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Published byLaureen Sims Modified over 9 years ago
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Manuel de Falla’s Ballet of the Three-cornered Hat
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Introduction
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“Young bride, lock the door with a crossbar...
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“…for even if the devil is sleeping, like as not he’ll wake up.”
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Part One: Afternoon
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A miller and his wife are hard at work.
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An argument breaks out between the miller and a blackbird.
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The miller’s wife laughs at him…
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…and calms the bird.
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The miller and his wife exchange pleasantries.
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The miller draws water from the well.
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A passing gentleman flirts with the miller’s wife while whistling.
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He is chased away by the miller.
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The miller’s wife laughs.
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A procession approaches…the town’s mayor, his wife, and their entourage.
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The mayor is struck by the beauty of the miller’s wife.
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The mayor’s wife looks on disapprovingly.
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The miller and his wife resume their work.
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The miller flirts with a young mill-girl.
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The miller’s wife becomes jealous and begins to weep.
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The mayor is heard approaching.
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The miller’s wife imitates his arrogance and limping gait.
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The mayor returns to court the miller’s wife.
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The miller’s wife assures the miller of her constancy and tells him to hide.
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Dance of the Miller’s Wife (Fandango)
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The mayor, smitten by the seductive dance, enters and bows to the miller’s wife.
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The miller’s wife pretends to be honored by his presence…
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…she curtsies
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She teases him by offering grapes…
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…but in her animated dance, she keeps them out of his reach.
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The mayor clumsily lunges for a kiss.
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The miller leaps out of hiding.
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The mayor is panic-stricken.
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The miller rushes in, pretending to look for a thief.
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The mayor falls to the ground.
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He is fearful of the miller’s revenge.
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He flees the scene.
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The miller’s wife resumes her dance.
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Part Two: Evening
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The neighbors come to celebrate a feast at the mill. Men and women drink and dance.
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The miller’s wife gracefully thanks her friends, then asks her husband to dance for them.
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The Miller’s Dance (Farruca)
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After his dance, the miller is congratulated by his friends.
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They laugh and drink, and are in high spirits.
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All of a sudden there is a knock at the door.
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The miller, his wife, and their friends look at each other in surprise and dismay.
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The miller opens the door to find the mayor’s bodyguards, holding a warrant for his arrest.
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Despite the miller’s protestations, he is carried away with no reason given for his arrest.
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The miller’s wife attempts to reclaim her husband, but is turned away roughly by the mayor’s bodyguards.
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All alone, the miller’s wife gazes sorrowfully into the distance.
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From afar, in the stillness of the night, she hears a song…
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“At night the cuckoo calls, warning married people to shut their bolts tightly, because the devil isn’t sleeping! At night, the cuckoo calls: ‘Cuckoo, Cuckoo, Cuckoo!”
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Still gazing into the night, she walks slowly back to the house, candle in hand.
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The cuckoo clock strikes nine.
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The miller’s wife extinguishes her candle and draws the curtains.
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The mayor appears, accompanied by two bodyguards.
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He stumbles repeatedly, but recovers his balance and dismisses his companions.
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Now alone, the mayor struts around, fancying himself a modern-day Don Juan.
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Having finished his fantasy, the mayor tries to cross the bridge to the miller’s home…
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…but falls into the water…
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…and cries for help.
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The miller’s wife comes running out of the house, alarmed by the commotion.
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No sooner does the mayor drag himself out of the water than he begins to court the miller’s wife.
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She refuses his advances.
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His wooing becomes more insistent.
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Infuriated by the mayor’s behavior, the miller’s wife threatens him with a gun.
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Terrified, the mayor falls to the ground and convulses.
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As the miller’s wife runs off, the mayor quickly takes off his wet clothes and puts them on a rock to dry.
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Having escaped the mayor’s bodyguards, the miller returns…
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…and sees the mayor’s clothes on the rock!
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Suspecting the worst, the miller fumes and plots his revenge.
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Seized with an idea, the miller changes into the mayor’s clothes, leaving his own on the rock.
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The mayor reappears, and has no choice but to put on the miller’s clothes.
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The mayor’s bodyguards arrive, and apprehend the mayor, mistaking him for the miller.
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Final Dance (Jota): general dance, during which the miller and his wife are reconciled.
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Identified as the scoundrel that he is, the mayor is tossed up and down in a blanket by the people of the town.
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