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Badass Baritone is disambiguated


* BadassBaritone: Méphistophélès and Valentin are both baritones, and they're some particularly badass characters in the opera.
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* BadassBaritone: Méphistophélès and Valentin are both baritones, and they're some particularly badass characters in the opera.

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* BadassBaritone: Méphistophélès and Valentin are both baritones, and they're some particularly badass characters in the opera.opera.
* BigBrotherInstinct: Valentin is very protective of his younger sister Marguerite, and he even tries to fight Méphistophélès when he mocks her in Act II. Needless to say, Valentin does not take it well when he learns that Faust had knocked her up.
* BittersweetEnding: Marguerite dies, but she is declared to have been saved by Heaven, and Faust himself is redeemed at the end.
* BreakTheCutie: Poor Marguerite is seduced and abandoned by Faust, then ends up a social outcast after giving birth to his child by Act IV. Her brother’s attempts to defend her honour end up getting him killed in a duel thanks to intervention by Méphistophélès, and he curses out Marguerite with his dying breath. Then to top it all off, Marguerite is condemned to Hell, and then sentenced to execution after killing her own child.
* CrossCastRole: Siébel is a breeches role that’s typically sung by a mezzo-soprano.
* DadsOffFightingInTheWar: More like older brother, as Valentin is preparing to go to war in Act II.
* DealWithTheDevil: Faust makes a deal with Méphistophélès to restore his youth so he can find love, on the condition that he gives himself up to the latter at the end of his life.
* DefiledForever: Marguerite is treated like this after having Faust’s child out of wedlock.
* DistractedByTheLuxury: Marguerite receives a box of jewelry from Méphistophélès, which makes her so excited, she doesn't even notice Siébel’s flowers.
* DrivenToMadness: Marguerite goes mad by Act V, and considering everything she’s gone through, it’s hard to blame her.
* DrivenToSuicide: Act I opens up with Faust trying to drink poison before he receives a visit from Méphistophélès.
* DuelToTheDeath: Valentin challenges Faust to a duel to avenge his sister’s honour, but he ends up killed when Méphistophélès intervenes.
* DyingCurse: Valentin curses out Marguerite with his final breath.
* EtherealChoir: Act V has a choir of angels sing as Marguerite goes to heaven.
* EvilSoundsDeep: Méphistophélès, the actual Devil himself, is sung by a bass-baritone. Averted mostly with Valentin, who is also a baritone.
* FaustianRebellion: Played with, in that Faust goes through one after realizing what has happened to Marguerite, but he still accepts the Devil’s help until the end of Act V.
* FauxAffablyEvil: Méphistophélès is a charming villain for most of the opera, up until Act IV and V, which show off his more cruel and sadistic side.
* FountainOfYouth: Faust’s youth is restored by an elixir given to him by the Devil.
* IncorruptiblePurePureness: There’s a huge emphasis on Marguerite’s purity that even Méphistophélès takes note of.
* TheIngenue: Marguerite.
* InnocentSoprano: arguerite is a lyric coloratura soprano role, and she’s the sweet, innocent village girl that Faust falls in love with.
* KickTheDog: Méphistophélès mocks Marguerite after she’s been made a social outcast in Act IV.
* LetsDuet: “Laisse-moi”, sung by Faust and Marguerite in Act III.
* LoveTriangle: A minor one between Faust and Siébel for Marguerite; not that it lasts very long.
* Main/{{Mephistopheles}}: He's a major character in the opera.
* OdeToIntoxication: Méphistophélès’s “Le veau d’or”, which he sings to the crowd in Act II.
* OffingTheOffspring: When Act V opens up, it’s revealed that Marguerite has murdered her own child, and is about to be executed for it.
* PrayerPose: Marguerite typically does one in Act IV, when she prays for forgiveness at the church.
* RedemptionEqualsDeath: Marguerite dies in Act V, and she is then declared to have been saved by Heaven.
* TenorBoy: Faust becomes one after his youth is restored.
* UsefulNotes/{{Walpurgisnacht}}: Act V takes place during the festival within the Harz Mountains.
* WickedWitch: Act V is filled with witches during the Walpurgis Night scenes.
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Faust, an aging scholar, is lamenting on how his studies have come to nothing and have left him all alone. He attempts to commit suicide, only to receive a visit from Méphistophélès himself. Méphistophélès shows him an image of Marguerite, a village maiden, and makes a deal with him: he will serve Faust on Earth, but Faust shall serve him in Hell. Faust agrees, and his youth is restored, and off he goes to seduce Marguerite.

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Faust, an aging scholar, is lamenting on how his studies have come to nothing and have left him all alone. He attempts to commit suicide, only to receive a visit from Méphistophélès himself. Méphistophélès shows him an image of Marguerite, a village maiden, and makes a deal with him: he will serve Faust on Earth, but Faust shall serve him in Hell. Faust agrees, and his youth is restored, transforming him into a handsome young man. But as he pursues Marguerite, Méphistophélès does whatever he can to ensure that the seduction is successful, so that he can lay claim to Faust's soul for good.

The original production of the opera had spoken dialogue, which was what premiered at the Théâtre Lyrique in Paris in 1859. Then, in 1869, a ballet was inserted into the first scene of the final act,
and off he goes the spoken dialogue was changed to seduce Marguerite.sung recitatives prior to its premiere at the Paris Opéra, thus turning it into a grand opera. Since then, ''Faust'' has become one of the most popular French grand operas, and has seen frequent performances around the world.

!!This work provides examples of:

* AdaptationNameChange: Faust's love interest was named Gretchen in Goethe's play. In the opera, her name is changed to 'Marguerite'.
* AllOfTheOtherReindeer: Marguerite becomes an outcast in the village after becoming pregnant out of wedlock.
* AscendedExtra: Siébel has a minor role in Goethe's play, but he's a more prominent character in the opera.
* BadassBaritone: Méphistophélès and Valentin are both baritones, and they're some particularly badass characters in the opera.
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''Faust'' is a five-act opera by Charles Gounod. Set to a French libretto by Jules Barbier and Michael Carré, it is a loose adaptation of ''[[Theatre/FaustFirstPartOfTheTragedy]]'' by Creator/JohannWolfgangVonGoethe.

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''Faust'' is a five-act opera by Charles Gounod. Set to a French libretto by Jules Barbier and Michael Carré, it is a loose adaptation of ''[[Theatre/FaustFirstPartOfTheTragedy]]'' ''Theatre/FaustFirstPartOfTheTragedy'' by Creator/JohannWolfgangVonGoethe.
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''Faust'' is a five-act opera by Charles Gounod. Set to a French libretto by Jules Barbier and Michael Carré, it is a loose adaptation of ''[[Theatre/FaustFirstPartOfTheTragedy]]'' by Creator/JohannWolfgangVonGoethe.

Faust, an aging scholar, is lamenting on how his studies have come to nothing and have left him all alone. He attempts to commit suicide, only to receive a visit from Méphistophélès himself. Méphistophélès shows him an image of Marguerite, a village maiden, and makes a deal with him: he will serve Faust on Earth, but Faust shall serve him in Hell. Faust agrees, and his youth is restored, and off he goes to seduce Marguerite.

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