Jean-Philippe Rameau
Platée

Ballet bouffon en un prologue et trois actes / Ballet bouffon in a prologue and three acts
Libretto by Jacques Autreau and Adrien-Joseph Le Valois d’Orville

Edited by M. Elizabeth C. Bartlet
Piano reduction by François Saint-Yves
BA 8852a (French) · EUR 47.95
Performance material on hire
Cover of Rameau: Platee


Rameau's greatest success in various versions

Platée was written to a libretto by Jacques Autreau that Rameau allowed to be revised for his purposes by Adrien-Joseph Le Valois d’Orville, above all to highlight its comic effects. In the form of a grotesquerie, we witness Jupiter curing his wife Juno of jealousy. He feigns a wedding celebration with the ugly swamp-nymph Platée. When Juno arrives she has to admit, in view of such a ridiculous rival, that her suspicions were unwarranted.

The work was first performed in Versailles in 1745 at the wedding of the Dauphin Louis with Maria Theresia of Spain. The performance was a failure, however, for the audience considered the rough-hewn comedy and scurrilous characters out of place at a wedding. It was not until 1749, in Paris, that Platée achieved its breakthrough and became Rameau’s greatest success to date. Another version with altered text was performed from 1754 onwards.

Our vocal score is based on the full score prepared by Mary Elizabeth C. Bartlet for publication in the Rameau complete edition (Opera Omnia Rameau, volume IV/10). Like the full score, it presents the Paris versions of 1749 and 1754 in the main body of the volume while reproducing variants from the Versailles première of 1745 in the appendix. Orchestral material for both versions is available on hire.