Gilbert and Sullivan created fourteen comic operas, including H.M.S. Pinafore, The Pirates of Penzance, and The Mikado, many of which are still frequently performed today. However, events around their 1889 collaboration, The Gondoliers, led to an argument and a lawsuit dividing the two. In 1891, after many failed attempts at reconciliation by the pair and their producer, Richard D'Oyly Carte, Gilbert and Sullivan's music publisher, Tom Chappell, stepped in to mediate between two of his most profitable artists, and within two weeks he had succeeded. This cartoon in The Entr'acte expresses the magazine's pleasure at the reuniting of D'Oyly Carte (left), Gilbert (centre), and Sullivan (right).
An engraving by D. H. Friston of Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera Trial by Jury, shortly after its premiĂšre. A satire of courtroom antics, which invoked "almost boisterous hilarity" in its original audience, Trial by Jury remains a favourite throughout the English-speaking world, and is performed regularly to this day.
Poster: Otis Lithograph Co; Restoration: Adam Cuerden
A poster for a 1908 American production of Aida, an opera by Giuseppe Verdi that premiered on December 24, 1871, to great acclaim at the Khedivial Opera House in Cairo, Egypt. However, Verdi was most dissatisfied that the audience consisted of invited dignitaries and critics, but no members of the general public. He therefore considered the European premiere, held at La Scala, Milan, to be its real premiere.
The final scene of Rossini's opera Le comte Ory at its premiere in 1828. The opera contains some of Rossini's most colorful orchestral writing and recounts a farcical tale of Count Ory and his men who attempt to seduce the women of Formoutiers while their husbands are away in the Crusades.
Ludwig Schnorr von Carolsfeld and his wife, Malwine Schnorr von Carolsfeld, in the original production of Wagner's Tristan und Isolde in 1865. It was at Wagner's own request that the couple were cast in the title roles. Six weeks, and three performances later, Ludwig Schnorr von Carolsfeld died in Dresden, only days after his 29th birthday. After his death, his widow could not bring herself to continue with her career and retired from the stage.
Valencia's Ciutat de les Arts i les CiĂšncies (City of Arts and Sciences) at night. The building to the left is the city's opera house and cultural centre, the Palau de les Arts Reina SofĂa. Designed by Santiago Calatrava, the Palau de les Arts was officially opened in October 2005 and staged its first opera, Beethoven's Fidelio, in October 2006. The opera house suffered a setback in December of that year when the main stage platform collapsed with the complete set of Jonathan Miller's production of Don Giovanni.
Credit: Metropolitan Job Print, 222 West 26th Street, New York
A poster for the original production of John Philip Sousa's operetta El Capitan (1896), starring DeWolf Hopper. Don Enrico Medigua, the viceroy of Spain-occupied Peru, fears assassination by rebels. After he secretly has the rebel leader El Capitan killed, he disguises himself as El Capitan. Estrelda, the former viceroy's daughter, impressed by tales of El Capitan's daring, falls in love with the disguised Medigua, who is already married. Meanwhile, Medigua's wife and daughter search for him, and the rebels capture the Lord Chamberlain, mistaking him for the viceroy. Medigua leads the hapless rebels against the Spaniards, taking them in circles until they are too tired to fight. The Spaniards win, the mistaken identities are revealed, the love stories are untangled, and the story ends happily.
Credit: Auguste Tilly for L'Illustration, 5 December 1885
The climactic event in the first half of Jules Massenet's Le Cid: Rodrigue's father has obliged his son to defend his honour, but Rodrigue only afterwards learns that the person he has to duel is his beloved ChimĂšne's father, the Comte de Gormas. He is honour-bound to go through with it, and wins the duel, but ChimĂšne now both loves and hates him, and this internal conflict powers the drama of the rest of the opera. From L'Illustration's coverage of the opera's premiĂšre.
The climax of act 2 in Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera Princess Ida as illustrated by William Russell Flint. The opera tells the story of Princess Ida who founds a women's university and teaches that women are superior to men and should rule in their stead. The prince to whom she had been married in infancy sneaks into the university, together with two friends, with the aim of collecting his bride. They disguise themselves as women students, but are discovered, precipitating a war between the sexes. Ida sings...
Italian tenor Enrico Caruso was an opera singer of international renown, and one of the key pioneers of recorded music. His "Vesti la giubba" (from Ruggiero Leoncavallo's Pagliacci) was, in its various versions, the first recording to sell a million copies.
The facade of the Concertgebouw concert hall in Amsterdam. It opened on 11 April 1888, with an inaugural concert in which an orchestra of 120 musicians and a chorus of 500 singers performed works by Wagner, Handel, Bach, and Beethoven. The hall now hosts 800 performances every year, including concert performances of opera. Its resident orchestra, the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, also serves as one of the orchestras for The Netherlands Opera.
The Austrian city of Salzburg, the birthplace of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and the home of the annual Salzburg Festival. In 2006, the festival celebrated the 250th anniversary of Mozart's birth by staging all 22 of his operatic works (including two unfinished operas). All the productions were filmed and released to the general public in November 2006.
Neuschwanstein Castle, commissioned by Ludwig II of Bavaria as a retreat and as an homage to Richard Wagner. The young king was so moved by Wagner's opera Lohengrin, based on the legend of the Swan Knight, that he named his castle "New Swan Stone," or "Neuschwanstein". It was King Ludwig's patronage that later gave Wagner the means to build a theatre for, compose and stage his epic cycle, The Ring of the Nibelung.
The Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome, a papal fortress and prison until 1901. It serves as the setting for act 3 of Puccini's opera Tosca. After murdering Rome's chief of police, the evil Baron Scarpia, Floria Tosca goes to the Castel Sant'Angelo, where her lover, Mario Cavaradossi, is to be executed. She has been led to believe that it will be a mock execution and is horrified to see him die in a hail of real bullets. As Scarpia's henchmen arrive to arrest her, she throws herself from the castle's ramparts. Famously dismissed by the musicologist Joseph Kerman as a "shabby little shocker", Tosca has become one of the most enduring works in the operatic repertoire.
Ilya Repin's 1876 painting, Sadko in the Underwater Kingdom. The Russian legend of Sadko, the minstrel who charmed the Sea King and his daughter and eventually returned to Novgorod a wealthy man, was the subject of Rimsky-Korsakov's 1896 opera Sadko.
The Sydney Opera House at night, as viewed from the Sydney Harbour Bridge. It is one of the world's most distinctive 20th century buildings, and one of the most famous performing arts centres in the world. Contrary to its name, the building houses several separate venues rather than a single opera theatre, with the two main venues, the Opera Theatre and the Concert Hall, defined by the two larger shells. The Sydney Opera House is a major performing venue for Opera Australia, The Australian Ballet, the Sydney Theatre Company and the Sydney Symphony.
Napoleon Bonaparte depicted in 1803 as the First Consul of France. Six years later, he commissioned the opera Pimmalione to show off the talents of two of his favourite singers, his lover Giuseppina Grassini and the famous castrato Girolamo Crescentini. It was first given in a private performance at the Tuileries Palace. Napoleon was delighted with the work and offered its composer, Luigi Cherubini, a large reward and a commission for another piece. Napoleon himself appears as a character in several operas including Prokofiev's War and Peace and Giordano's Madame Sans-GĂȘne.
Portrait of the English soprano, Nancy Storace, circa 1788. The role of Susanna in Mozart's opera The Marriage of Figaro was written for and first performed by her. Mozart also wrote the concert aria "Ch'io mi scordi di te?" for her, often considered to be one of his greatest compositions in that genre.
An early advertisement showing the Drawing Room Scene from Utopia, Limited, a Savoy opera by Gilbert and Sullivan. The opera premiered in 1893 and satirises limited liability companies, and particularly the idea that a bankrupt company could leave creditors unpaid without any liability on the part of its owners.
Portrait of Noël Coward by the English society-photographer and former actor, Allan Warren. Coward's 1929 operetta Bitter Sweet was later made into a film starring Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy. The score was so heavily cut that Coward vowed he would never again allow one of plays to be filmed in Hollywood.
The Last Day of Pompeii, Karl Bryullov's 1833 painting depicting the destruction of Pompeii following the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD. The painting was inspired in part by Giovanni Pacini's opera L'ultimo giorno di Pompei which premiered in Naples in 1825 with spectacular special effects. Pacini's young daughters, Amazilia and Giovannina, served as the models for the two children sheltering in the arms of a Pompeian woman. The woman was modelled on Yuliya Samoylova who was the foster mother of Pacini's daughters and had been the lover of both Pacini and Bryullov.
The Fall of Phaeton painted by Rubens in 1604. The myth of Phaethon, whose attempt to drive the sun god's chariot led to his death, was the basis of Lully's 1683 opera Phaëton. Lully's opera was an indirect reference to the fate of Nicolas Fouquet whose ambitions to imitate the King Louis XIV (The Sun King) brought about his downfall.
The Theatro Municipal in SĂŁo Paulo, Brazil. It is regarded as one of the landmarks of the city, significant both for its architectural value as well as its historical importance. The first production to be staged there was Ambroise Thomas's opera Hamlet with Titta Ruffo in the title role.
Gallen-Kallela's 1899 painting Kullervo Cursing depicts a scene from the tormented life of Kullervo, a character in the Finnish epic Kalevala and the protagonist of Aulis Sallinen's opera Kullervo. Sallinen's opera was intended for the opening of a new national opera house in Helsinki, but construction delays meant that the work was premiered in Los Angeles as part of the celebrations of the 75th anniversary of Finnish independence. The Finnish baritone Jorma Hynninen sang the title role in the 1992 premiere with Matti Salminen as his father.
A self-portrait by Salvator Rosa, an Italian Baroque painter and poet who was described as "unorthodox and extravagant" and a "perpetual rebel". His life and adventures, along with those of Masaniello, a Neapolitan fisherman turned rebel leader, formed the basis for AntĂŽnio Carlos Gomes's 1874 opera Salvator Rosa. Its librettist, Antonio Ghislanzoni, had also written the libretto for Verdi's Aida.
Credit: Roberto Focosi, engraved by Francesco Corbetta, and restored by Adam Cuerden
Frontispiece to the 1860 vocal score of Verdi's opera, Un ballo in maschera. Major problems with the censors beset this opera. Originally entitled Gustavo III, it was a fictionalized account of the 1792 assassination of King Gustav III of Sweden. The censors forbade the portrayal of a real monarch, let alone the assassination of the monarch on stage. Verdi had the setting moved to Germany with all the names changed and the opera retitled Una vendetta. The censors objected again. Verdi gave up, broke his contract with the Teatro San Carlo, the commissioning opera house, and returned home. The San Carlo sued. Verdi counter-sued. Once the legal issues cleared, Verdi submitted it to the Teatro Apollo. This time the setting was in Colonial America. It was finally performed in 1859 and proved a hit.
Credit: Engraved by Luigi Barinetti after Girolamo Magnani; restored by Adam Cuerden
Title page of the vocal score for Verdi's 1845 opera, Giovanna d'Arco. Based on the life of Joan of Arc, the opera takes considerable liberties with history. Unlike the real Joan of Arc who was burnt at the stake, Verdi's heroine dies on the battlefield. The opera premiered at La Scala, Milan, where it was rapturously received by the audience but dismissed by the critics. For a production in Rome three months later, the Papal censors demanded that all religious connotations be removed from the story. The opera was performed as Orietta di Lesbo and set on the Isle of Lesbos with an Italian heroine leading the Lesbians into battle against the Turks.
Credit: Antoine Barbizet; restored by Adam Cuerden
Cover of a first edition of the vocal score for La Prise de Troie (The Fall of Troy), the first two acts from Hector Berlioz's opera Les Troyens. Berlioz himself wrote the libretto based on Virgil's epic poem the Aeneid. The opera originally premiered with only its last three acts, under the title Les Troyens Ă Carthage (The Trojans at Carthage). The complete Les Troyens was Berlioz's most ambitious work, the summation of his entire artistic career, but he did not live to see it performed in its entirety.
Credit: Antoine Barbizet; restored by Adam Cuerden
Cover of the 1863 vocal score for Les Troyens Ă Carthage (The Trojans at Carthage), the title given to last three acts from Hector Berlioz's opera Les Troyens. The opera originally premiered under this title. The first two acts were later performed under the title La prise de Troie (The Fall of Troy). The complete Les Troyens with a libretto by Berlioz himself based on Virgil's epic poem the Aeneid was his most ambitious work and the summation of his entire artistic career, but he did not live to see the opera performed in its entirety.
Title page of Rigoletto, an opera by Giuseppe Verdi with a libretto by Francesco Maria Piave based on Victor Hugo's play Le roi s'amuse. Despite serious initial problems with the censors, the opera had a triumphant premiere at La Fenice in Venice on 11 March 1851 and is considered by many to be the first of the operatic masterpieces of Verdi's middle-to-late career. Its tragic story revolves around the licentious Duke of Mantua, his hunch-backed court jester Rigoletto, and Rigoletto's beautiful daughter Gilda. The opera's original title, La maledizione (The Curse), refers to the curse placed on both the Duke and Rigoletto by a courtier whose daughter had been seduced by the Duke with Rigoletto's encouragement. The curse comes to fruition when Gilda likewise falls in love with the Duke and eventually sacrifices her life to save him from the assassins hired by her father.
Front page of The Illustrated London News depicting the elopement scene from Haddon Hall, an 1892 opera by Arthur Sullivan and Sydney Grundy. The opera dramatises the legend of Dorothy Vernon's elopement with John Manners in 1563. The legend came to prominence in the 19th century and was the subject of numerous plays and novels.
Credit: Uncertain attribution; restoration by Adam Cuerden
Vocal score to the 1916 version of Ariadne auf Naxos (Ariadne on Naxos) an opera by Richard Strauss with a German libretto by Hugo von Hofmannsthal. Bringing together slapstick comedy and consummately beautiful music, the opera's theme is the competition between high and low art for the public's attention. Music critic and author Matt Dobkin wrote that, while Ariadne auf Naxos is "not as well loved as Der Rosenkavalier or as important as Salome, it is nevertheless staged all the time, thanks in large part to sopranos' attraction to the vocal and dramatic grandeur of the title role and to the compelling spitfire Zerbinetta character."
Giuseppe Verdi conducting Aida at its first Paris Opera performance in 1880. Aida quickly rose to popularity after its premiĂšre in 1871 in Cairo. Isma'il Pasha, Khedive of Egypt, commissioned Verdi to write an opera for performance to celebrate the opening of the Khedivial Opera House, paying him 150,000 francs, but the premiere was delayed because of the Siege of Paris (1870â71), during the Franco-Prussian War, when the scenery and costumes were stuck in the French capital, and Verdi's Rigoletto was performed instead for the opening ceremony. Aida eventually premiĂšred in Cairo in late 1871. Metastasio's libretto La Nitteti (1756) was a major source of the plot.
Poster for Verdi's La forza del destino. Based on a Spanish drama, Don Ălvaro o la fuerza del sino (1835), by Ăngel de Saavedra, 3rd Duke of Rivas, La forza del destino tells the story of two star-crossed lovers who fate turns against at every turn. The man attempting to throw a gun away as a sign of good faith causes it to shoot the woman's father. The woman's brother, having joined the army under an assumed name, gets given papers to destroy by the man, also under an assumed name â and thus learns his identity and goes on a mad quest to destroy him. And, in the end, when forced to duel the brother and winning, an attempt to save the brother's life results in the man finding the woman... and when they go to help him, the brother stabs the woman in the heart.
The Israeli Opera performance of Aida in 2011. The Israeli Opera is the principal opera company of Israel. It was founded in 1985 after lack of Israeli government funding led to the demise of the Israel National Opera. The company also founded the Israeli Opera Festival which has performed large-scale outdoor productions, originally at Caesarea, and from 2010 in Masada, as with this production of Aida.
Portrait of Ambroise Thomas (1811â1896). He was a French composer known for his operas Mignon (1866) and Hamlet (1868) and as Director of the Conservatoire de Paris from 1871 till his death. Emmanuel Chabrier said of him, "There is good music, there is bad music, and then there is Ambroise Thomas."
Depiction in The Illustrated London News of the final scene of Attila, an opera in a prologue and three acts by Giuseppe Verdi to an Italian libretto by Temistocle Solera, based on the 1809 play Attila, König der Hunnen (Attila, King of the Huns) by Zacharias Werner, in which Odabella, a woman who fought the Huns, and thus so impressed Attila that he wished to marry her, shows her true, hidden hatred for the man who killed her father by stabbing Attila in the heart.
Ezio's act 2 aria of heroic resolution "Ă gettata la mia sorte" ("My lot is cast, I am prepared for any warfare") is a fine example of a characteristic Verdian genre, and it achieved fame in its own time with audiences in the context of the adoption of a liberal constitution by Ferdinand II. Other contemporary comment praised the work as suitable for the "political education of the people", while, in contrast, others criticised the opera as "Teutonic" in nature.
Set design for act 1 in an 1895 Paris production of Verdi's opera Otello. With the composer's reluctance to write anything new after the success of Aida in 1871 and his retreat into retirement, it took his Milan publisher Giulio Ricordi the next ten years, first to persuade him to write anything, then to encourage the revision of Verdi's 1857 Simon Boccanegra by introducing Arrigo Boito as librettist, and finally to begin the arduous process of persuading and cajoling Verdi to see Boito's completed libretto for Otello in July/August 1881. However, the process of writing the first drafts of the libretto and the years of their revision, with Verdi all along not promising anything, dragged on, and it was not until 1884, five years after the first drafts of the libretto, that composition began, with most of the work finishing in late 1885. When it finally premiĂšred in Milan on 5 February 1887, it proved to be a resounding success, and further stagings of Otello soon followed at leading theatres throughout Europe and America.
Photograph of Albert Reiss at the stage entrance of the Metropolitan Opera circa 1910 . Reiss was a Germanoperatictenor who had a prolific career in Europe and the United States during the first third of the twentieth century. He spent much of his career performing at the Metropolitan Opera where he sang in more than 1,000 performances, including several premieres, between 1901-1919. Excelling in the tenor buffo repertoire, Reiss was particularly associated with the roles of David in Wagner's Die Meistersinger von NĂŒrnberg and Mime in Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen, two roles he sang in numerous houses internationally.
Credit: Pierre-Auguste Lamy (?), restored by Adam Cuerden
Illustration to Jacques Offenbach's last composition Les contes d'Hoffmann, showing the prologue. Based on the stories of E. T. A. Hoffmann, it features three doomed romances, with his friend Nicklausse â actually Hoffmann's muse in disguise â following him around, attempting to protect him, even as tragedies befall all around him. However, in the end he explains the three women he described are actually elements of his fourth love, whom he then rejects, and the muse reveals herself and embraces him.
Credit: Pierre-Auguste Lamy (?), restored by Adam Cuerden
Illustration to Jacques Offenbach's last composition Les contes d'Hoffmann, showing the Giulietta act, set in Venice. In this act, Hoffmann falls in love with the courtesan Giulietta and thinks she returns his affections. Giulietta is not in love with Hoffmann but only seducing him under the orders of Captain Dapertutto, who has promised to give her a diamond if she steals Hoffmann's reflection from a mirror. The jealous Schlemil, a previous victim of Giulietta and Dapertutto (he gave Giulietta his shadow), challenges the poet to a duel, but is killed. Nicklausse wants to take Hoffmann away from Venice and goes looking for horses. Meanwhile, Hoffmann meets Giulietta and cannot resist her, giving her his reflection, only to be abandoned by the courtesan, to Dapertutto's great pleasure. Hoffmann tells Dapertutto that his friend Nicklausse will come and save him. Dapertutto prepares a poison to get rid of Nicklausse, but Giulietta drinks it by mistake and drops dead in the poet's arms.
English composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor whose opera Thelma, long thought to have been lost, was given its posthumous premiere in 2012, the centenary year of his death
The French composer Jules Massenet (1842 – 1912), best known for his operas, of which he wrote more than thirty. By the time of his death, Massenet was regarded by many critics as old-fashioned and unadventurous although his two best-known operas, Manon and Werther, remained popular in France and abroad. After a few decades of neglect, his works began to be favourably reassessed during the mid-20th century, and many of them have since been staged and recorded.
The American composer William Grant Still (1895 â 1978) whose 150 works included five symphonies and eight operas. His opera Troubled Island, set in Haiti and based on the life of Jean Jacques Dessalines, was premiered by New York City Opera in 1949 and became the first opera by an African American composer to be performed by a major company.
Jacques Offenbach (1819 â 1880), a German-born French composer, cellist and impresario of the romantic period. He is remembered for his nearly 100 operettas and his opera The Tales of Hoffmann. His Orpheus in the Underworld, first performed in 1858, is said to be the first full-length classical operetta. Offenbach was a powerful influence on later composers of the operetta genre, particularly Johann Strauss, Jr. and Arthur Sullivan. His best-known works were continually revived during the 20th century, and many of his operettas as well as The Tales of Hoffmann continue to be staged in the 21st.
Credit: Philippe Chaperon (1823â1906) Restoration by Adam Cuerden
Philippe Chaperon's set design for the final act of Verdi's Rigoletto in an 1885 production at the Palais Garnier. The scene depicts the house of the assassin Sparafucile who has been paid by Rigoletto to kill the licentious Duke of Mantua who is seen sleeping in the upstairs room. In the end, it is not the Duke whom Sparafucile murders, but Rigoletto's daughter Gilda who disguised herself as a man.
Credit: Paul Maurou (1848â1931), restored by Adam Cuerden
Poster for the original production of Edmond Audran's opera Gillette de Narbonne. The opera recounts the tale of the beautiful but penniless Gillette and her reluctant bridegroom, the philandering Roger. At one point in the intrigue, she disguises herself as her own twin brother.
A depiction of Gioachino Rossini's meeting with King George IV at the Brighton Pavilion in 1823. George IV made much of Rossini when he arrived in England with his wife Isabella Colbran. He and Colbran had signed contracts for an opera season at the King's Theatre in London. However, Colbran's vocal shortcomings were a serious liability, and she reluctantly retired from performing. Public opinion was not improved by Rossini's failure to provide a new opera for the theatre, as promised.
A depiction of the storm scene from the final act of Gioachino Rossini's opera The Barber of Seville in which Count Almaviva and Figaro climb through the window to foil the plans of Rosina's guardian Bartolo.
Set design for act 3, scene 2 of Louise Bertin's 1838 opera La Esmeralda. Based on The Hunchback of Notre-Dame, and with a libretto by Victor Hugo himself, it would be the last of Bertin's operas after it was hounded off stage by those that opposed Hugo's politics, and those that claimed that it was produced solely due to Bertin's family connections, in the end, causing a near-riot in the theatre on the last of its six performances, as the anti-Bertin factions succeeded in shutting it down. It would not be produced again until 2002.
Credit: Unknown, sometimes attributed to Rauzzini. Restoration by Adam Cuerden
A scene from Mascagni's opera Cavalleria rusticana in which Santuzza begs Turiddu not to join his lover Lola inside the village church. His angry refusal leads Santuzza betray him to Lola's husband who ultimately kills Turiddu in a knife duel. Cavalleria rusticana, which premiered in 1890, was Mascagni's first and most popular opera. There have been over 100 full-length recordings of the work since it was first recorded in Germany in 1909.
Credit: Unknown, sometimes attributed to Rauzzini; restored by Adam Cuerden
A scene from Mascagni's opera Cavalleria rusticana in which Alfio challenges Turiddu to a duel after learning that he has seduced his wife. Following Sicilian custom, the two men embrace, and Turiddu, in a token of acceptance, bites Alfio's ear, drawing blood which signifies a fight to the death. Cavalleria rusticana, which premiered in 1890, was Mascagni's first and most popular opera. There have been over 100 full-length recordings of the work since it was first recorded in Germany in 1909.
Credit: Henri C. R. Presseq, published by Imp. P. Dupont. Restored by Adam Cuerden.
Poster for the 1900 premiĂšre of Camille Erlanger's opera Le Juif polonais starring Victor Maurel as the innkeeper Mathias. A melodramatic climax occurs in act 2 when the sound of sleigh bells at his daughter's wedding reminds Mathias of the Jew he had murdered 15 years ago.
Credit: Unknown artist. Restoration by Adam Cuerden
The stage setting for part 2 of Maurice Ravel's opera, L'enfant et les sortilĂšges. The libretto by Colette tells the story of a rude child whose destructive behaviour is ultimately transformed when the objects and animals he has harmed come to life and reprimand him. In this final scene, the child wanders outside to a garden filled with singing animals and plants. After being offered the opportunity to write a musical work, Colette wrote the text of L'enfant et les sortilĂšges in eight days. Several composers were proposed to her but she was only excited by the prospect of Ravel.
Credit: Luigi Verardi after Dominico Ferri, restored by Adam Cuerden
The Hall of Arms (act 1, scene 3) in the original 1835 production of Vincenzo Bellini's opera I puritani. The libretto by Count Carlo Pepoli, recounts the love story of Arturo, a Royalist, and Elvira, the daughter of a Puritan. Their roles were sung at the premiere by Giovanni Battista Rubini and Giulia Grisi. Bellini took three months between the completion of the score and start of rehearsals to polish the work, which proved an immense and enduring success. I puritani was Bellini's last opera. He died nine months after its premiere at the age of 33.
Lucy Arbell as Queen Amahelli in Massenet's opera Bacchus. The story is based on the mythology surrounding Bacchus and Ariadne (Ariane). The Gods, among them demi-god Bacchus, appear in human form in ancient India to attempt to persuade the people away from the pervading Buddhist influence. Ariane has followed them, convinced that Bacchus is in fact Theseus, her unrequited love. In the end, Ariane sacrifices herself to save humanity and in doing so, Bacchus becomes a God.
The world premiere of La bohĂšme was in Turin on 1 February 1896. Since then, La bohĂšme has become part of the standard Italian opera repertory and is one of the most frequently performed operas worldwide.
Set design for act 2 of Giacomo Meyerbeer's opera Les Huguenots for its premiĂšre performance in 1836. Les Huguenots tells the story of the love between a Huguenot (Protestant) man and a Catholic woman, while religious hatred sweeps across France, culminating in the historical St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre, during which the woman's father, finding the Huguenots, realises only after killing them that his daughter was with them, and has now died at his hand.
Credit: George Grantham Bain Collection; Restored by Adam Cuerden
Dame Ethel Mary Smyth, DBE 22 April 1858 – 8 May 1944) was an English composer and a member of the women's suffrage movement. Her compositions include songs, works for piano, chamber music, orchestral works, choral works and operas.
She first studied privately with Alexander Ewing when she was seventeen. He introduced her to the music of Wagner and Berlioz. After a major battle with her father about her plans to devote her life to music, Smyth was allowed to advance her musical education at the Leipzig Conservatory, where she studied composition with Carl Reinecke. She left after a year, however, disillusioned with the low standard of teaching, and continued her music studies privately with Heinrich von Herzogenberg. While she was at the Leipzig Conservatory, she met DvoĆĂĄk, Grieg and Tchaikovsky. Through Herzogenberg, she also met Clara Schumann and Brahms.
Smyth's extensive body of work includes the Concerto for Violin, Horn and Orchestra and the Mass in D. Her opera The Wreckers is considered by some critics to be the "most important English opera composed during the period between Purcell and Britten." Another of her operas, Der Wald, mounted in 1903, was for more than a century the only opera by a woman composer ever produced at New York's Metropolitan Opera until Kaija Saariaho'sL'Amour de loin in December 2016.
Set design for act 3, scene 1 of Louise Bertin's 1838 opera La Esmeralda. Based on The Hunchback of Notre-Dame, and with a libretto by Victor Hugo himself, it would be the last of Bertin's operas after it was hounded off stage by those that opposed Hugo's politics, and those that claimed that it was produced solely due to Bertin's family connections, in the end, causing a near-riot in the theatre on the last of its six performances, as the anti-Bertin factions succeeded in shutting it down. It wouldn't be produced again until 2002.
The opera prompted an extended eulogy from Richard Wagner, who was present at the first night, in the Dresdner Abend-Zeitung, for which he was a correspondent. However, since the 19th century it has been rarely revived.
Set design for act 3 of the premiĂšre of the French revised version of Gluck's opera Alceste, which had a largely rewritten third act. Based on the play Alcestis by Euripides, it tells the tale of a wife willing to sacrifice herself to save her husband, and her husband's unwillingness to let her die on his behalf. Hercules, wearing the Nemean lion's skin can be seen in the foreground.
Robert le diable was one of the defining works of the genre of grand opera, and helped rocket its composer, Giacomo Meyerbeer to fame. "The Ballet of the Nuns" from the third act, pictured here in an illustration of the original production, was additionally greatly influential on the development of ballet.
Giacomo Puccini (22 December 1858 – 29 November 1924) photographed in 1924. Called "the greatest composer of Italian opera after Verdi", his works include standards of the operatic repertoire such as La bohĂšme (1896), Tosca (1900), Madama Butterfly (1904), and Turandot (1924, premiered 1926).
Puccini's early work was rooted in traditional late-19th-century romantic Italian opera, but he later successfully developed his work in the realistic verismo style, of which he became one of the leading exponents.
He died of smoking-related lung cancer shortly before finishing his last opera, Turandot, which was finished based on his sketches.
Rosa Raisa (30 May 1893 – 28 September 1963) was a Polish-born and Italian-trained Russian-Jewish dramatic operatic soprano who became a naturalized American. She possessed a voice of remarkable power and was the creator of the title role of Puccini's last opera, Turandot, at La Scala, Milan.
Credit: Max and Gotthold BrĂŒckner, restored by Adam Cuerden
Design for act 3 of Richard Wagner's opera TannhĂ€user (1845) by Max and Otthold BrĂŒckner for the Bayreuth Festival. TannhĂ€user is based on two German legends: TannhĂ€user, the mythologized medieval German MinnesĂ€nger and poet, and the tale of the WartburgSong Contest. The story centers on the struggle between sacred and profane love, and redemption through love, a theme running through much of Wagner's mature work. The opera remains a staple of major opera house repertoire in the 21st century.
Act 1 costume for Wally as seen in the original production of Alfredo Catalani's opera La Wally (1892).
The opera is best known for its aria "Ebben? Ne andrĂČ lontana" ("Well, then? I'll go far away") from act 1, in which Wally decides to leave her home forever).
It also features a memorable death scene in which the heroine throws herself into the avalanche that has just killed her lover after he called out to her. It is seldom performed, partly because of the difficulty of staging this scene, but Wally's principal aria is still sung frequently.
Act 3 set design for Edgar, an operaticdramma lirico in three acts (originally four acts) by Giacomo Puccini to an Italian libretto by Ferdinando Fontana, freely based on the play in verse La Coupe et les lĂšvres by Alfred de Musset.
The first performance was given at the Teatro alla Scala in Milan on 21 April 1889. The opera was not a success. Puccini repeatedly revised it, before eventually giving up in frustration, declaring the work irredeemable.
Set design for act 1 of Madama Butterfly, an opera in three acts (originally two) by Giacomo Puccini, with an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa, based on the short story "Madame Butterfly" (1898) by John Luther Long, which in turn was based on stories told to Long by his sister Jennie Correll and on the semi-autobiographical 1887 French novel Madame ChrysanthĂšme by Pierre Loti. Long's version was dramatized by David Belasco as the one-act play Madame Butterfly: A Tragedy of Japan, which, after premiering in New York in 1900, moved to London, where Puccini saw it in the summer of that year.
The original version of the opera, in two acts, had its premiere on 17 February 1904 at La Scala in Milan. It was poorly received, despite having such notable singers as soprano Rosina Storchio, tenor Giovanni Zenatello and baritone Giuseppe De Luca in lead roles. This was due in part to a late completion by Puccini, which gave inadequate time for rehearsals. Puccini revised the opera, splitting the second act in two, with the Humming Chorus as a bridge to what became act 3, and making other changes. Success ensued, starting with the first performance on 28 May 1904 in Brescia.
Set design for act 1 of A basso porto ( "At the lower harbour"), a three-act opera by composer Niccola Spinelli. The opera uses an Italian language libretto by Eugene Checchi which is based on Goffredo Cognetti's 1889 play O voto. The opera premiered to critical success at the Cologne Opera on April 18, 1894, sung in a German translation by Ludwig Hartmann and Otto Hess. The work is widely considered Spinelli's greatest composition, and the prelude to the opera's third act has been programmed by numerous orchestras for performances in concert.
Giuseppe Verdi depicted with his friends and family at the Villa Verdi in 1900. Standing: Teresa Stolz, Umberto Campanari (one of Verdi's estate lawyers), Giulio Ricordi, and Leopoldo Metlicovitz (a poster artist for Ricordi). Seated: Maria Carrara Verdi (Verdi's adopted daughter), Barberina Strepponi (Verdi's sister-in-law), Giuseppe Verdi, and Giuditta Ricordi (Giulio's wife).
Herbert wrote his sixth operetta for prima donna Alice Nielsen and her newly formed Alice Nielsen Opera Company. Nielsen, having earned widespread praise in The Serenade, requested and received not one but three roles in The Fortune Teller. The story is set in Hungary and involves Irma, an heiress from Budapest, who is studying for the ballet. Irma is in love with a young Hussar captain but is being forced to marry the silly Count Barezowski. When a gypsy fortune teller, Musette, arrives, she is mistaken for Irma, a case of mistaken identity that fosters many complications.
Songs include the "Gypsy Love Song" ("Slumber on, my little gypsy sweetheart") and "Romany Life".
Credit: Robert Jacob Hamerton, restored by Adam Cuerden
The Contrabandista, or The Law of the Ladrones, is a two-act comic opera by Arthur Sullivan and F. C. Burnand. It premiered at St. George's Hall, London, on 18 December 1867 under the management of Thomas German Reed, for a run of 72 performances. There were brief revivals in Manchester in 1874 and America in 1880. In 1894, it was revised into a new opera, The Chieftain, with a completely different second act.
The piece was the first of Sullivan's full-length operas that was produced. Although it was not a great success, it exhibits many of the qualities and techniques that Sullivan would employ in composing his twenty further comic operas, including the famous series of fourteen Gilbert and Sullivan operas produced between 1871 and 1896.
William Grant Still (1895â1978) was an American composer of nearly 200 works, including five symphonies and nine operas. Often referred to as the "Dean of Afro-American Composers", Still was the first American composer to have an opera produced by the New York City Opera. His first symphony, entitled Afro-American Symphony, was until 1950 the most widely performed symphony composed by an American. Born in Mississippi, he grew up in Little Rock, Arkansas, attended Wilberforce University and Oberlin Conservatory of Music, and was a student of George Whitefield Chadwick and later Edgard VarĂšse. Still was the first African American to conduct a major American symphony orchestra and the first to have an opera performed on national television. Due to his close association and collaboration with prominent African-American literary and cultural figures, he is considered to be part of the Harlem Renaissance movement.
This picture of Still was taken by Carl Van Vechten in 1949; the photograph is in the collection of the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C.
Marian Anderson (February 27, 1897 – April 8, 1993)' was an American contralto who performed a wide range of music, from opera to spirituals with renowned orchestras in major concert and recital venues throughout the United States and Europe between 1925 and 1965.
Anderson was an important figure in the struggle for African-American artists to overcome racial prejudice in the United States during the mid-twentieth century. In 1939 during the era of racial segregation, the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) refused to allow Anderson to sing to an integrated audience in Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C. The incident placed Anderson in the spotlight of the international community on a level unusual for a classical musician. With the aid of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and her husband President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Anderson performed a critically acclaimed open-air concert on Easter Sunday, April 9, 1939, on the Lincoln Memorial steps in the capital before an integrated crowd of more than 75,000 people and a radio audience in the millions.
On January 7, 1955, Anderson became the first African-American to sing with the Metropolitan Opera in New York. At the invitation of director Rudolf Bing, she sang the part of Ulrica in Giuseppe Verdi's Un ballo in maschera. Anderson later said about the evening, "The curtain rose on the second scene and I was there on stage, mixing the witch's brew. I trembled, and when the audience applauded and applauded before I could sing a note, I felt myself tightening into a knot." Although she never appeared with the company again, Anderson was named a permanent member of the Metropolitan Opera company.
Credit: Metropolitan Printing Co., restored by Adam Cuerden
Poster advertising performances by Matilda Sissieretta Joyner Jones (January 5, 1868 or 1869 â June 24, 1933), an African-American soprano. She sometimes was called "The Black Patti" in reference to Italianopera singer Adelina Patti. Jones' repertoire included grand opera, light opera, and popular music. Trained at the Providence Academy of Music and the New England Conservatory of Music, Jones made her New York debut in 1888 at Steinway Hall, and four years later she performed at the White House for PresidentBenjamin Harrison. She eventually sang for four consecutive presidents and the British royal family, and met with international success. Besides the United States and the West Indies, Jones toured in South America, Australia, India, southern Africa, and Europe.
The highest-paid African-American performer of her time, later in her career she founded the Black Patti Troubadours (later renamed the Black Patti Musical Comedy Company), a musical and acrobatic act made up of 40 jugglers, comedians, dancers and a chorus of 40 trained singers. She remained the star of the Famous Troubadours for around two decades while they established their popularity in the principal cities of the United States and Canada, Jones retired from performing in 1915. In 2013, she was inducted into the Rhode Island Music Hall of Fame.
Lilly Walleni, the stage name of Sanna Klara Vallentin (1875â1920), was a Swedish mezzo-soprano. Thanks to her powerful voice and her dramatic temperament, she is remembered in particular for the Wagner roles she performed in Germany's principal opera houses as well as in Stockholm. From 1911 to 1916, she was engaged by the Court Opera in Hannover where she was honoured with two Lippe awards.
The first night was not altogether a success, as critics and the audience felt that Ruddygore (as it was originally spelled) did not measure up to its predecessor, The Mikado. After some changes, including respelling the title, it achieved a run of 288 performances. The Illustrated London News praised the work of both Gilbert and, especially, Sullivan: "Sir Arthur Sullivan has eminently succeeded alike in the expression of refined sentiment and comic humour. In the former respect, the charm of graceful melody prevails; while, in the latter, the music of the most grotesque situations is redolent of fun."
There were further changes and cuts, including a new overture, when Rupert D'Oyly Carte revived Ruddigore for the first time since its original run for a 1920 tour that turned into a London run in 1921 (pictured here). This caused the opera to enter the repertory, which it has never left since.
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