(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
The Greenfield Christmas Tree
U.S. Opera
Home About Composers Operas
Recommendations Download music Recordings, books and videos
Click on an opera's title for more information


Amahl and the Night Visitors

Amelia Goes to the Ball

Antony and Cleopatra

The Aspern Papers

The Ballad of Baby Doe

The Boor

The Canterbury Pilgrims

The Consul

The Cradle Will Rock

Cyrano

David Rizzio

The Death of Klinghoffer

Doctor Atomic

Evangeline

A Full Moon in March

Gallantry

The Ghosts of Versailles

Goya

The Greenfield Christmas Tree

A Hand Of Bridge

Harvey Milk

I Was Looking At the Ceiling And Then I Saw the Sky

Introductions and Good-Byes

Judith

The Jumping Frog of Calaveras County

The King's Henchman

Little Women

Lord Byron

The Medium

Merry Mount

Miss Havisham's Fire

Miss Havisham's Wedding Night

Nixon in China

Peter Ibbetson

The Picture of Dorian Gray

The Pipe of Desire

Porgy and Bess

Postcard from Morocco

A Quiet Place

Robin Hood

The Ruby

The Sacrifice

The Saint of Bleecker Street

Six Characters In Search of an Author

Solomon and Balkis

The Stoned Guest

The Stronger

Susannah

The Tender Land

Treemonisha

Trouble in Tahiti

Vanessa

A View From The Bridge

The Visitation

A Water Bird Talk

Will You Marry Me?




Please visit our sister sites:

Mousehold Words

The Atlas of Fiction

The Greenfield Christmas Tree

christmas entertainment

Music by Douglas Moore
Libretto by Arnold Sundgaard
About The Greenfield Christmas Tree

A one-act christmas opera from the composer of The Ballad of Baby Doe, with parts for children and chorus, The Greenfield Christmas Tree provides an alternative to Amahl and the Night Visitors for amateur groups.

Cast of Characters
Grandfather John Frothingham Toby, age 11, his grandchild
Prudence, age 8, his grandchild Susan, age 6, his grandchild
Samuel, the hired man Brita, Norwegian housekeeper
Reverend Flood The Donkey
The Cow The Goat
The Sheep Choral Leader
Chorus of neighbors and friends
Synopsis

In Greenfield, Massachusetts, a chorus of John Frothingham's neighbors sing a Christmas carol. It is Christmas, 1873, and Frothingham is a stern Massachusetts puritan, opposed to "pagan customs" such as gift-giving, mistletoe, and Christmas trees. His grandchildren, his hired man, Samuel, and Brita, their Norwegian housekeeper all try to convince him that a tree would be harmless, but Frothingham declares that he will not have one in his house.

The children, done with their chores, are disappointed that the first Christmas since their parents' death will not be celebrated in any way. After Frothingham leaves, Toby, the oldest child, tries to give Samuel the present the children had made for their grandfather, a wicker birdcage. Samuel refuses, and Brita distracts the children with a colorful Christmas dress and by telling them about traditional Norwegian Christmas celebrations in Minnesota. Together, they pretend to decorate an old broomstick as if it was a Christmas tree.

Samuel and Brita leave, after Brita tells the children that the animals are said to talk on Christmas Eve. At midnight, the animals in the barn do sing, but when Frothingham returns he doesn't believe his grandchildren. The singing voices tell the children to open the barn door, and inside the barn they see a fully decorated Christmas tree. Samuel explains to Frothingham that he only forbid a tree in the house, and this one is in the barn. The Reverend Flood arrives, and tells Frothingham he should be proud to have the first Christmas tree in the state of Massachusetts, and Frothingham reluctantly agrees to let it stand there with the door open. The Reverend distributes apples to the children as all sing a Christmas chorus.

Performance History
World premiere
Hartford Symphony, Bushnell Memorial Auditorium, Hartford, Connecticut
December 8, 1962
Fritz Mahler, conductor
Bibliography Search for book about The Greenfield Christmas Tree at Amazon.com

Douglas Moore

The Greenfield Christmas Tree (piano-vocal score)

G. Schirmer 1963



Last update: January 11, 2009