- Giacomo Meyerbeer. Grand opera in five acts. 1863.
- Libretto by Eugène Scribe.
- First performance at the Paris Opéra on 28th April 1865.
CHARACTERS
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| Sélika, a slave | soprano |
| Inès, daughter of Don Di&233;go | soprano |
| Vasco da Gama, a Portuguese naval officer | tenor |
| Nélusko, a slave | baritone |
| Don Pédro, president of the Royal Council | bass |
| Don Diégo, an admiral & council member | bass |
| Don Alvar, a member of the council | tenor |
| Anna, confidante of Inès | mezzo-soprano |
| Grand Inquisitor of Lisbon | bass |
| High Priest of Brahma | baritone |
| Anna, attendant of Inès | mezzo-soprano |
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The opera is set in Lisbon and on an island in the Indian Ocean: the period is the 16th century.
Vasco da Gama is betrothed to Inès, and as the story opens has been away for two years. Inès recalls
their parting. Her father, Don Diégo, insists that she marry Don Pédro, since now Vasco is surely
dead. He returns, however, bringing with him two slaves, Sélika and Nélusko, and seeking support
for further exploration, refused by the Grand Inquisitor, who finds nothing of Africa in the Bible.
Vasco is imprisoned. Sélika, a queen in her own country, tries to comfort him, as he dreams of Inès,
and prevents Néusko killing him. Vasco sees in Sélika a possible companion in his enterprise,
while Inès has purchased Vasco's freedom by marrying Don Pédro. Inès and Don Pédro now set
sail, piloted by the treacherous Nélusko, to be joined by Vasco, who seeks to protect Inès. The
vessel is wrecked in a storm and the Portuguese are taken prisoner. Sélika is now queen once more,
while the male prisoners are put to death, except for Vasco, saved by Sélika, who claims him as her
husband and bids him escape. He refuses, but is later seen by her with Inès, who has not died, as
others have, from the poisonous scent of the manchineel tree. Sélika now believes she will lose
Vasco, and kills herself, joined in death by Nélusko.
L'Africaine is a characteristic example of French grand opera, in all its magnificence of
spectacle. Meyerbeer had the libretto as early as 1838, but the work was not completed until 1863
and was first performed in 1865, four years after the death of the librettist Scribe and a year after the
death of the composer. The staging calls for elaborate effects, particularly in the scene on board
ship, where interior cabins can be seen, and in the ship- wreck of the third act, as well as in the
ceremonies at the temple of Brahma in the fourth, where the people pay homage to their queen,
Sélika, the African Maid of the title. In prison Sélika tries to calm the troubled Vasco, as he sleeps,
with her Air du sommeil (Sleep aria), Sur mes genoux, fils du soleil (On my knees, son of the sun).
This and the tenor Pays merveilleux (Wonderful country), sung by Vasco in the fourth act, with
Nélusko's earlier ballad Adamastor, roi des vagues profondes (Adamastor, king of the deep waves)
may be heard in concert repertoire.
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