The premiere of
Les bergers took place on 11 December 1865 at the
Bouffes-Parisiens, Paris. The work was staged, in German, in Vienna in 1866. Before the opening,
Le Figaro published a letter written by Offenbach to Henri de Villemessant, setting out his artistic aims with the new work. He described the structure of the piece, as a "series of pastorals", with the first set in antiquity and working on the theme of
Pyramus and Thisbe, the second set in the time and style of
Watteau and
Louis XV, and in the third act Offenbach "sought to represent
Courbet in music". The overture contains a theme on the oboe which is the first version of "Au Mont Ida" from
La belle Hélène. The first act, using the title
Myriame et Daphné (the names of the lovers), was staged as a curtain-raiser at the premiere of Massenet's
Thérèse in Monte-Carlo in 1907; with
Maggie Teyte in a principal role. Faris comments that the 18th-century pastiche "is skilfully done. Offenbach creates gavotte-like, courtly elegance with an austerly simple rhythmic accompaniment". ==Roles==