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TH 218

Vanka the Steward

Ванька-ключник

Projected opera (1881).

  • An unrealised project dating from October - December 1881.
  • Libretto by Dmitrii Averkiev, after his story Drunken Night [Хмелевая ночь].

History

On 30 October 1881, while visiting Kiev, Tchaikovsky attended a performance of Vanka the Steward, Luka Antropov’s stage version of Dmitrii Averkiev’s tale Drunken Night. The following day the composer told Petr Jurgenson that he was considering Averkiev’s story as the basis for his next opera, and asked him to try to find a printed copy of it in Moscow, adding: "I can’t decide whether to make this into an opera, or to write Mazepa. The subject of Vanka the Steward is very appealing to me" [1].

After having read the play, Tchaikovsky wrote again to his publisher on 16 November, asking him to try to contact Averkiev to see if he would be willing to write a libretto for the opera [2]. "Today I received a reply from Averkiev", Jurgenson reported back on 3 December. "He will gladly take care of the libretto... He wanted to have your address, but because I did not have it, I told him to write to you in Rome poste restante" [3]. However, by 4 January 1882, Tchaikovsky had still not received the libretto. "There has been nothing whatever for me poste restante", he told Jurgenson, "And to tell the truth, I’m glad about this because I’m not disposed at the moment to think seriously about opera" [4]. Tchaikovsky soon resumed work on Mazepa, and nothing more was heard about Vanka the Steward.

From: The Tchaikovsky Handbook, vol. 1 (2002), p. 404
Copyright © 2002 Alexander Poznansky and Brett Langston


Notes:
  1. Letter 1882 to Petr Jurgenson, 10/22 August 1881 [back].
  2. Letter 1894 to Petr Jurgenson, 16/28 November 1881 [back].
  3. Letter from Petr Jurgenson to Tchaikovsky, 3/15 December 1881. Published in П. И. Чайковский: Переписка с П. И. Юргенсоном, том 1 (1938), p. 217 [back].
  4. Letter 1926 to Petr Jurgenson, 4/16 January 1882 [back].