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During World War I Manuel de Falla wrote a Pantomime ballet in two scenes and called it '' El Corregidor y la Molinera '' or, '' The Governor and the Miller's Wife ''. The work was scored for a small Chamber Ensemble and was performed in 1917. EL SOMBRERO DE TRES PICOS Sergei Diaghilev , of the '' Ballets Russes '', saw the premiere of '' El Corregidor y la Molinera '' and commissioned de Falla to rewrite the ballet. The outcome was a two-act ballet scored for large orchestra called '' El Sombrero de Tres Picos '' or, '' The Three-Cornered Hat ''. '' El Sombrero de Tres Picos '' was first performed in London in 1919. Diaghilev asked de Falla to conduct the premiere but de Falla felt he was not experienced enough to conduct a work so complex. After the first rehearsal de Falla handed the baton over to Ernest Ansermet . Sets and costumes were done by Pablo Picasso and Choreography by Léonide Massine . THE STORY The story of '' El Sombrero de Tres Picos '' is based on a Spanish Folktale. It is about a governor who has fallen in love with a miller's wife and his attempts to flirt with her. ACT ONE After a short fanfare the curtain rises revealing a mill in Andalusia. The miller is trying to teach a pet blackbird to tell the time. He tells the bird to chirp twice, but instead it chirps three times. Annoyed the miller scolds the bird and tells it to try again. The bird now chirps four times. The miller gets mad at the bird again and his wife offers it a grape. The bird takes the grape and chirps twice. The miller and his wife laugh over this and continue their work. Soon the governor, his wife, and their bodyguard pass by taking their daily walk. The procession goes by and the couple return to their work. The governor is heard coming back. The miller tells his wife that he will hide and that they will play a trick on the governor. The miller hides and the governor sees the miller's wife dancing. After her dance she offers him some grapes. When the governor gets the grapes the miller's wife runs away with the governor following her. Finally he catches her and the miller jumps out of a bush with a stick. The miller chases the governor away and the miller and his wife continue working. ACT TWO That night guests are at the miller's house. The miller dances to entertain them. His dance is interrupted by the governor's bodyguard who has come to arrest him. After the miller is taken away the guests leave one by one. The miller's wife goes to sleep and soon the governor comes to the mill. On his way to the door the governor trips and falls in the river. The miller's wife wakes up and runs away. The Governor undresses and hangs his clothes on a tree and goes to sleep in the miller's bed. The miller has escaped from prison and sees the governor in his bed. The miller thinks that the governor is sleeping with his wife and plans to switch clothes with the governor and avenge himself in the bed of the governor's wife. The miller leaves dressed as the governor and the governor soon wakes up. He goes outside and sees that his clothes are gone so he dresses in the miller's clothes. The bodyguard comes and sees the governor dressed as the miller and goes to arrest him. The miller's wife sees the bodyguard fighting with what looks like her husband and joins in the fight. The miller comes back and sees his wife in the fight and joins it to protect her. The governor explains the entire story and the ballet ends with the miller's guests tossing the governor up and down in a blanket. THE MUSIC Throughout the ballet Manuel De Falla uses traditional Andalusian folk music. The two songs sang by the Mezzo-soprano are examples of '' Cante-jondo '' singing, which often accompany flamenco music. Cante-jondo tells a story and is usually sad. |
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