Study Guide for The Secret Marriage.pub
Transcription
Study Guide for The Secret Marriage.pub
The impresario (from the Italian impresa, meaning "an enterprise or undertaking") was the key figure in the organization of the carnival season. He was very much like today’s film and television producers: responsible for organizing all aspects of a production, hiring the artists, arranging for costumes and sets, working with lawyers to draw up contracts for the various people involved in bringing the production to the stage, getting the right venue, working with the censors to get content approved, and so on. He spent days traveling from one town to another, making sure to connect with the key people in those towns to ensure that his production would run smoothly and that he would be invited back the following season. Often, impresarios took on big financial risks; many of them went bankrupt. The role of the impresario lost importance in the late 1800s, as music publishers began to take over the role of producing operas. Publishers controlled the composers as well as the casting, leaving little for the traditional impresario to do. For more information on Pittsburgh Opera's education programs, please contact: Marilyn Michalka Egan, Ph.D. Director of Education megan@pittsburghopera.org 412-281-0912 ext 242 Pittsburgh Opera 2425 Liberty Avenue Pittsburgh, PA 15222 www.pittsburghopera.org http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/william-hogarth-marriage-a-la-mode #2 The Tête à Tête shows signs that the marriage has begun to fail. The husband and wife appear uninterested in one another and there are indicators of adulterous adventures and a fight. William Hogarth painted Marriage à la Mode. The six pictures were moralisticat warning aboutOpera the disastrous Production Photo by TimaMatheson Vancouver results of an ill-considered marriage for money. The original engravings from 1743-1745 are in London’s National Gallery. Allegheny Regional Asset District American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. Bayer USA Foundation The Berkman Charitable Trust Benedum Foundation BRIDGES & Company, Inc. Jack Buncher Foundation Anne L. & George H. Clapp Charitable Trust Chautauqua Opera Guild Clearview Federal Credit Union Dominion Foundation Eaton Corporation Eden Hall Foundation EQT Foundation First Commonwealth Financial FISA Foundation Fort Pitt Capital Group, Inc. Frick Fund of The Buhl Foundation Giant Eagle Foundation The Grable Foundation The Guilds of Pittsburgh Opera The Hearst Foundation Hefren-Tillotson, Inc. The Heinz Endowments Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield Levin Furniture The Massaro Corporation William V. & Catherine A. McKinney Charitable Foundation McCreery Fund of The Buhl Foundation R. K. Mellon Foundation National Endowment for the Arts Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Pennsylvania Department of Community & Economic Development Pennsylvania Department of Education The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. PPG Industries, Inc. Bobby Rahal Motorcar Company Reed Smith LLP The Techs Triangle Tech Group United States Steel Corporation UPMC Health System Study Guide to the Opera The high point of the year was the carnival season. We know it as Mardi Gras, but in the 18th and 19th centuries, carnival season ran from post-Christmas until Lent. During this time, everyone expected to be entertained with all new opera productions, including ballo grande (grand ballet). This is where the impresario came in. Sources: John Rosselli, The Opera Industry in Italy from Cimarosa to Verdi: The Role of the Impresario (Cambridge University Press), © 1984. Italy was a group of 9 or 10 different states in the Italian Peninsula; each state had its own dialect, laws, and censors. Despite the differences, the people did seem to have a “cultural unity”—their love of theater and music, more specifically, opera. For the upper classes in the towns, the theater was the center of their social lives; it was “where they met, talked, ate, drank, gambled, and were entertained.” Map found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Italy_unification_1815_1870.jpg In order to understand the role of the impresario in early Italian opera, one must understand what life was like in Italy before it was unified into one country. Music by Domenico Cimarosa ● Libretto by Giovanni Bertati by Jill Leahy (The Secret Marriage) Pittsburgh Opera Education thanks our generous supporters: Il matrimonio segreto The Life of the Impresario, from the time of Cimarosa to Verdi A Legend about The Secret Marriage by Jill Leahy Domenico Cimarosa wrote over 80 operas in his lifetime, but Il matrimonio segreto, written in the middle of his career, is considered his masterpiece. Working with a libretto by Giovanni Bertati that was itself based on a play called The Clandestine Marriage (by playwright George Colman the Elder and actor/playwright David Garrick), Cimarosa composed a wildly popular comic opera and the only one of his works that is still being performed. Opera legend Il matrimonio segreto was first performed on February 7, 1792 in Vienna, at the Imperial Hofburg Theatre, in the presence of Emperor Leopold II. Its premiere is said to have created the longest encore in opera history. As the story goes, “Leopold II was so impressed that, after offering dinner to all the performers, he had them repeat the opera in a private performance on the same day. This was a considerable feat considering that, according to contemporary reports, the première lasted close to three hours because of public acclamation and the repetition of arias and ensembles.” ¹ Domenico Cimarosa 1749 – 1801 It’s interesting to note that this opera opened in “Cimarosa’s skill at writing arias free from the Vienna two months after Mozart’s death, and was conventional strictures of the more successful than any of Mozart’s works at that form comes through in time. Over the years, the richness and complexity Geronimo’s “Che saltino i dinari,” which stopped the of Mozart’s operas have gained him a more show at the premiere.” ² enduring reputation. However, Il matrimonio segreto offers a story that showcases human folly without using disguises or mistaken identity so common in opera buffa, and the simple beauty of Cimarosa’s music continues to provide audiences with a refreshing break from the complexity of contemporary life. ¹ Oxford Music Online: Il matrimonio segreto (The Secret Marriage) by Gordana Lazarevich ² Anthony Tommasini — http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/30/arts/music/30cima.html?_r=0 The Secret Marriage Synopsis Characters of the Opera Marriage à la Mode, a series of six paintings by William Hogarth, 1743 – 1745. Adapted from Opera Theatre of St. Louis Setting: We are in the household of Geronimo, a wealthy citizen of Bologna. He has two daughters, Elisetta and Carolina, and a sister Fidalma, who runs the household. He also has a young secretary, Paolino, who is secretly married to the younger daughter, Carolina. ACT I. Paolino and Carolina discuss how to stay calm ("Cara, non dubitar"). Paolino is working to arrange a marriage contract between Elisetta and his patron, Count Robinson, hoping that as soon as Geronimo's older daughter is well married, his marriage to the younger one will be acceptable. Count Robinson has written a letter expressing interest—tempted by Elisetta's substantial dowry—and Geronimo is thrilled to think that his daughter will be a Countess ("Udite, tutti udite"). Fidalma confesses to her niece that she is in love, too, but only reveals in an aside to the audience that she has her eye on Paolino. Domenico Cimarosa was born on December 17, 1749 in Aversa, a small town in southern Italy not far from Naples. His parents were poor but, as was often the case in those times, they sent Cimarosa to a nearby monastery where he could receive a free education. Showing great promise, Cimarosa was awarded a scholarship to a prestigious music school in Naples and he continued his studies there under several Italian music masters. Paolino [pah-oh-LEE-noh] tenor Clerk of Geronimo who is secretly married to his daughter Carolina. In order to gain Geronimo’s approval of their marriage, Paolino arranges a marriage contract between Elisetta and Count Robinson. Carolina [kah-roh-LEE-nah] soprano Geronimo’s younger daughter who is secretly married to Paolino. Geronimo [jay-ROH-nee-moh] bass #1 The Marriage Contract shows an arranged marriage between the son of bankrupt Earl Squanderfield and the daughter of a wealthy, miserly city merchant. (Painting #2 on p 1.) A rich merchant who is deaf. He is the father of Elisetta and Carolina, brother of Fidalma, and employer of Paolino. Elisetta [eh-lee-ZEH-tah] soprano Older daughter of Geronimo and sister of Carolina. As the elder daughter, she must be married before Carolina. When the Count arrives, he is disappointed to find that it is Fidalma [fee-DAHL-mah] contralto not Carolina who has been offered to him ("Senza tante cerimonie"). He tells Paolino that he will be content with a Sister of Geronimo, aunt of Carolina and Elisetta. She is in love with Paolino. smaller dowry and sends him off to arrange the match. Carolina doesn't dare tell the Count that she is married, so Count Robinson bass when she admits she has no lover, it excites him further. A wealthy nobleman and former employer of She tries to convince him that she has no desire or Paolino. He is betrothed to Elisetta for a large dowry, but prefers to marry Carolina qualification to be a countess ("Perdonate, signor mio"), but he continues to pursue her. Elisetta accuses them both instead, for a smaller dowry. of betraying her, and the commotion attracts Fidalma, who joins Carolina in trying to calm Elisetta ("Lasciatemi, signore"). Everyone tries at once to explain his or her feelings to the confused and exasperated Geronimo ("Orsù, saper conviene"). #3 The Inspection shows the Count and a prostitute, with syphilis, visiting a quack. #4 The Toilette shows the Countess and lover hosting a reception in her bedroom. Intermission ACT II. Geronimo insists that the Count must honor his contract and marry Elisetta, but the Count refuses. When he offers to accept a smaller dowry with Carolina's hand instead, Geronimo is delighted to save face and money—as long as Elisetta agrees. Paolino is distraught, and throws himself on Fidalma's mercy, but is stunned to find that she hopes to marry him ("Sento, ahimé! che mi vien male"). He faints, giving her the idea that he returns her emotion and making Carolina think she has been betrayed, but he promises that they will leave the house at dawn and take refuge in the house of a relative ("Pria che spunti in ciel l'aurora"). The Count tells Elisetta all his bad habits and physical defects, hoping she'll reject him, but she stands firm—and he finally confesses that he cannot abide her. Geronimo can't persuade her either. Fidalma suggests sending Carolina to a convent, and Geronimo agrees ("Deh! lasciate ch'io respiri"). Carolina is broken-hearted and tries to confess her predicament to the Count, but they are interrupted by her sister, her aunt, and her father, who are gleeful at having caught them together ("Sortite, sortite"). Geronimo sends Paolino off with a letter to the Mother Superior. After a brilliant and farcical finale, Paolino and Carolina finally confess they have been married for two months. Geronimo and Fidalma are furious, but the Count and Elisetta advise them to forgive the newlyweds, adding that they themselves will marry after all ("Ascoltate un uom di mondo"). A Master of Dramma Giocoso by Jill Leahy Beginning at the age of 23, and for much of the rest of his life, Cimarosa composed operas, mostly dramma giocoso (a.k.a. opera buffa), and sacred pieces. He traveled throughout Italy conducting his music and creating works for the “stagione”, which is Italian for “season”, an organizational system used by larger houses for presenting opera. He was a member of the Neapolitan School, a group of composers who lived and worked around Naples, which was a significant musical center in the 1700s. Cimarosa composed over 80 operas and was celebrated as a composer during his lifetime, although he is not as famous today as some of his contemporaries, such as Mozart and Salieri. In 1787, he received an invitation from the Empress Catherine II (Catherine the Great) to come to St. Petersburg, where he stayed until Emperor Leopold II invited him to Vienna in 1792. There, Cimarosa collaborated with Giovanni Bertati to adapt The Clandestine Marriage, a 1766 comedy by George Colman the Elder and David Garick. The idea for the play came from a series of William Hogarth paintings from 1743-1745 called Marriage à la Mode. The six pictures pointedly skewered upperclass 18thcentury society, depicting disastrous results of marrying for money. Il matrimonio segreto was Cimarosa's masterpiece: Verdi considered it to be the model opera buffa and the Naples audience received it with great acclaim. Later, Cimarosa returned to Italy where he became involved in some political intrigues that resulted in his being banished from Naples. He died at the age of 52 on January 11, 1801 in Venice. The Librettist Devoted to Dramma Giocoso by Jill Leahy #5 The Bagnio shows the Count fatally wounded by his wife’s lover. #6 The Lady’s Death shows the Countess poisoning herself; her baby is infected. Giovanni Bertati was born on July 10, 1735 in a province of Venice called Martellago. He wrote his first libretto at the age of 28, and from then on, he worked prolifically, creating at least 70 known librettos during the course of his long career. Bertati visited Vienna several times, and was fortunate enough to win the favor of Emperor Leopold II, who gave him the title of Poeta Cesareo ("Imperial Poet") of the Italian Opera in Vienna, replacing Lorenzo da Ponte, who had fallen out of the emperor’s good graces. During Bertati’s career as a librettist, he almost exclusively wrote drammi giocosi. While Il matrimonio segreto is considered Cimarosa’s masterpiece, it was also Bertati’s most celebrated libretto.