GABRIEL'S
DAUGHTER
An Opera in Two Acts
Libretto by William Luce
Voices:
2 Sopranos, 2 Mezzo-Sopranos, 2 Tenors, Baritone, Bass-Baritone
(constructed so that only 8 singers are needed; each person may
play up to 3 parts)
Instrumentation:
2(Pic)/1(Eng. Horn)/2(Bass Clar.)/1
2/2/2/0 1/2/1/1 Strings
Length:
Approx. 2 hours
PRINCIPAL ROLES
CLARA (mezzo); several arias, ensembles, etc. onstage a lot, needs endurance, has some resting spots in the work; must portray Clara Brown both as an older and as a younger black woman.
CHIVINGTON (tenor) The character who interacts the most with Clara; moderately taxing, one aria, ensembles.
BLACK SUPPORTING ROLES
BECKY (sop) Clara’s friend; 2 scenes
LIZA JANE (sop) Clara’s lost daughter, appears in last scene; sings sustained lyric duet
with Clara (hi b)
ELIZA BROOKS (sop) In one scene; she is thought to be Clara’s daughter, but is not; one duet with Clara- very emotional scene.
BARNEY FORD (bari) Clara’s good friend; in three scenes; duet and trio
OTHER ROLES (may be cast from chorus)
JENNY (sop), friend of Clara, half caucasian, half Native American ancestry
LUCINDA (sop) Daughter of Clara’s master; two scenes, not taxing
EVALINE (alto) Sister of Lucinda, two scenes, not taxing
GOSSIP 1 (sop) 2 scenes
GOSSIP 2 (sop) 2 scenes
GOSSIP 3 /JANE GORDON (mezzo) four scenes; strong and spirited lady, madame in brothel
CORNISH MINER/MINER/BIDDER 1(tenor) three scenes, has short dramatic song in brothel
JEWISH MINER/MINER/BIDDER 2 (bari) three scenes, has short dramatic song in brothel
ITALIAN MINER/TOM/AUCTIONEER (tenor) three scenes, must be strong singer/actor; important material as Auctioneer, plus short dramatic song in brothel.
WADSWORTH (bari) 1 scene- plays Wagonmaster- strong looking, take-charge kinda guy.
BYERS (bari) 1 scene, head of Newspaper; solo lines in ensemble
EVANS/DOCTOR (bass) three scenes. Several solo lines, ensembles.
ACTORS (no singing, a small amount of dialogue)
CLARA’S SISTER AS CHILD (Prologue)
CLARA BROWN as young child (Prologue)
President Grand (1 scene) Speaks two words!
Roles that were double cast in the premiere production can be sung individually if preferred.

The opera tells the story of a remarkable
woman who was an ex-slave, and who spent most of her life in
bondage in frontier Kentucky. During these years she had lost
contact with her husband and children when they were sold to
different owners. She obtained her freedom after the death of
her owner in 1857 and traveled west in search of her missing
family.
Clara arrived in Central City, CO, around 1860,
already some 60 years old. She opened her own laundry business
and with hard work and successful investments, Clara became wealthy,
owning scores of properties and mining claims throughout Central
City, Georgetown and Denver. She used her money to help dozens
of beleaguered freedmen come to Colorado to start new lives. Surviving
fires, flood and frauds, Clara continued her good works throughout
the 1870’s, however, she searched in vain for her long-lost
family.
In her later years, her health failing and
impoverished from a lifetime of unflagging generosity, Clara moved
to Denver and had to depend upon her many friends and admirers
to provide for her. In a truly operatic denouement, the faith that
sustained her through her entire life was finally, and gloriously,
rewarded by a miraculous reunion with her daughter Eliza Jane.
Information taken from an article by Roger
Baker who is the author of the book entitled Clara: An Ex-Slave in Gold Rush Colorado, recently published by Black
Hawk Publishing.

For more information, see Gabriel's Daughter on William Luce's website
REVIEWS
“Adding to the historic weight of the evening was the fact
this is also the 25 th season that Mollicone’s ‘Face
on the Barroom Floor’ is being performed on
site in the city’s Teller House bar. It is today second only
to Menotti’s ‘Amahl’ as
the most-performed one-act American opera of the 20th century.
In ‘Gabriel’s Daughter’ Mollicone…reveals
a voice uniquely his own. He has woven bits of Americana —honky-tonk,
gospel and a hint of ‘Battle Hymn of the Republic’—seamlessly
into his score. His compelling music moves the story forward at
a rapid pace, but never hurries it. To capture the bite of the
story Mollicone pushes tonality to its edge, and an undercurrent
of darkness focuses attention on the haunting love at the core
of the work. His richly colored music is engaging—but never
relentless…. Mollicone is a master of massive scenes that
portray the historical milieu—the slave market, the gold-rush
craze, a mob stirred by racial hatred, and John Baril has the CCO
chorus singing at the height of its powers in them. For overall
beauty and effectiveness of staging ‘Gabriel’s
Daughter’ sets a new standard at the CCO.”
--THE DAILY CAMERA,
7/ 14/03 – Wes
Blomster
“Mollicone mixes
operatic grandness, Broadway-musical energy and movie-soundtrack
sweep to create a likable score that brims with memorable tunes
(try to purge the toe-tapping ‘ Colorado !’ chorus
from your head). Clara’s ‘Lullaby’ and
the gospel-tinged ‘Glory Day’ also impress.
Luce has crafted an elegant libretto, featuring unforced rhyming
couplets and hard-hitting lines (‘Slavery and God going hand
in hand’).”
--ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS 7/15/03
- Marc Shulgold
“Given Mollicone’s extensive experience in the operatic
realm, it is not surprising that he has put together a solid score,
skillfully evoking moods and shaping characters… There are
moments when the opera sounds like a movie score and many other
times when it comes off more as a Broadway musical…”
--THE DENVER POST 7/15/03
- Kyle MacMilla
“If you have never seen an opera, see this one. If you
want to be part of history in the making, attend the Central City
Opera’s production of Gabriel’s
Daughter this
summer. You can say you saw it in its first season, before it was
famous. This opera will be a Colorado, if not an American, classic,
to be treasured by Coloradans, African-Americans, opera-lovers,
history buffs, miners and, well, just about everybody.”
--THE MOUNTAIN EAR 7/21/03 – Barbara
Lawlor
“Mollicone has composed a work that will stand solidly in
the opera repertoire – and do the American Opera proud….
Henry Mollicone’s score incorporates Ragtime, military marches
and Gospel with nods to Bernstein and Copland. His work is, by
turns, tender, passionate and stirring…. The masterful libretto
by William Luce is full of heart-piercing poetry…. Not to
be missed!”
--OUT FRONT COLORADO 8/1/03 – David
Marlowe
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