The opera was premiered on 11 November 1901 (
Old Style), in Moscow at the Noviy Theater. Although it never became part of the standard repertory,
Feast was revived by the Tchaikovsky Opera in
Perm, Russia in 1999 as part of a Pushkin-bicentennial performance of all four of the operatic settings of the
Little Tragedies, i.e.,
Dargomyzhsky's The Stone Guest,
Rimsky-Korsakov's
Mozart and Salieri, and
Rachmaninoff's
The Miserly Knight.
Feast was given its American premiere on October 14, 2009 by the Little Opera Theatre of New York, directed by Philip Shneidman. A CD recording of
Feast was issued on the Chandos label in 2004, with the Russian State Symphony Orchestra under
Valery Polyansky. Because of its timely subject matter and relatively small performance forces,
A Feast in Time of Plague has received renewed interest during the
COVID-19 pandemic, with virtual productions popping up in Brazil, Sweden, and Russia, among others. ==Characters and setting==