The first modern performance of the work was by the
ORTF in 1964 on 16 September 1964 (celebrating the 200th anniversary of Rameau's death) at the Maison de la Radio in Paris, recorded for broadcast the following month; the cast included
Christiane Eda-Pierre and
Andre Mallabrera. It owes its modern revival to the conductor
John Eliot Gardiner, who gave a concert version of the piece (in which
Trevor Pinnock played
harpsichord continuo) at the
Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, on 14 April 1975, for which he had prepared the orchestral material from the original manuscripts over the preceding year. In July 1982, Gardiner gave the first fully staged performance with
Catherine Turocy, choreographer, and her New York Baroque Dance Company at the
Aix-en-Provence Festival. Since then, the opera's reputation and popularity have grown considerably. In 2020, the Czech baroque orchestra
Collegium 1704 led by conductor
Václav Luks toured Europe with a concert production of the opera (Vienna, Moscow, Versailles); a complete recording featuring Caroline Weynants, Deborach Cachet,
Benedikt Kristjánsson, Mathias Vidal, and Benoît Arnould, was released in the same year by the label Château de Versailles Spectacles. The recording won the French award Trophées for the best opera recording of the year. ==Roles==