• Mieczyslaw Weinberg
  • The Idiot, Op. 144 (1986)

  • Schirmer Russian Music (USA, Canada and Mexico only)

Opera in four acts. Available in the USA and Canada and Mexico only

  • 3(pic).3(ca).4(ebcl,bcl).3(cbn)/4331/timp.3[+]perc/hp.cel/str; onstage pf
  • 1(pic).2.1(ebcl).1(cbn)/2110/timp.2[+]perc/hp.cel/str; onstage pf
  • 3S, Mz, C, 6T, 2Bar, 5B, 3silent role
  • 3 hr 40 min

Programme Note

 
Opera in 4 acts, based on the novel of the same name by Fyodor Dostoevsky.

Cast List:
   PRINCE LEO NIKOLAEVICH MYSHKIN: Tenor
   NASTASSIA FILIPPOVNA: Soprano
   PARFION RAGOSHIN: Bass
   LEBEDEV: Baritone
   IVAN FYODOROVICH EPANCHIN, General: Bass
   ELISAVETA PROKOFIEVNA EPANCHINA, his wife: Alto
   AGLAIA EPANCHIN: Mezzo soprano
   ALEXANDRA EPANCHIN: Soprano
   ADELAIDA EPANCHIN: Silent role
   ARDALIONICH IVOLGIN (GANYA), Epanchin's secretary: Tenor
   VARVARA (VARYA), his sister: Soprano
   GANYA'S AND VARYA'S PARENTS: Silent roles
   AFANASSI IVANOVICH TOTSKY, Nastassia's former lover: Baritone
   TOCHILNIK (backstage): Tenor
   CITIZENS OF ROSTOV: 3 Tenors, 3 Basses

Synopsis:
The young Prince Myshkin, who suffers from epilepsy, returns utterly destitute to St. Petersburg after a several years’ stay in a Swiss sanatorium. He immediately finds himself involved in a network of intrigues surrounding the dark-eyed beauty Nastassia. His love for her forces the decent Myshkin into an uneasy relationship with his impulsive rival Parfion Rogoshin, a rich merchant’s son. Nastassia is fascinated by the profound folly of the Prince, who has meanwhile become a millionaire through a sudden inheritance. Rogoshin’s attempt to do away with his adversary fails because Myshkin suffers an epileptic seizure during the attempted murder.

Myshkin’s reaction to the profound affection of the proud and unspoilt Aglaia, the youngest daughter of the Epanchins, with whom he is distantly related, reveals his tragic inability to become truly committed. Nastassia gives her apparently irrevocable consent to the worried Prince in Pavlovsk, but flees a few minutes before the wedding with Rogoshin to St. Petersburg.

In a tantrum of raging jealousy, Rogoshin stabs Nastassia to death and spends hours of devotion next to the murdered woman. After desperate searching, Myshkin finds the scene of the horrible crime. Forgetting himself, he strokes the head of Rogoshin, who is sunk in painful paralysis.