The One-Act Opera Festival
Bluebeard's Castle

Composed by Bela Bartok
Directed by Linda Lehr

Cast
Prologue of the Bard  - Maureen McCluskey

Bluebeard (bass or bass-baritone) - Bryce Smith / Dan Zacheriah

Judith (soprano/mezzo) - Emma Toth / Shannon Capogreco

Bluebeard’s wives - TBA
Synopsis

One Act Opera

The basic plot is loosely based on the folk tale of Bluebeard, but is given a heavily
psychological reworking—some would say psychoanalytic or psychosexual, (see Bruno
Bettelheim and The Uses of Enchantment).

Place: A huge, dark hall in a castle, with seven locked doors.
Time:
Judith insists that all the doors be opened, to allow light to enter into the forbidding
interior, insisting further that her demands are based in her love for Bluebeard. Bluebeard
refuses, saying that they are private places not to be explored by others, and asking
Judith to love him but ask no questions. Judith persists, and eventually prevails over his
resistance.

The first door opens to reveal a torture chamber, stained with blood. Repelled, but then
intrigued, Judith pushes on. Behind the second door is a storehouse of weapons, and
behind the third a storehouse of riches. Bluebeard urges her on. Behind the fourth door is
a secret garden of great beauty; behind the fifth, a window onto Bluebeard's vast
kingdom. All is now sunlit, but blood has stained the riches, watered the garden, and
grim clouds throw blood-red shadows over Bluebeard's kingdom.

Bluebeard pleads with her to stop: the castle is as bright as it can get, and will not get
any brighter, but Judith refuses to be stopped after coming this far, and opens the
penultimate sixth door, as a shadow passes over the castle. This is the first room that has
not been somehow stained with blood; a silent silvery lake is all that lies within, "a lake of
tears". Bluebeard begs Judith to simply love him, and ask no more questions. The last door
must be shut forever. But she persists, asking him about his former wives, and then
accusing him of having murdered them, suggesting that their blood was the blood
everywhere, that their tears were those that filled the lake, and that their bodies lie
behind the last door. At this, Bluebeard hands over the last key.

Behind the door are Bluebeard's three former wives, but still alive, dressed in crowns and
jewellery. They emerge silently, and Bluebeard, overcome with emotion, prostrates himself
before them and praises each in turn, finally turning to Judith and beginning to praise
her as his fourth wife. She is horrified, begs him to stop, but it is too late. He dresses her in
the jewellery they wear, which she finds exceedingly heavy. Her head drooping under
the weight, she follows the other wives along a beam of moonlight through the seventh
door. It closes behind her, and Bluebeard is left alone as all fades to total darkness.
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