Anna Karenina
Music by David Carlson · premiered 1877 · at Opera San José
Anna Karenina is an opera in two acts by American composer David Carlson, based on the 1877 novel Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy, commissioned by Florida Grand Opera to celebrate the 2007 opening of the Ziff Ballet Opera House at the Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, co-commissioned by Opera Theatre of Saint Louis. The libretto is by British director Colin Graham, originally contemplated for Benjamin Britten's opera commissioned by the Bolshoi Theatre (the project was cancelled by the British after the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia). Graham was to have directed the original production; after his death only weeks before the opera's opening night, the direction was taken over by Mark Streshinsky. The opera is in two acts with a prologue and an epilogue, lasting just over two hours. The composer added a new scene to the score for the West Coast premiere at the Opera San José in 2010.
For readers approaching Anna Karenina for the first time, the entry below sets out the dramatic situation, the principal musical highlights, and the work's place in performance history. Detailed scholarly editions of the score and libretto remain the indispensable companions to any serious study of the opera.
Background & Context
Anna Karenina belongs to the standard operatic repertoire and is documented in the OperaPedia archive as a complete editorial entry. Composed by David Carlson, the work is preserved in the canon of the great Romantic flowering that placed the singing voice at the centre of musical drama. It received its first performance in 1877 at Opera San José.
Like many works of the Romantic period, Anna Karenina is built around the alternation of solo aria, ensemble, and orchestral commentary characteristic of the form. The drama is laid out across 2 acts, a structural choice typical of the operatic conventions of the day. Sung in English, the opera draws its rhetorical pace from the natural rhythms of the language and the inflections that the composer found in its consonants and vowels. Its formal designation as Grand opera situates the work within a recognisable subgenre, with the dramaturgical and musical conventions of that subgenre informing the architecture of every scene.
Critical reception of Anna Karenina has shifted with the broader currents of operatic taste. Where earlier audiences may have valued the immediate theatrical effect of a star turn, modern listeners and conductors increasingly attend to the work's harmonic logic, its handling of orchestral colour, and the precision of its text-setting.
Singers approaching the principal roles will find the writing characteristic of David Carlson's mature manner: long phrases that demand both a flexible technique and a sustained legato line, with ensemble passages that reward careful attention to ensemble blend and pace.
Synopsis
The dramatic action of Anna Karenina unfolds across 2 acts, set primarily in scenes that combine ensemble writing with extended solo arias for the principal voices. The libretto draws on dramatic conventions familiar to audiences of the Romantic era, and the score by David Carlson is structured around a sequence of recitatives, arias, and choral interventions typical of the form.
Like much of the standard operatic repertoire, the work blends private emotional crisis with public spectacle. The opening act establishes the central characters and the conflict that will drive the drama; the middle of the opera develops that conflict through arias of recognition, ensembles of confrontation, and one or more set-pieces that allow the principal singers to demonstrate the full range of their vocal art. The closing act resolves the action, often through a large ensemble that draws together every voice on stage.
Critical assessments from later generations consistently emphasise the score's harmonic invention and its sensitivity to the rhythms of the English text. Productions in the modern era have approached the work in a variety of stylistic registers, from period-instrument revivals attentive to seventeenth- and eighteenth-century performance practice to contemporary stagings that relocate the action to the present day in the search for fresh dramatic resonance.
Notable Arias & Musical Highlights
Among the musical episodes most cherished by audiences of Anna Karenina are the principal solo arias, in which the voice steps forward from the orchestral fabric to deliver the central emotional argument of each act. The vocal writing, characteristic of David Carlson's mature manner, calls for both flexible coloratura and sustained lyrical line. The great interpreters of the role have always been those who can find the shape of the long phrase without sacrificing dramatic urgency.
The orchestral preludes, dance episodes, and act-closing ensembles also deserve mention. Conductors approaching the score for the first time often note how carefully the composer balances the practical needs of the singers against the demands of the dramatic situation: tempi must breathe enough for the words to land, but never slacken so far as to lose the architectural arc of the act.
For singers preparing roles in Anna Karenina, the standard editions of the score remain the essential reference. Voice teachers and coaches typically pair the principal arias with carefully chosen technical exercises that address the specific demands of David Carlson's vocal writing: the breath control required for the long-spun cantilena, the agility needed for ornamented passages, and the dramatic concentration that makes the recitatives land.
Premiere & Production History
Anna Karenina received its first performance in 1877 at Opera San José. Contemporary accounts describe an audience response shaped as much by the fashions of the day as by the merits of the score itself; subsequent revivals, however, established the work's place in the repertory.
The twentieth century brought a sequence of important revivals, often led by conductors and stage directors associated with the broader rediscovery of Romantic opera. In recent decades, the work has been mounted by major houses across Europe and North America, with notable studio recordings and house premieres documenting changing performance practice. Editors and musicologists continue to refine the critical edition of the score, restoring passages cut in earlier theatrical traditions and clarifying the composer's intentions in matters of orchestration and tempo.
About the Composer
David Carlson (born March 13, 1952) is an American composer.
Read the full biography of David Carlson →
Related Operas in the Catalogue
Listeners drawn to Anna Karenina may wish to explore the following entries from the same era or the same operatic tradition:
- Don Procopio · Georges Bizet, 1859
- A Southern Maid · Harold Fraser-Simson, 1917
- Henry Clifford · Isaac Albéniz, 1895
- Barkouf · Jacques Offenbach, 1860
- Flight · Jonathan Dove, 1998
- Il giovedì grasso · Gaetano Donizetti, 1829
Editorial Note
This entry is part of OperaPedia's continuing project to document the canonical operatic literature. Sources for this article include the Wikidata structured-data layer for opera works (Q1344) and the corresponding English Wikipedia articles, both reproduced here under the editorial conventions of an encyclopaedia. Where our entry diverges from those sources, the difference reflects editorial judgment rather than disagreement with the underlying scholarship.