Das Land des Lächelns
Franz Lehár (1870-1948) was incontestably one of the foremost masters of the operetta. He abounded in creative ideas, was a supreme craftsman, a temperamental musician whose artistry flowed in his blood, and a dramatist who succeeded in breathing genuine life into the hackneyed figures of the operetta genre. His most popular operettas were premiered between 1925 and 1929. These were the works whose wealth of ideas and emotionally florid, sometimes even sentimental, melodies brought them greater fame than the brilliant early works such as "The Count of Luxembourg" (1909) and "Gypsy Love" (1910) - save for "The Merry Widow" (1905), his most popular operetta of all. The works of this second creative period were also conceived with one particular singer in mind: Richard Tauber. The most typical works of this period are "Paganini" (1925), "The Czarevitch" (1927), "Friederike" (1928) and "Das Land des Lächelns" (1929). Among Lehár's later operettas, "Das Land des Lächelns" has been particularly successful. It revels in color and rhythmic liveliness and the peculiar harmonies and melodies echo the exoticism of the Chinese setting.