(Redirected from Lieutenant Kije)
Soviet poster advertising the 1934 film.
'''Lieutenant Kijé''' (
Russian: Подпоручик Киже, ''Podporuchik Kizhe'') is a novella by the Soviet author
Yury Tynyanov (1894-1943) published in 1927. The plot is a
satire on the
bureaucracy of Emperor
Paul I of Russia. In each episode, the Emperor's subjects faithfully go through the motions to follow his orders.
The lieutenant is "born" when a clerk miscopies a phrase in a military order "Подпоручики же..." ("And the lieutenants...") as "Подпоручик Киже..." (translated by
Ginsburg as "Lieuten. Nants...") and the Emperor assigns Kijé to guard duty. When an advisor identifies the one who shouted "Help!" under the Emperor's window one night as Kijé, the lieutenant is flogged and marched to Siberia. A maid-in-waiting is distressed to hear that her lover has been exiled, so the Emperor reinstates Lt. Kijé and has him marry her. They have a child, and Kijé steadily rises through the ranks. The Emperor finally summons him, but the general is "killed in battle" and is buried with full military honors.
The story was made into a film, directed by
Aleksandr Fajntsimmer, which is now remembered primarily for its music, which was the first instance of Prokofiev's new simplicity.
Suite from ''Lieutenant Kijé''
Sergei Prokofiev composed music to the film ''Lieutenant Kijé'' in 1933. Prokofiev compiled a suite from the film music, in which form it has found the most popularity. The suite exists in two versions, one using a voice and the other using a
saxophone. The music has also been used as the score for a ballet by the
Bolshoi Ballet company. The troika is perhaps the best known movement, frequently used in films and
documentaries for
Christmas scenes and scenes involving
snow.
Movements
The suite, in five movements and lasting 20-25 minutes, broadly follows the plot:
#Kijé's Birth: Emperor Paul, listening to a report, mishears a phrase and concludes that a lieutenant exists. He demands that "Kijé" be promoted to his elite guard. It is an offence to contradict the
Tsar, so the palace administrators must invent someone of that name.
#Romance. The fictional lieutenant falls in love. The
double bass has an appropriately ghostly quality.
#Kijé's Wedding. Since the Tsar prefers his heroic soldiers to be married, the administrators concoct a fake wedding. The
vodka that the Tsar approves for this event is very real.
#
Troika. The
fairy-tale quality of the story is illustrated by a three-horse open sleigh.
#Kijé's Burial. The administrators finally rid themselves of the non-existent lieutenant by saying he has died. The Tsar expresses his sadness, and the civil servants heave a sigh of relief.
Premiere
1937,
Paris (hence the French spelling of "Kijé")
Instrumentation
Baritone voice
2
flutes,
piccolo, 2
oboes, 2
clarinets,
tenor saxophone (sometimes performed on bassoon), 2
bassoons, 4
horns, 2
trumpets,
cornet, 3
trombones,
tuba, 3 percussionists (
cymbals, little
bells,
triangle,
bass drum,
snare drum,
tambourine),
harp,
piano or
celeste, and
strings.
Analysis
Recordings
★
Chicago Symphony Orchestra, conducted by
Fritz Reiner.
★
Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by
Seiji Ozawa.
Uses in other media
Film
★ The
1958 British movie ''
The Horse's Mouth'', directed by
Ronald Neame from the novel by
Joyce Cary, uses the suite for its soundtrack.
★ The suite appears during the opening and closing credits of the 1975
Woody Allen film ''
Love and Death''.
★ The melody for "Kijé's Wedding" is used in the 1988 film ''
Crossing Delancey''.
★
Vladimir Cosma uses nearly untouched melody from ''The Birth of Kijé'' in the theme ''Remembering the Hills'' from his score to
Yves Robert's 1990 film ''
La Gloire de mon père''.
★ Part of the Wedding movement is used in the 1991 movie ''
Doc Hollywood'' directed by
Michael Caton-Jones and starring
Michael J. Fox.
Popular music
★
The Free Design jazzed up and added lyrics to the Troika theme in their song "Kijé's Ouija."
★ A part of the Troika movement is used in the 1974 song "
I Believe in Father Christmas" by
Greg Lake.
★
Sting used the melody from the Romance of ''Lieutenant Kijé'' in the chorus of his 1985 song "
Russians".
Parallel characters
The story of Kijé—the conveniently invented fictitious war hero, who ultimately must die as a victim of his own success—is frequently referenced and parodied in popular culture.
George Orwell's 1949 novel ''
Nineteen Eighty-Four'' contains a brief passage in which the protagonist,
Winston Smith, a worker at the
propaganda-producing
Ministry of Truth, creates a fictitious and heroic "Comrade Ogilvy", who was dedicated to novel's totalitarian regime,
Oceania, and had died in the line of duty.
Poul Anderson's 1953 novelette "Sam Hall" features a disgruntled bureaucrat who creates fake records about a rebel named Sam Hall (after
the song) who fights against the totalitarian government.
Lieutenant Kijé is parodied in the first season episode of ''
M
★ A
★ S
★ H'', "Tuttle", also in the war hero "Schumann" from ''
Wag the Dog'' (1997), and obliquely in the ''
Brazil'' (1985) opening sequence.
In her novel, ''Eclipse of the Century'' (1999), Jan Mark presents a deserter from the
Russian army who renames himself Lieutenant Kijé, as a sign that he no longer exists.
In the eighth season episode of ''
Seinfeld'', "The Susie" (episode #149),
Elaine Benes inadvertently creates an alter ego named "Susie," whom co-workers believe is actually real. To avoid conflict, Elaine and the fictional Susie attend a conflict resolution meeting with the company president. Ultimately, Elaine rids herself of the non-existent Susie by saying she has committed
suicide; a large number of guests attend Susie's funeral.
External links
★
MIDI for Troika (broken link)