Jump to content

Iris (opera)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by InternetArchiveBot (talk | contribs) at 05:17, 26 January 2020 (Rescuing 1 sources and tagging 0 as dead.) #IABot (v2.0). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Iris
Opera by Pietro Mascagni
Poster by Casa Ricordi, 1898
LibrettistLuigi Illica
LanguageItalian
Premiere
22 November 1898 (1898-11-22)

Iris (Italian: [ˈiːris]) is an opera in three acts by Pietro Mascagni to an original Italian libretto by Luigi Illica. It premiered on 22 November 1898 at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome. The story is set in Japan during legendary times.

Background and performance history

In common with all of Mascagni's full-length operas, Iris is now rarely performed, even in Italy, although along with L'Amico Fritz it remains one of the composer's more performed operas. Two of the opera's most memorable numbers are the tenor's serenade ("Apri la tua finestra") and the Hymn to the Sun ("Inno al Sole").

The so-called "aria della piovra" ("Octopus aria"), "Un dì, ero piccina," where Iris describes a screen she had seen in a Buddhist temple when she was a child, depicting an octopus coiling with its tentacles around a young woman, may have been inspired by the print "The Dream of the Fisherman's Wife" (1814) by the Japanese artist Hokusai.[1]

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere cast, 22 November 1898[2]
(Conductor: Pietro Mascagni)
Iris soprano Hariclea Darclée
Il Cieco bass Giuseppe Tisci Rubini
Osaka tenor Fernando De Lucia
Kyoto baritone Guglielmo Caruson[3]
Geisha soprano Ernestina Tilde Milanesi
Haberdasher tenor Eugenio Grossi
Rag merchant tenor Piero Schiavazzi
Chorus: shopkeepers, geishas, laundry girls, samurai, citizens

Synopsis

Act I

The opera begins with an invisible choir singing a "Hymn to the Sun," the second best-known piece in the opera.

Iris, the young and innocent daughter of a blind old man, Il Cieco, lives happily, enjoying the sun and the simple things of nature. Osaka, a young lord in search of adventures, plans to kidnap her with the help of Kyoto who keeps a geisha house. During a puppet show, Osaka enters disguised as a child of the sun, singing the serenade "Apri la tua finestra [Open Your Window]," the most famous selection in the opera. He conquers the heart of Iris, and Samurai carry her off, conducting her to Kyoto's geisha house called Yoshiwara. Before leaving, Kyoto anonymously leaves money on Il Cieco's doorstep, as well as a note telling him where she has gone and implying that she has abandoned him.

Act II

At Yoshiwara, where, according to the libretto, the sun never penetrates, Iris wakes up under the illusion of having died and gone to Paradise. Osaka arrives and tries to seduce her but fails to persuade her to yield to his advances. Tired and annoyed by her simplicity and innocence, Osaka tells Kyoto to get rid of her. Instead Kyoto, hoping to make some profit off of Iris, exposes her to the crowds on a balcony of the house. Il Cieco, having assumed that Iris went to the geisha house of her own accord, comes there. He curses her, repeatedly flinging mud in her face. She is overwhelmed by sudden madness at her father's incomprehensible actions. Before anyone, including the remorse-stricken Osaka who has returned, can stop her, Iris rushes back into the house and throws herself down a shaft leading to a sewer.

Act III

The next morning in the sewer, ragpickers begin stealing Iris' silken clothing; she revives, frightening away the ragpickers. She quickly becomes delirious and imagines that she hears the voices of the three men, first Osaka, then Kyoto, and finally Il Cieco, each mocking her. She rejoices when she feels the warm rays of the rising sun, accompanied by a return of the "Hymn to the Sun," and she dies. Tendrils of flowers bear the soul of Iris to heaven.

Instrumentation

Woodwinds Percussion Strings
2 Flutes Timpani (set of 4) Violin I, II
1 Piccolo (doubles fife) Bass Drum Viola
2 Oboes Cymbals Celli
1 English Horn Triangle Double Basses
2 Clarinets Glockenspiel 2 Harps
1 Bass Clarinet Giuoco di tam tams (13 tuned tam tams A2-A3; Note these

will need to be hung on 2 racks)

Shamisen
2 Bassoons Large tam tam
1 Contrabassoon Small tam tam
Brass Tambourine
4 Horns Timpani Giapponese
3 Trumpets
4 Trombones
4 Cornetts

References

Notes

  1. ^ Mallach, Alan (2002). Pietro Mascagni and his Operas. UPNE. p. 127 and note. Retrieved January 28, 2011. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ Premiere cast from Casaglia (2005).
  3. ^ Caruson created the role of Kyoto. See photo of Caruson in costume. Retrieved 11 August 2015. For a list of Caruson's performances, see Marcocci, Roberto. "Caruson Guglielmo". La voce antica (in Italian). Retrieved 11 August 2015. From a review of Verdi's Otello in the Teatro Regio (Parma): "The baritone Caruson, Iago, is a pure, most intelligent artist, accenting in a truly exceptional way, but has limited vocal means. On successive evenings he was greatly applauded, since he possesses the secret of real singing, sadly abandoned in our days." ("Il baritono Caruson, Jago, è pure artista intelligentissimo, accenta in modo veramente eccezionale, ma dispone di limitati mezzi vocali. Nelle sere successive sarà maggiormente applaudito, perché possiede il segreto del vero canto purtroppo ai dì nostri abbandonato.") Source: Valerio Cervetti (ed.). "Altre voci : Carnevale 1894-95". Giulio Ferrarini (in Italian). La Casa della Musica. Retrieved 11 August 2015.

Sources

  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). Iris. Almanacco Amadeus. Retrieved 5 December 2013 (in Italian).
  • Warrack, John and West, Ewan (1992), The Oxford Dictionary of Opera, 782 pp., ISBN 0-19-869164-5