Adelia (opera)

Adelia (opera)

"Adelia, o La figlia dell’arciere" ("Adelia, or The Archer's Daughter") is a "melodramma serio", or opera, in three acts by Gaetano Donizetti. The Italian libretto was written by Felice Romani and Girolamo Marini after the anonymous French play. The opera premiered at the Teatro Apollo, Rome on 11 February 1841.

History

Although the opera premiered in 1841, Romani had written the libretto years earlier for composer Carlo Coccia who never ended up using it. The original opera libretto ended with the execution by hanging of Adelia's nobleman lover, Oliviero, and Adelia's "Tosca-style suicide", where she plunges to her death from a convenient rampart. [ [http://www.npr.org/programs/attheopera/archives/001007.ato.html NPR.ORG] ] This ending, however, was objected to by papal censors and Marini was brought in to provide an alternative happy ending, which was included in the final score. [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C04E0DF123DF936A25752C1A96F958260&scp=10&sq=Adelia%20&st=cse 1999 New York Times Article] ] At the time of the opera's first production, Donizetti was also busy with "La favorite" which had premiered in Paris a couple months prior to the opening of "Adelia". The composer commuted between Paris and Rome while working on both productions and actually arrived rather late in "Adelia"'s rehearsal period with the previously unseen Act III still in his suitcase. Donizetti wrote the opera with lauded bel canto soprano Giuseppina Strepponi in mind for the title role. [http://www.operatoday.com/content/2007/11/donizetti_adeli.php Opera Today] ]

The opening night for the opera proved to be rather tumultuous due to an unscrupulous promoter over-selling the house. Donizetti had to pay a scalper for his own seat to the premiere and frustrated ticket-holders inside and out erupted into a riot when they found that the seats they had bought were already filled by other ticket holders. In spite of the challenges of opening night, the critical response to "Adelia" was positive and the opera ended up being a financial success. [ [http://www.musicalcriticism.com/recordings/cd-adelia.htm Musical criticism.com] ] However, Donizetti was never happy with the quality of the overall work. In his book "The Bel Canto Operas", Charles Osborne says that "Donizetti believed that Adelia was a failure, and blamed himself for having accepted a libretto which he felt lacked dramatic situations, passion, or even verses capable of inspiring him."cite book
title= The Bel Canto Operas: Of Rossini, Donizetti and Bellini
last= Charles
first= James
year= 1994
publisher= Hal Leonard
isbn=9780931340840
]

Today "Adelia" is infrequently performed and widely unknown. Although the music is regarded highly, critics have noted that the plot of the opera is somewhat convoluted and silly which may be one reason why this opera is not performed often. New York Times music critic Anthony Tommasini said, "The score is distinguished by its endlessly inventive melodic flow, subtle harmonic shifts and elegant dramatic understatement." Opera News said, "Donizetti privately fumed at the requirement by Roman authorities that the opera have a happy ending. An improbable denouement, along with the static action and underdeveloped characters, no doubt has much to do with the near-total neglect of "Adelia", even in Italy. Some of the opera is admittedly Donizetti in auto-pilot, rum-ti-tum mode, but "Adelia" offers plenty of fine music. The sprightly overture, the rousing vendetta aria for Arnoldo and the chorus, the lilting music for Odetta and the attendants as they dress Adelia's hair, and the Act II trio are all notably melodic and well wrought. The extended love duet for Oliviero and Adelia is especially beautiful." [http://www.metoperafamily.org/operanews/_archive/899/recordings.899.html Opera News 1999] ] Other music reviewers have speculated that the challenging coloratura demands of the title role have caused many opera companies to shy away from a work that requires a highly gifted coloratura soprano. Indeed, the title character dominates the action throughout the opera with full-scale solo scenes in each of the three acts. That being said, recent productions of the opera include Bergamo (1997), at the Teatro Carlo Felice, Genoa (1998, recording available), the Opera Orchestra of New York at Carnegie Hall (1999), and the Haydn Orchester von Bozen und Trient (2007, recording available).

Roles

Synopsis

Setting: 15th century Burgundy, France

"Adelia" opens with the tale of Duke Carlo the Bold and his archers, returning victoriously from battle. Oliviero, a commoner, is caught sneaking out of the house of Arnoldo, the Duke’s bodyguard. He is accused of spoiling the honor of the Duke's daughter Adelia and the meddling crowd pronounces the ill-fate in store for the couple. Adina hopes to persuade her father otherwise, but Arnaldo denounces Oliviero to the Duke, who anyway had “other plans” for Adelia. Oliviero is sentenced to death by the Duke for violating women -- of lower station!-- as the law of the land says that any noble who became romantically involved with a commoner would be executed.

Arnoldo wisely tells the Duke that killing Oliviero will not restore the family honor, so the Duke decideds to make Oliviero a Count and allow the two to marry with the intent of beheading the groom after the wedding once his daughter's honor has been restored. Later, Oliviero interupts the wedding preperations by informing Adelia of a suspicious scaffold being erected just outside. The couple dreams of happy love but a letter reveals the Duke’s true plans. Adelia decides to not marry her love in order to save him from death but her father in turn threatens his own daughter with death if she does not restore the family honor by marrying Oliviero. However, Arnoldo can’t go through with slaying his daughter and breaks down in tears. Emotionally manipulated Adelia agrees to marry Oliviero.

Meanwhile, Oliviero begins to doubt the bride’s feelings since she has been acting strangely. He realizes that the threat of the scaffold must be giving her a nervous breakdown. However, the Duke has a sudden and wholly unmotivated change of heart, sparing Oliviero, ennobling Arnoldo (to legitimize the match), and finds a buyer for a like-new, never-used scaffold. Adelia weeps for joy.

Notable songs

*"Fui preaga; ah, tu lo vedi" Act I aria for Adelia
*"Siam giunti" Act I aria for Arnoldo
*"Ah, no, non posso" Act II duet for Adelia and Arnoldo
*"Tutto di te sollecito" Act II duet for Adelia and Oliviero
*"Che fia di me!" Act III aria for Oliviero
*"Ah! mi lasciate" Act III aria for Adelia

Recordings

*John Neschling conducting the Chorus and Orchestra of the Teatro Carlo Felice at Genoa, with Mariella Devia, Octavio Arevalo, Stefano Antonucci, Boris Martinovic, 2000 (BMG Ricordi, ASIN: B00000IPB7)

*Gustav Kuhn conducting the Haydn Orchester von Bozen und Trient, with , Michela Sburlati, Hermine Haselböck, David Sotgiu, Xavier Rouillon, Giorgio Valenta, Giulio Mastrototaro, and Andrea Silvestrelli, 2007 (RCA label, ASIN: B000R28KZS)

References

ources

*Mary Ann Smart. The "New Grove Dictionary of Opera", edited by Stanley Sadie (1992), 5,448 pages, ISBN 0-333-73432-7 and ISBN 1-56159-228-5
*"The Oxford Dictionary of Opera", by John Warrack and Ewan West (1992), 782 pages, ISBN 0-19-869164-5
*"Donizetti and his Operas", by William Ashbrook, 752 pages, Cambridge University Press, 1982. ISBN 978-0521276634
*"Gaetano Donizetti - A Guide to Research", by James P. Cassaro, 229 pages, New York: Garland Publishing, 2000. ISBN 978-0815323501

External links

* [http://www.bobsuniverse.com/BOW/Libretti/Comp-Donizetti/Donizetti-Adelia-1841.pdf Online Italian libretto]
* [http://opera.stanford.edu/Donizetti/Adelia/libretto.html Adelia at Opera Glass]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JXCYAscBZNo Recording of the final scene of Adelia]


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