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Zelmira

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Template:Rossini operas Zelmira is an opera in two acts by Gioachino Rossini to a libretto by Andrea Leone Tottola. Based on the French play, Zelmire by de Belloy, it was the last of the composer's Neapolitan operas. Stendhal called its music Teutonic, comparing it with La clemenza di Tito but remarking: "...while Mozart would probably, had he lived, have grown completely Italian, Rossini may well, by the end of his career, have become more German than Beethoven himself!" [1]

Performance history

The first performance of Zelmira was in Naples at the Teatro di San Carlo on 16 February 1822. This was followed by a successful premiere in Vienna on 13 April 1822, as part of a three-month long Rossini Festival for which Rossini wrote some additional music. Performances in several Italian cities followed, and then the London premiere on 24 January 1824 with Rossini conducting and his now-wife, Isabella Colbran, in the title role. It was seen in Paris in 1826. There was one presentation in the US in New Orleans "around" 1835.[2]

Over 100 years were to pass before the opera was presented in Naples in 1965, but "to no great acclaim".[2] The 1980s saw two presentations, a concert performance in Venice in 1998 plus a production by the Rome Opera in 1989.

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere Cast, 16 February 1822
(Conductor: Nicola Festa)
Polidoro, King of Lesbos bass Antonio Ambrosi
Zelmira, his daughter soprano Isabella Colbran
Emma, her confidant contralto Anna Maria Cecconi
Ilo, Prince of Troy and husband of Zelmira tenor Giovanni David
Antenore, a usurper from Mytilene tenor Andrea Nozzari
Leucippo, his confidant, a general bass-baritone Michele Benedetti
Eacide, a follower of Prince Ilo tenor Gaetano Chizzola
High priest of Jupiter bass Massimo Orlandini
Priests, populace, Mytilene army, Ilo's followers, Zelmira's young son (silent)

Synopsis

Set for the mausoleum (lithograph by Pasquale Canna, 1771 - 1830)

The opera's complicated plot revolves around Zelmira, her father Polidoro, the wise and beloved king of the Isle of Lesbos, and her husband, Prince Ilo. Before the action begins, Ilo had departed the island to defend his homeland. While he was gone, Azor, the lord of Mytilene and a disappointed suitor of Zelmira, had invaded Lesbos with the intention of assassinating King Polidoro and taking over his throne. Zelmira, however, had managed to conceal her father in the royal mausoleum and then told Azor that he was hiding in the temple to Ceres. Azor burnt down the temple, thinking he had killed the King, but he was in turn killed on orders from Antenore, who also aspired to the throne.

Act 1

The Mytilene warriors are mourning the death of Azor. Antenore, with the help of Leucippo, plots to take over the throne of Lesbos by trying to incriminate Zelmira in the deaths of Azor and her father. At first, even Emma, Zelmira's confidante, believes the accusations. Fearing for the safety of her young son, Zelmira reveals to Emma that her father is still alive and asks her to take the child into hiding. Prince Ilo returns to the island. Zelmira is afraid to tell him of the accusations against her or to defend herself. Instead, Prince Ilo hears only Antenore's version of the story. Antenore is crowned King of Lesbos. Leucippo attempts to murder Ilo, but is stopped by Zelmira. Found with the dagger in her hand, Zelmira is now also accused of attempting to murder her husband and is imprisoned.

Act 2

Leucippo intercepts a letter from Zelmira to Ilo in which she tells him that her father is still alive and that the accusations against her are false. He and Antenore temporarily free her from prison and trick her into revealing her father's hiding place. Both father and daughter are recaptured and await their deaths at the hands of the plotters. Meanwhile, Prince Ilo is distraught at what he believes to be the death of Polidoro and the unhappy end to his marriage. Emma appears and tells Prince Ilo the truth about Zelmira. He and his men rescue Zelmira and Polidoro. Zelmira is happily reunited with her husband and child, while both Antenore and Leucippo are led off in chains.[3]

Recordings

Year Cast:
Zelmira, Ilo, Emma, Antenore, Polidoro
Conductor,
Opera House and Orchestra
Label [4]
1965 Virginia Zeani,
Nicola Tagger,
Gastone Limarilli,
Paolo Washington,
Anna Rota
Carlo Franci,
Orchestra and Chorus of the Teatro San Carlo
(Recording of a performance at Naples, 10 April)
Audio CD: Great Opera Performances
Cat: G.O.P. 780; Opera d'Oro
Cat: OPD 1455
1989 Cecilia Gasdia,
William Matteuzzi,
Bernarda Fink,
Chris Merritt,
Jose Garcia
Claudio Scimone,
I Solisti Veneti
Audio CD: Erato
Cat: 45419
2003 Elizabeth Futral,
Antonino Siragusa,
Manuela Custer,
Bruce Ford,
Marco Vinco
Maurizio Benini,
Scottish Chamber Orchestra
Audio CD: Opera Rara
Cat: ORC 27

References

Notes

  1. ^ Stendhal, 1970 edition, p.394
  2. ^ a b Osborne, C. p. 108
  3. ^ Based on the synopsis in Italian in Gelli, Piero (ed.), Dizionario dell'Opera, 2006, Milan: Baldini Castoldi Dalai, ISBN 88-8490-780-2
  4. ^ Recordings of Zelmira on operadis-opera-discography.org.uk

Sources

  • Greenwald, Helen and Kathleen Kuzmick Hansell, Zelmira, (the critical edition). Vol. 33 of the Fondazione Rossini Pesaro's Opere (Ricordi 2005). The music for the large stage band (20+) fills a separate volume.
  • Holden, Amanda (Ed.), The New Penguin Opera Guide, New York: Penguin Putnam, 2001. ISBN 0-14-029312-4
  • Kalmus/Belwin Mills has reprinted a piano-vocal score of apparently French origin with a table of contents giving prices for all the individual numbers included. No recitatives are given and whole scenes are omitted.
  • Osborne, Charles, The Bel Canto Operas of Rossini, Donizetti, and Bellini, Portland, Oregon: Amadeus Press, 1994 ISBN 0-931340-71-3
  • Osborne, Richard, Rossini, Ithaca, New York: Northeastern University Press, 1990 ISBN 1-55553-088-5 ISBN 1-55553-088-5
  • Osborne, Richard (1992), "Zelmira", The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, ed. Stanley Sadie (London) ISBN 0-333-73432-7
  • Scimone, Claudio, Notes on the opera, trans. John Underwood, in booklet accompanying the 1989 Erato recording.
  • Stendhal, (translated and annotated by Richard N. Coe), Life of Rossini, University of Washington Press, 1972 ISBN 978-0-670-42790-1 ISBN 0-295-95189-3