Early years Massenet was born on 12 May 1842 at
Montaud, now part of the city of
Saint-Étienne, in the
Loire. He was the youngest of the four children of and his second wife Eléonore-Adelaïde
née Royer de Marancour; the elder children were Julie, Léon and Edmond. Massenet senior was a prosperous ironmonger; his wife was a talented amateur musician who gave Jules his first piano lessons. By early 1848 the family had moved to Paris, where they settled in a flat in
Saint-Germain-des-Prés. Massenet was educated at the
Lycée Saint-Louis and, from either 1851 or 1853, the
Paris Conservatoire. According to his colourful but unreliable memoirs, His biographer Demar Irvine dates the audition and admission as January 1853. Both sources agree that Massenet continued his general education at the lycée in tandem with his musical studies. At the Conservatoire Massenet studied
solfège with
Augustin Savard and the piano with François Laurent. He pursued his studies, with modest distinction, until the beginning of 1855, when family concerns disrupted his education. Alexis Massenet's health was poor, and on medical advice he moved from Paris to
Chambéry in the south of France; the family, including Massenet, moved with him. Again, Massenet's own memoirs and the researches of his biographers are at variance: the composer recalled his exile in Chambéry as lasting for two years;
Henry Finck and Irvine record that the young man returned to Paris and the Conservatoire in October 1855. On his return he lodged with relations in
Montmartre and resumed his studies; by 1859 he had progressed so far as to win the Conservatoire's top prize for pianists. The family's finances were no longer comfortable, and to support himself Massenet took private piano students and played as a percussionist in theatre orchestras. His work in the orchestra pit gave him a good working knowledge of the operas of
Gounod and other composers, classic and contemporary. Traditionally, many students at the Conservatoire went on to substantial careers as church organists; with that in mind Massenet enrolled for organ classes, but they were not a success and he quickly abandoned the instrument. He gained some work as a piano accompanist, in the course of which he met
Wagner who, along with
Berlioz, was one of his two musical heroes. In 1861 Massenet's music was published for the first time, the
Grande Fantasie de Concert sur le Pardon de Ploërmel de Meyerbeer, a virtuoso piano work in nine sections. Having graduated to the composition class under Ambroise Thomas, Massenet was entered for the Conservatoire's top musical honour, the
Prix de Rome, previous winners of which included Berlioz, Thomas, Gounod and
Bizet. The first two of these were on the judging panel for the 1863 competition. All the competitors had to set the same text by
Gustave Chouquet, a cantata about
David Rizzio; after all the settings had been performed Massenet came face to face with the judges. He recalled: The prize brought a well-subsidised three-year period of study, two-thirds of which was spent at the
French Academy in Rome, based at the
Villa Medici. At that time the academy was dominated by painters rather than musicians; Massenet enjoyed his time there, and made lifelong friendships with, among others, the sculptor
Alexandre Falguière and the painter
Carolus-Duran, but the musical benefit he derived was largely self-taught. During his time in Rome, Massenet met
Franz Liszt, at whose request he gave piano lessons to Louise-Constance "Ninon" de Gressy, the daughter of one of Liszt's rich patrons. Massenet and Ninon fell in love, but marriage was out of the question while he was a student with modest means.
Early works Massenet returned to Paris in 1866. He made a living by teaching the piano and publishing songs, piano pieces and orchestral suites, all in the popular style of the day. At around the same time he composed a
Requiem, which has not survived. In 1868 he met
Georges Hartmann, who became his publisher and was his mentor for twenty-five years; Hartmann's journalistic contacts did much to promote his protégé's reputation. He and his family were trapped in the
siege of Paris but managed to get out before the
Paris Commune began; the family stayed for some months in
Bayonne, in southwestern France. '' by
Célestin Nanteuil After order was restored, Massenet returned to Paris where he completed his first large-scale stage work, an opéra comique in four acts,
Don César de Bazan (Paris, 1872). It was a failure, but in 1873 he succeeded with his incidental music to
Leconte de Lisle's tragedy
Les Érinnyes and with the dramatic oratorio,
Marie-Magdeleine, both of which were performed at the
Théâtre de l'Odéon. In general he worked fluently, seldom revising, although
Le roi de Lahore, his nearest approach to a traditional
grand opera, took him several years to complete to his own satisfaction. The opera, with a story taken from the
Mahabharata, was a success and was quickly taken up by the opera houses of eight Italian cities. It was also performed at the
Hungarian State Opera House, the
Bavarian State Opera, the
Semperoper in Dresden, the
Teatro Real in Madrid, and the
Royal Opera House, Covent Garden in London. After the first Covent Garden performance,
The Times summed the piece up in a way that was frequently to be applied to the composer's operas: "M. Massenet's opera, although not a work of genius proper, is one of more than common merit, and contains all the elements of at least temporary success." This period was an early high point in Massenet's career. He had been made a chevalier of the
Legion of Honour in 1876, and in 1878 he was appointed professor of counterpoint, fugue and composition at the Conservatoire under Thomas, who was now the director. Massenet was a popular and respected teacher at the Conservatoire. His pupils included
Bruneau,
Charpentier,
Chausson,
Hahn,
Leroux,
Pierné,
Rabaud and
Vidal. According to some writers, Massenet's influence extended beyond his own students. In the view of the critic
Rodney Milnes, "In word-setting alone, all French musicians profited from the freedom he won from earlier restrictions."
Manon, first given at the Opéra-Comique in January 1884, was a prodigious success and was followed by productions at major opera houses in Europe and the United States. Together with Gounod's
Faust and Bizet's
Carmen it became, and has remained, one of the cornerstones of the French operatic repertoire. After these two triumphs, Massenet entered a period of mixed fortunes. He worked on
Werther intermittently for several years, but it was rejected by the Opéra-Comique as too gloomy. For her, the composer revised
Manon and wrote
Esclarmonde (1889). The latter was a success, but it was followed by
Le mage (1891), which failed. Massenet did not complete his next project,
Amadis, and it was not until 1892 that he recovered his earlier successful form.
Werther received its first performance in February 1892, when the Vienna
Hofoper asked for a new piece, following the enthusiastic reception of the Austrian premiere of
Manon. it was not immediately taken up with the same keenness as
Manon. The first performance in Paris was in January 1893 by the Opéra-Comique company at the Théâtre Lyrique, and there were performances in the United States, Italy and Britain, but it met with a muted response.
The New York Times said of it, "If M. Massenet's opera does not have lasting success it will be because it has no genuine depth. Perhaps M. Massenet is not capable of achieving profound depths of tragic passion; but certainly he will never do so in a work like
Werther". It was not until a revival by the Opéra-Comique in 1903 that the work became an established favourite.
Thaïs (1894), composed for Sanderson, was moderately received. Like
Werther, it did not gain widespread popularity among French opera-goers until its first revival, which was four years after the premiere, by which time the composer's association with Sanderson was over.
The Times commented that in this piece Massenet had adopted the
verismo style of such works as
Mascagni's
Cavalleria rusticana to great effect. The audience clamoured for the composer to acknowledge the applause, but Massenet, always a shy man, declined to take even a single curtain call.
Later years, 1896–1912 The death of Ambroise Thomas in February 1896 made vacant the post of director of the Conservatoire. The French government announced on 6 May that Massenet had been offered the position and had refused it. The following day it was announced that another faculty member,
Théodore Dubois, had been appointed director, and Massenet had resigned as professor of composition. Two explanations have been advanced for this sequence of events. Massenet wrote in 1910 that he had remained in his post as professor out of loyalty to Thomas, and was eager to abandon all academic work in favour of composing, a statement repeated by his biographers Hugh Macdonald and Demar Irvine. Other writers on French music have written that Massenet was intensely ambitious to succeed Thomas, but resigned in pique after three months of manoeuvring, once the authorities finally rejected his insistence on being appointed director for life, as Thomas had been. He was succeeded as professor by
Gabriel Fauré, who was doubtful of Massenet's credentials, considering his popular style to be "based on a generally cynical view of art". in the title role of
Chérubin, 1905 With
Grisélidis and
Cendrillon complete, though still awaiting performance, Massenet began work on
Sapho, based on a novel by
Daudet about the love of an innocent young man from the country for a worldly-wise Parisienne. It was given at the Opéra-Comique in November 1897, with great success, though it has been neglected since the composer's death. His next work staged there was
Cendrillon, his version of the
Cinderella story, which was well received in May 1899. Macdonald comments that at the start of the 20th century Massenet was in the enviable position of having his works included in every season of the Opéra and the Opéra-Comique, and in opera houses around the world. Apart from composition, his main concern was his home life in the
rue de Vaugirard, Paris, and at his country house in
Égreville. He was uninterested in Parisian society, and so shunned the limelight that in later life he preferred not to attend his own first nights. He described himself as "a fireside man, a bourgeois artist". The main biographical detail of note of his latter years was his second
amitié amoureuse with one of his leading ladies,
Lucy Arbell, who created roles in his last operas. Milnes describes Arbell as "gold-digging": her blatant exploitation of the composer's honourable affections caused his wife considerable distress and even strained Massenet's devotion (or infatuation as Milnes characterises it). In 1905 Massenet composed
Chérubin, a light comedy about the later career of the sex-mad pageboy Cherubino from
Mozart's
The Marriage of Figaro. Then came two serious operas,
Ariane, on the Greek legend of
Theseus and Ariadne, and
Thérèse, a terse drama set in the
French Revolution. His last major success was
Don Quichotte (1910), which ''L'Etoile
called "a very Parisian evening and, naturally, a very Parisian triumph". Even with his creative powers seemingly in decline he wrote four other operas in his later years – Bacchus, Roma, Panurge and Cléopâtre. The last two, like Amadis'', which he had been unable to finish in the 1890s, were premiered after the composer's death and then lapsed into oblivion. ==Music==