THOMAS, AMBROISE BIOGRAPHY(1811 - 1896)
The son of a violinist and of a singer, Ambroise Thomas was born in Metz, but
moved to Paris after the death of his father, studying at the Conservatoire with
Zimmerman, Doulen and the great pianist Kalkbrenner, going on to study composition
with Berlioz's teacher, Lesueur. He won the important Prix de Rome, spending time
in Italy and then in Germany, before establishing himself in Paris as a composer
of opera, initially with increasing success at the Opéra-Comique, where
Mignon, based on Goethe's Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre was first staged in 1866.
Two years later his Hamlet was seen at the Opéra, a substantial work that
aroused inevitable criticism in certain circles for its treatment of the original
play of Shakespeare, who had already suffered in his earlier Elizabethan pot-pourri,
Un songe d'une nuit d'été. In 1871 he became director of the Conservatoire,
where he opposed apparent German influence, and was hostile to the teaching and
music of César Franck. He also continued to oppose the appointment of Gabriel
Fauré, who joined the staff of the Conservatoire only after Thomas's death
in 1896. In addition to his operas, he left sacred and secular vocal music, with
orchestral and instrumental compositions.
|