The work caused great controversy with members of the audience, because of the violence of the plot and the nature of the music. Benjamin Britten was reported to have left the premiere at the interval.[3] The first US performance was in Minneapolis, and the first New York performance took place in 1988.[4] The first performance in Austria was in 1991, by Wien Modern, with Birtwistle supervising the production.[5] Birtwistle directed a revival of the opera at Aldeburgh in June 1991.[6]
With reference to the ballet of Igor Stravinsky, Paul Griffiths has characterized Mr Punch as "the exact contrary of Petrushka: a human being behaving as a puppet".[7] David Wright has summarized how Birtwistle and Pruslin attempted to treat the characters and music in an archetypal manner to write what they have described as a "source opera".[8] Jonathan Cross has published a detailed analysis of the opera.[9]
Punch is rocking his baby, then throws it into the fire. He stabs Judy to death when she finds the charred baby. Punch is now free to seek Pretty Polly, and he leaves on his horse. He finds her and offers her a flower, which she refuses, saying it was tarnished by his murder of his baby.
The Doctor and Lawyer revive Punch, but they too are murdered (with a gigantic hypodermic needle and quill, respectively), and join Judy at the chorus gibbet. Punch again woos Pretty Polly, giving her a prism. Again she rejects him. Punch murders the Choregos, a narrator figure, by sawing him in half (within a bass viol case). This is a turning point in Punch's life, and the cyclical nature of the work changes.
Punch is haunted by nightmarish images of his cruelty and a satanic wedding with Judy. Punch goes to the gallows for his crimes, but cheats the hangman into hanging himself. Pretty Polly reappears and the two sing a love duet around the gallows, now transformed into a maypole.
^Wright, David, "Clicks, Clocks & Claques" (July 1994). The Musical Times, 135 (1817): pp. 426–431.
^Cross, Jonathan, "Lines and Circles: On Birtwistle's Punch and Judy and Secret Theatre" (July–October 1994). Music Analysis, 13 (2/3): pp. 203–225.
^Knussen, Oliver, "Recordings: Birtwistle: Punch and Judy / Ligeti: Scenes and Interludes from Le Grand Macabre" (March 1981). Tempo (New Ser.), 136: pp. 27–29.
^Murray, David, Review of Punch and Judy (1990). Tempo (New Ser.), 175: p. 53.