The Knight of Rueful Countenance returns  to the Mariinsky Theatre 
The Knight of Rueful Countenance, the heroic dreamer Don  Quichotte is returning to the Mariinsky The atre. Don  Quichotte is one of French composer Jules Massenet’s late operas and  it was commissioned by Raoul Gunsbourg, of the Opéra de Monte Carlo  specially for Fyodor Chaliapin. And whatever the composer’s contemporaries  may have thought of this opera, the singer himself always adored it  and the role of Don Quichotte became one of the ones he  loved most in his entire repertoire. The premiere  of the opera took place on 6 February 1910  at the Opéra de Monte Carlo. Already on 12 November 1910,  the Russian premiere took place at the Bolshoi The atre  in Moscow, where Chaliapin not only performed the title role but  directed the production as well. Later came Paris, Nürnberg, London and  the USA. in 1919 the opera was staged at the Mariinsky  The atre (Alexander Khessin conducting with Chaliapin as stage director).
Massenet’s Don Quichotte has never been absent for long from theatre  playbills. As it was created for Fyodor Chaliapin, however, the opera  requires equally brilliant performers and so it is only staged when  a singer worthy of the role comes along. One such is, without  question, is the outstanding Italian bass Ferruccio Furlanetto, who has  already performed the role of Don Quichotte in St Petersburg  in a concert version of the opera at the Concert  Hall of the Mariinsky The atre. Don Quichotte with Ferruccio Furlanetto, the Mariinsky Chorus and Orchestra and  soloists under the baton of Valery Gergiev was released  on the Mariinsky label. The recording was named “Disc  of the Week” by BBC Radio 3 and “Opera Choice  of the Month” by BBC Music Magazine. 
Furlanetto admits that the role of Don Quichotte is one of his  favourites: “Don Quichotte is close to my heart. Everyone, albeit  for three hours in their lives, should become such a person,  someone who loves everything around them... He loves nature, the sun,  the light, the air, people, animals... And this love is expressed very  poetically, so I say that in an ideal world this is what, ideally, people  should be like.” 
The opera is being staged by director Yannis Kokkos, a renowned  French theatre designer and stage director. Fame first came to Kokkos as  a production designer, having worked together with stage director  Antoine Vitez. As a stage director, Kokkos has worked on productions  of operas by Wagner, Richard Strauss, Gluck, Berlioz, Mozart and Rossini  at the Teatro alla Scala, the Théâtre de la Monnaie,  the Théâtre du Capitole de Toulouse, the Théâtre du Châtelet and  Welsh National Opera. Inspired by St Petersburg, the stage director  sees features in Don Quichotte similar to those of Prince  Myshkin.
The lead roles are being rehearsed by Anna Kiknadze, Yekaterina  Sergeyeva and Elena Tsvetkova (the Beautiful Dulcinée), Ferruccio Furlanetto,  Askar Abdrazakov, Ilya Bannik and Mikhail Kolelishvili (Don Quichotte), Andrei  Serov and Andrei Spekhov (Sancho Pança), Lyudmila Dudinova, Eleonora Vindau and  Maria Bayankina (Pedro), Yulia Matochkina, Irina Shishkova and Regina Rustamova  (Garcia), Carlos D’Onofrio, Andrei Ilyushnikov and Nikolai Yemtsov (Rodriguez)  and Dmitry Koleushko, Alexander Shagun and Alexander Trofimov (Juan).  The Stage Director and Set Designer is Yannis Kokkos, the Costume  Designers Yannis Kokkos and Paola Mariani and the Lighting Designer Michael  Bauer. 
The Musical Director is Valery Gergiev.
The story of Don Quichotte was beautifully suited to Massenet's  talents, strongest in creating exotic color, carefully blending pathos and  comedy, and depicting charming sirens who can twist men around their dainty  fingers. (This last was allowed in this opera by the transformation of Dulcinйe  into a seductive courtesan instead of a farm girl whose charms exist solely in  Quichotte's eyes.) It has long been a star vehicle for basses and  bass-baritones, particularly singing actors such as Chaliapin (for whom the role  was created), Christoff, Ghiaurov, Raimondi, and Ramey. (However, Massenet was  largely unimpressed by Chaliapin's portrayal; in one famous episode, Chaliapin  burst into sobs as he was reading through the death scene, greatly annoying the  composer.) The other lead roles are almost as rewarding, even though they tend  to be overshadowed; Sancho Panza gets to shine not only in his comic moments but  in his passionate defense of his idealistic master's dreams, and Dulcinee's  spirited "Spanish" songs are sure crowd-pleasers.
Though he lived for two  more years after writing it, Massenet was already ill during its composition,  and given his habit of becoming infatuated with his leading ladies (in this  case, Lucy Arbell), it seems quite likely that he felt some identification with  the lead role.
Even if he had no such feelings, certainly Massenet knew  how to go for the audience's heartstrings, and he did so with a precision worthy  of a surgeon, particularly in such moments as the death scene and Dulcinee's and  Quichotte's final meeting. However, he also gave the character enough dignity  that the role is still one of pathos rather than bathos, though an overindulgent  performer can easily disrupt that balance. Similarly, while the Spanish flavor  is synthetic, and not as memorable as that in Carmen, it is nonetheless  infectious.
Don Quichotte (Don Quixote) is an opera in five acts by Jules  Massenet to a French libretto by Henri Cain,
Massenet's comedie-heroique,  like so many other dramatized versions of the story of Don Quixote, relates only  indirectly to the great novel by Miguel de Cervantes. The immediate inspiration  was Le chevalier de la longue figure, a play by the poet Jacques Le Lorrain  first performed in Paris in 1904. In this version of the story, the heroine  Dulcinee, who never actually appears in the original novel, is a flirtatious  local beauty inspiring one of the infatuated old man's  exploits.
Conceiving originally Don Quichotte to be a three-act opera,  Massenet started to compose it in 1909 at a time when he, suffering from acute  rheumatic pains, spent more of his time in bed than out of it, and composition  of Don Quichotte became, in his words, a sort of "soothing balm." In order to  concentrate on that new work, he interrupted composition of his other opera,  Bacchus.
Don Quichotte was first performed in Monte Carlo on 19 February  1910. Massenet identified personally with his comic-heroic protagonist, as he  was in love with Lucy Arbell who sang Dulcinee at the first performance in 1910.  He was then 67 and died just two years later. The role of Don Quichotte was one  of the Russian bass Feodor Chaliapin's most notable  achievements.
Immediately after the world premiere at Monte Carlo, the  opera was staged in Brussels, Marseille and Paris (all in 1910). Then, on 27  January 1912, it was presented at the French Opera House in New Orleans, 15  November 1913, in Philadelphia, and on 18 May 1912, the London Opera House  performed it as well.
After World War I Don Quichotte received its  premiere in Budapest in 1917, and the Opera-Comique in Paris presented it in  1924. The Metropolitan Opera in New York City performed it only 9 times in 1926,  and never since, after devastating reviews of those performances in particular,  and criticisms of Massenet's music in general, by Lawrence Gilman in the Herald  Tribune.
Besides frequent and periodic revivals of it at Monte Carlo and  in France, it was also shown with great success in Italy (Catania in 1928, Turin  in 1933 (Teatro Regio), Bologna in 1952, Venice in 1982, Florence in 1992). The  Polish premiere was at the Krakow Opera in 1962, and Baltic State Opera premiere  was in 1969.
More recently, it was staged in Paris in 2000 (with Samuel  Ramey in the title role) and in San Diego in 2009, starring Ferruccio Furlanetto  and Denyce Graves