Das Spitzentuch der Königin (The Queen's Lace Handkerchief) is an operetta by Johann Strauss II. The libretto was by Heinrich Bohrmann-Riegen and Richard Genée and is about the Spanish writer Cervantes.[1] Although the operetta is supposedly based on a fictitious incident in the court of Portugal in the 1500s, in fact "it's a send-up of the court of the Austro-Hungarian Emperor Franz Joseph I, with the young king in the story representing Crown Prince Rudolf, 19 years of age at the time, whose death nine years later was one of the big Habsburg family tragedies".[2]
Performance history
It was first performed on 1 October 1880 in Vienna at the Theater an der Wien under the composer's direction by Therese Braunecker-Schäfer, Alexander Girardi, Eugenie Erdösy, Karoline Tellheim, Hermine Meyerhoff, Felix Schweighofer and Ferdinand Schütz.[3] The piece was adapted for Broadway in 1882, with some additional songs by Solomon and Stephens, and (once the new Casino Theatre solved its mechanical problems) ran successfully for 130 performances.[4]
The work is rather obscure nowadays, but the waltz "Rosen aus dem Süden" (Roses from the South), which incorporates melodies from the operetta, is well known. A revised version by Erich Wolfgang Korngold under the title Das Lied der Liebe (The Song of Love) was premiered in Berlin on 23 December 1931 with Richard Tauber and Anny Ahlers in leading roles.[5]
It is 1580 and the king of Portugal is unable to govern, too busy with extramarital flirting and the attractions of fine food and wine, relying instead on the powerful count Villalobos. When Cervantes makes fun of the count in a song, he is arrested. However, the king has him released because his wife likes his writing. The queen has fallen in love with the poet and sends him a lace handkerchief with the compromising phrase "The Queen loves you, but you are not the King".
When Villalobos finds the handkerchief, fallen from the poet's pocket, he hurries to the king, who instantly believes that the queen is having an affair. He forbids Cervantes to be near his wife and further, sends her to a convent. Cervantes later finds himself in a tavern near the convent. When he hears all that has occurred, he plans to get the royal couple back together, and with friends disguised as thieves, abducts the queen back to the palace. They find the king at ease, and dressed as a servant-girl, the queen takes him his favourite dish. He recognizes her; Cervantes tells the king a story to make him forgive his wife, and all ends with rejoicing.