he has fallen in love.[4] Dr. Arnek's wife, Leona, and his other white assistant, Eric Rupert, are distraught over Cora's assignation with a black man.[4] They scheme against the couple and ultimately use the tools of the "white state" to thwart the happiness of the couple.[4] Toime is tragically disgraced and killed, but not before he burns his research.[1] This leaves Dr. Arnek as the "most important man" as he is now the only one who has seen Ukamba's research and knows the important formula.[4] The opera ends with the other scientists demanding Dr. Arnek divulge the formula held within his mind. Will he divulge it?[1][4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g Harold C. Schonberg (March 14, 1971). "The Opera: Menotti's Important Man". The New York Times.
  2. ^ Bruce, Archibald; Barnes, Jennifer (2001). "Menotti, Gian Carlo". In Stanley Sadie; John Tyrrell (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.). London: Macmillan.
  3. ^ a b Donald L. Hixon (2000). Gian Carlo Menotti: A Bio-bibliography. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 10. ISBN 0-313-26139-3.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Margaret Ross Griffel (2013). Operas In English: A Dictionary. Scarecrow Press. p. 329. ISBN 9780810883253.
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