Carmen Synopsis
ACT I - A
square outside of a tobacco factory in 1820s
Seville, Spain
A group of soldiers and their
corporal, Morales, reflect on their easygoing lives.
Micaëla (Me-ky-ayla) enters the square and asks
Morales if he has seen Don José (Joe-say). The
corporal tells her that José will arrive when the
new guard relieves the old, and the soldiers offer
to entertain her in the guardhouse in the meantime.
She declines, and the soldiers return to watching
passers-by. Street urchins imitate the new guard,
including José and his lieutenant, Zuniga, as they
enter.
A bell signals a break for the
women working in the tobacco factory. They flood the
square to enjoy their cigarettes. Carmen emerges
from the crowd, and young men demand to know when
the sensuous gypsy goddess will favor one of them
with her love. She tells them that love is a
rebellious bird that they will never tame, lawless
and free, and if you snare it, it flies away. José
catches her eye, and she teasingly throws him a
flower.
Micaëla finds José, bringing
with her a letter from his mother, who forgives his
erring ways and encourages him to return to the love
of his youth, Micaëla. Shouts from within the
factory interrupt their reverie of life together.
Carmen has slashed another worker's face with a
knife. Zuniga demands that Carmen explain herself,
but she defies him. He orders José to arrest the
insolent girl. José has no choice but to take her
forcefully to prison. On the way, she informs him to
the contrary: he is under her power, charmed by the
flower she gave him, and he will bow to her every
whim. She promises to meet José at Lillas Pastia's
tavern if he helps her escape. Intoxicated by the
brazen creature, he is powerless to refuse.
Act II – Lillas Pastia’s
Tavern
two months
later
Carmen and her friends entertain officers and
smugglers with fiery gypsy songs and dances in the
tavern. Escamillo, a bullfighter, swaggers in and
shares a drink with his admirers. In response to a
lusty chorus of adulation, he sings the famous
toreador song. He and Zuniga have their eyes on
Carmen, and both declare their love. Though
flattered, she refuses their advances. Zuniga
promises to return later that evening, hoping she
will have changed her mind. As the tavern clears
out, two smugglers enter and ask Carmen and her
companions Frasquita and Mercédès to help them with
a job that night. They need women to carry it off.
She refuses because José, imprisoned for aiding her
escape, was just released and could show up at any
minute. Just as José arrives, the call sounds from
the barracks, and he insists that he has to leave.
Upset, Carmen protests that if he really loved her,
he would join her and the smugglers that night in
the mountains. With impeccable timing, Zuniga
arrives to seduce Carmen. In a fit of jealousy, José
attacks his lieutenant. The smugglers drag Zuniga
away, and José has little choice but to go with
them.
Act III, Scene One
- The
smugglers' hideout
At the hideout in a wild mountain pass, José and
Carmen fight again. She tells him to leave and then
joins Frasquita and Mercédès as they
turn cards to tell their fortunes. Frasquita and
Mercédès foresee rich and gallant lovers, but
Carmen's cards spell death for her and for José.
Micaëla, with the help of a guide, arrives at
the hideout, hoping to save José. Just when she sees
him, he fires on Escamillo, who is also approaching
the camp. The bullfighter is looking for Carmen,
having heard that she is dissatisfied with her
latest lover. Enraged, José nearly kills the
bullfighter in a knife fight, which Carmen and the
smugglers luckily interrupt. Unfazed, Escamillo
invites Carmen and the others to his next bullfight
in Seville
and takes his leave. Micaëla confronts José, tells
him that his mother is on her deathbed, and begs him
to come with her. He agrees, but only after vowing
to Carmen that he will return.
Scene Two -
Seville
The day of the bullfight has arrived, and a
resplendent Carmen approaches the stadium on
Escamillo's arm. Haggard and desperate, José emerges
from the crowd and declares his undying love to
Carmen.
He implores her to forget the past and start a new
life with him. She laughs scornfully at him,
hurling the ring he once gave her into the dirt.
She will never give in: she was born free and free
she will die. In a passionate rage, José
plunges his dagger into Carmen’s heart and collapses
in horror upon his beloved, as cheers for the
triumphant bullfighter rise from the stadium.
# # #