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Belisario

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Belisario
Opera by Gaetano Donizetti
Title page of the 1836 libretto
LibrettistSalvadore Cammarano
LanguageItalian
Based onBelisarius
by Eduard von Schenk
Premiere
18 March 1836 (1836-03-18)

Belisario (Belisarius) is a tragedia lirica (tragic opera) in three acts by Gaetano Donizetti. Salvadore Cammarano wrote the Italian libretto after Luigi Marchionni's adaptation of Eduard von Schenk's [de] play, Belisarius, first staged in Munich in 1820 and then (in Italian) in Naples in 1826.[1] The plot is loosely based on the life of the famous general Belisarius of the 6th century Byzantine Empire.

It premiered to critical and popular success on 4 February 1836 at the Teatro La Fenice, Venice, and was given many additional performances that season,[2] although Donizetti scholar William Ashbrook notes that there would have been more had the opera not been presented so late in the season.[3]

However, in spite of its initial short-term success and critical reaction, as represented by a review in La Gazzetta privilegiata which stated that "A new masterwork has been added to Italian music...Belisario not only pleased and delighted, but also conquered, enflamed and ravished the full auditorium",[4] in the long run, had "Donizetti poured music of the calibre of his Lucia di Lammermoor into the score of Belisario the shortcomings of its wayward plot and dramatic structure would matter less".[5] By April 1836, even the composer himself recognized that the work stood below Lucia in accomplishment.[5]

Composition history

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With the success of Lucia di Lammermoor in September 1835, Donizetti moved on to stagings of Maria Stuarda, the first under that name at La Scala in late 1835. He had signed the contract in July 1835 to present Belisario in Venice, for what would be the first visit to that city since 1819, but it was not until October that the subject was finally agreed upon.

There followed discussions with impresario Natale Fabbrici about employing a Venetian librettist, Pietro Beltrame. However, not only did the composer prefer to work with a librettist known to him and with whom he could work in close proximity,[6] but he had already begun working with Cammarano who was revising – to the composer's satisfaction – an earlier version of Belisario[7] which the librettist had submitted to the Teatro San Carlo management in 1832.[6]

Of greater concern to Donizetti was the singers who were to be engaged. Primarily, he was concerned about the identity of the leading tenor: "Until I know for sure, I cannot compose duets, finales and trios", he writes in October.[8] By the time Donizetti arrived in Venice on 6 January 1836, the score of Belisario was almost finished, and because of delays, he had time to hear several of the proposed singers in a performance of Rossini's L'assedio di Corinto given on 12 January, the day before rehearsals of Belisario were to begin.

In the case of Antonietta Vial (who was to sing the role of Irene and whom he described on first hearing her as "both a bastard soprano and a veiled contralto",[9] he was able to make adjustments to suit her vocal limitations. By the time of the first performance, which was well received, Donizetti reported to his publisher the audience's reaction to most of the numbers, specifically that "in the duet for Vial and Salvatore, many shouts of bravi, but at the end (so they say) the situation is so moving that they were weeping".[10]

In a review of a 2011 London performance, some of the strengths of Donizetti's score are outlined:

The central couple are played by bass and soprano, which brings Verdi's Macbeth immediately to mind. But Donizetti's score has none of Verdi's furious compression, and dramatically we are in very different territory. Belisario and Antonina, the latter more Regan than Lady Macbeth, are at each others' throats rather than united by desire for power. Her machinations lead to his being blinded then expelled from Byzantium into the natural world beyond. The emotional centre lies, however, in Donizetti's forceful depiction of Belisario's relationship with his strong-willed daughter Irene – you think at once of Cordelia – and his eventual reunion with Alamiro, the son who vanished in infancy and in whose supposed murder Belisario is implicated.[11]

Performance history

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19th century

The opera's popularity continued through the 19th century, with stagings in 31 cities both in Europe and America.[2] Its first performance in London took place on 1 April 1837, but it only reached the United States on 29 July 1843 in Philadelphia and later in New York on 14 February 1844.[2]

After an 1899 performance in Koblenz, the opera disappeared.

20th century and beyond

Modern productions have been rare. Revivals took place in 1969 at La Fenice,[12] in 1970 at Bergamo, in 1972 in London, in 1973 in Naples, in 1981 in Buenos Aires, and in 1990 at Rutgers University in New Jersey.[2] Most notable amongst performers in the leading female role has been Leyla Gencer.

The opera was presented in January 2005 by the North Carolina School for Arts [13] using a then brand-new performance score prepared by Ottavio Sbragia. Realizing close to the beginning of rehearsals that a performance score was not available, NCSA enlisted the help of musicologist Philip Gossett, who was able to put them in touch with Sbragia, and his version, which was based on the original 1836 performances in Venice, became the work's critical edition.[14]

The same year saw stagings by Turkish State Opera and Ballet in Istanbul.[15]

In July 2010, the opera was performed by the Buenos Aires Lirica[16] and a concert performance, starring Nelly Miricioiu with London's Chelsea Opera Group[17] under conductor Richard Bonynge, was given at Queen Elizabeth Hall on 13 February 2011[11][18]

Belisario was given a new production at the Teatro Donizetti in Bergamo as part of the Donizetti Festival in September 2012 using the critical edition,[19] while the BBC Symphony Orchestra presented a concert performance in London on 28 October 2012 with Canadian soprano Joyce El-Khoury as Antonina and Sicilian baritone Nicola Alaimo as the title character. [20][21] The cast recorded the opera for Opera Rara.[20]

Roles

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Carolina Ungher, who created the role of Antonina
Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 4 February 1836
Antonina, Belisario's wife soprano Carolina Ungher
Irene, their daughter mezzo-soprano Antonietta Vial
Belisario, General of the army baritone Celestino Salvatori
Giustiniano, Emperor of the Orient bass Saverio Giorgi
Alamiro, prisoner of Belisario tenor Ignazio Pasini
Eudora soprano Amalia Badessi
Eutropio, head of the imperial guard tenor Adone Dell'Oro
Eusebio, caretaker of the prison bass Giovanni Rizzi
Ottario bass Giovanni Rizzi
Senators, veterans, shepherds, guards, captives, people

Synopsis

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Place: Byzantium and the Haemus mountains.
Time: sixth century A.D.

Act 1

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Il Trionfo (Triumph)[5]

The hall in the emperor's palace

Irene and the populace greet the victor Belisarius. Antonina hates her husband because Proclus, the slave of Belisarius, has confessed on his deathbed, that upon command of his master he had exposed her son on the shore of the ocean, thus causing his death. The Emperor Justinian greets his commander and grants his prayer for the release of the prisoners. The captive, Alamiro, who adores Belisarius, refuses to leave him (Recitative and duet: Che veggio!... Il don sprezzi forse, Alamiro? / "What do I see, you Alamiro reject my gift?"). The general adopts him in place of his long lost son. Irene congratulates her father, but Antonina has already begun her work of hate, by traducing Belisarius to Justinian, and the innocent man is accused of high treason and thrown into prison on the evidence of his wife.

Act 2

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L'Esilio (Exile)

Before the prison

Alamiro and his friends lament the fate of Belisarius, whose eyes have been put out by his enemies, falsely construing and disobeying the commands of the emperor. Alamiro swears vengeance (Aria: Trema, Bisanzio! sterminatrice, Su te la guerra discenderà / "Tremble, murderous Byzantium, war shall descend upon thee"). Irene clad as a youth arrives to act as guide to her father, who is about to be released from prison (Duet: Oh tu, che della eterna, orribil notte /"Oh thou, who in terrible darkness").

Act 3

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La Morte (Death)

In the mountains

As the clang of weapons is heard, Irene leads Belisarius to a cave for safety. Alamiro now leads the army of the Alanni against Byzantium to avenge Belisarius. Belisarius confronts him and recognizes him as his son through an amulet. At his father's request, the son leaves the ranks of the enemies of Byzantium, and the Alanni, now under the command of Ottavio, march to Byzantium, having no fear, as the emperor's army is bereft of its leader.

Hall in Byzantium

Antonina, in remorse, tells the emperor that her testimony against Belisarius was false. Irene approaches with news of the victory and informs Antonina that Alamiro is her son, and that it was the slave, not Belisarius, who had planned his death. Meanwhile, the blind Belisarius has led the Byzantine army and defeated the Alanni, who had threatened Byzantium, but an arrow has mortally wounded him. He is carried in dying, and the sorrowing emperor promises to be a father to Alamiro and Irene.

Recordings

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Year Cast: Belisario,
Antonina,
Irene,
Alamiro,
Giustiniano
Conductor,
opera house and orchestra
Label[22]
1969 Giuseppe Taddei,
Leyla Gencer,
Mirna Pecile,
Umberto Grilli,
Nicola Zaccaria
Gianandrea Gavazzeni,
Teatro La Fenice Orchestra and Chorus
(Recording of a performance at Teatro La Fenice, Venice, on 9 or 14 May)
CD: Melodram
Cat: MEL 27051
Mondo Musica
Cat: MFOH 10301
Opera d'Oro
Cat: OPD 1258
1970 Renato Bruson,
Leyla Gencer,
Mirna Pecile,
Umberto Grilli,
??
Adolfo Camozzo,
Orchestra and Chorus of the Teatro Donizetti di Bergamo
(Recording of a performance at Bergamo, October)
CD: Hunt
Cat: CD 586
1981 Renato Bruson,
Mara Zampieri,
Stefania Toczyska,
Vittorio Terranova,
Nino Meneghetti
Gianfranco Masini,
Teatro Colón Orchestra and Chorus
CD: HRE
Cat: 385
1997 Jacek Strauch,
Ines Salazar,
Natalia Biorro,
Sergei Homov,
Konstantin Sfiris
Dan Ratiu,
Grazer Philharmonisches Orchester and Chorus
(Video recording of a performance in a modern production at the Graz Opera, November or December)
Video Cassette: Premiere Opera Ltd
Cat: VID 2234 (NTSC)
2012 Nicola Alaimo,
Joyce El-Khoury,
Camilla Roberts,
Russell Thomas,
Alastair Miles
Sir Mark Elder,
BBC Symphony Orchestra and the BBC Singers
(Studio recording made at BBC Maida Vale Studios, London, October 2012)
CD: Opera Rara,
Cat: ORC 49[23]

References

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Notes

  1. ^ Osborne 1994, p. 246; Ashbrook 1982, p. 561; Ashbrook 1992, p. 384; Smart & Budden, 2001. Jean-François Marmontel's Bélisaire has also been suggested as a source: Weinstock 1963, p. 350; Ashbrook & Hibberd 2001, p. 237, state it was Marmontel's 1776 "play"), but Osborne strongly asserts that Cammarano's primary source must have been Marchionni's Italian translation of Schenk's 1820 play Belisar, which had been presented in Naples in 1826, and not Marmontel's 1766 novel.
  2. ^ a b c d Osborne 1994, pp. 245–248
  3. ^ Ashbrook 1982, p. 637: Ashbrook states that there were "28 consecutive performances" that season (p. 107), whereas Osborne claims 17. (p. 246)
  4. ^ Quoted in Osborne, 1994, p. 246
  5. ^ a b c Osborne, 1994, p. 247
  6. ^ a b Commons 2013, pp. 12–14: "It would be imprudent to have the poet so far removed from the maestro" Donizetti had noted in a letter of 24 October.
  7. ^ Ashbrook 1982, pp. 103–105
  8. ^ Donizetti to Fabbrici, 24 October 1835 in Ashbrook 1982, p. 106
  9. ^ Donizetti to Giovanni Ricordi, 1 February 1836, in Commons 2013, p. 20
  10. ^ Donizetti to Ricordi, 5 February 1836, in Ashbrook 1982, p. 107
  11. ^ a b Tim Ashley (21 February 2011). "Belisario – Review". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 1 September 2011.
  12. ^ Robert Baxter, "Belisario Review", The Opera Quarterly, vol. 22, no. 1 (Winter 2006), pp. 182–184 (partial article; refers to several different recordings). Retrieved 2 September 2012
  13. ^ Announcement of the stagings on donizettisociety.com Retrieved 2 September 2012
  14. ^ Nancy Goldsmith, "A Note on the Score", article on the Donizetti Society (London) website. Retrieved 2 September 2012
  15. ^ Turkish State Opera website Archived July 30, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 2 September 2012
  16. ^ Full program pdf with essays, etc. in Spanish on balirica.org.ar Retrieved 2 September 2012.
  17. ^ Robert Hugill (16 February 2011). "Stylish and Powerful: Donizetti's Belisario". Chelsea Opera Group. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  18. ^ Jim Pritchard review, musicweb-international.com. Retrieved 1 September 2012
  19. ^ Operabase.com listing Retrieved 26 August 2012
  20. ^ a b "Belisario, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Mark Elder, Barbican" by Michael Church, The Independent (London), 29 October 2012. Retrieved 30 October 2012
  21. ^ Time Ashley (30 October 2012). "Belisario – review". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 31 October 2012.
  22. ^ Recordings on operadis-opera-discography.org.uk
  23. ^ "Bellisario recording information on Opera Rara website". Archived from the original on 7 August 2016. Retrieved 19 May 2014.

Cited sources

Further reading

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  • Allitt, John Stewart (1991), Donizetti: in the light of Romanticism and the teaching of Johann Simon Mayr, Shaftesbury: Element Books, Ltd (UK); Rockport, MA: Element, Inc.(USA)
  • Black, John (1982), Donizetti’s Operas in Naples, 1822–1848. London: The Donizetti Society.
  • Melitz, Leo [de] (1921). The Opera Goer's Complete Guide, p. 35 (source of the synopsis)
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