Guy de Maupassant's tragic-satirical tale was the plot for film adaptations with Fernandel and later Bourvil, among others, and was adapted for the opera stage in 1947 by Benjamin Britten and Eric Crozier under the title Albert Herring, whereby the location was moved from Normandy to the fictitious "Loxford" in East Suffolk. In the apparent guise of a comedy, Benjamin Britten tells the oppressive story of a mothered misfit in a small-town provincial setting: the outsider, ridiculed by everyone and subjected to malicious mockery, receives the financially highly endowed "virtue prize", thus achieving fame and honors - but then runs away with his prize money and returns home an alcoholic wreck.
After A Midsummer Night's Dream and Owen Wingrave, the Department of Opera and Music Theater at the University Mozarteum Salzburg is once again devoting itself to Benjamin Britten's abysmal music-theatrical œuvre. This winter semester, two of his masterpieces will be performed: Albert Herring in December 2022 will be followed by The Turn of the Screw in January 2023.