

Nigel Osborne
Hell's Angels
Duration: 120'
Textbearbeitung: David Nigel
Textvorlage: Oskar Panizza
Libretto von: David Freeman
Roles:
Hohe Soprane: 1. Engel
Salome
Die Frau
Kind Borgia
Soprane: 2. und 3. Engel
Jungfrau Maria
Helena von Troja
Heloise
Agrippina
Nonne
Kind Borgia
Vanozza
Julia Farnese
2. Schauspieler Mezzosopran: Magdalena
Tenöre: Jesus
Papst
Ritter
Papst Alexander VI.
1. Schauspieler
Baßbaritone: Cherub
Gott
Der Knabe
Außenminister
2. und 3. Mann
Kind Borgia
Burcardi
Baß: Satan
Puppen-spieler
3. Schauspieler
Instrumentation details:
1·0·1·0 - 1·1·0·0 - perc. - hp. - vln., vla., vc.
Osborne - Hell's Angels
Work introduction
“[…] This was Osborne’s first opera [...]. The starting point for Hell’s Angles, however, was a play, The Council of Love, by the late 19th-century dramatist Oskar Panizza, which tells the story of a divine retribution on the court of the Borgia Pope Alexander VI in 1494. God looks down upon his representative on earth and does not like what he sees; he calls a Council of Love in Heaven to decide how he should punish his subjects for their debauchery and corruption. Satan is asked to help, and he suggests a plan: he invents syphilis and introduces it into the papal court carried by a beautiful woman.
For Hell’s Angels, however, Osborne and Freeman give the scenario a contemporary parallel, interweaving the 15th-century saga with Heaven and Earth in the present, when the Papacy is again under threat, this time for being too honest – the new Pope is in favour of birth control and wants to rid the Vatican of the taint of financial jiggery-pokery; he ends up poisoned by his aides. God is stirred into action again, a second Council of Love is summoned, and Satan’s solution this time is even more specific – he invents AIDS. The opera ends with the infected youth sent into the world to exact revenge. […]”
OPERA/3/1986/Andrew Clements