The idea of a ballet on the subject of the
Greek seer who changes sex was first considered by Lambert in the 1930s. Lambert started composing the score in Paris, but due to the distractions of other work he had to enlist assistance for the orchestration from younger colleagues, such as
Robert Irving,
Humphrey Searle,
Gordon Jacob,
Alan Rawsthorne and
Elisabeth Lutyens. One of three ballets commissioned for the
Festival of Britain, Lambert's score is roughly contemporary with French composer
Francis Poulenc's short comic opera
Les mamelles de Tirésias first performed at the
Opéra-Comique in 1947, on a similar sex-change theme, based on
Guillaume Apollinaire's surrealist text of 1917. The premiere was conducted by the composer and given in the presence of
Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother. Lambert died six weeks after its premiere. There were 12 London performances in 1951, then ten the following year, seven in 1953, three in 1954 and two in the next season. and in New York in September 1955. The
New York Times review, headlined "Superb 'Tiresias'", was stronger than any of the UK reviews. Alan Rawsthorne's orchestral
Improvisations on a Theme of Constant Lambert (1960) uses the opening fanfare from
Tiresias as its theme. ==Original cast==