There are conflicting accounts of the genesis of the piece. According to the Académie nationale de l'opérette, Gabet and Clairville had Planquette set their libretto, which they then offered, unsuccessfully, to various managements; it was initially rejected because of its similarity to
Boieldieu's La dame blanche and
Flotow's Martha. Excerpts from the score were published and sold well, with the result that Charles Cantin, manager of the
Théâtre des Folies-Dramatiques, became interested in staging the piece. The alternative account, in the ''Encyclopédie de l'art lyrique français'', is that Cantin accepted the libretto and commissioned
Hervé to set it. The authors were unwilling to introduce additional broad comedy effects called for by Hervé, and Cantin, who liked to encourage rising talent, turned to Planquette to set the piece. as Serpolette, 1877 Since 1867 the Folies-Dramatiques had presented a series of
opéras bouffes and
comiques; the principal composers were Hervé and
Charles Lecocq. For the new opera Cantin assembled a strong cast. The leading lady of his company,
Conchita Gélabert, had just left to retire into private life but was persuaded back, and Cantin had recently recruited an 18-year-old newcomer
Juliette Girard, an alumna of the
Conservatoire de Paris, who took the other soprano lead. The two tenor roles were taken by the popular
Simon-Max and Ernest Vois. Although he wrote twelve more full-length operas, Planquette never equalled the success of this, his first stage work. ==First production==