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Gian Carlo Menotti

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Menotti redirects here. If you are looking for the Argentine coach see César Luis Menotti.
Gian Carlo Menotti, photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1944

Gian Carlo Menotti (born July 7, 1911, Cadegliano-Viconago, Italy) is an Italian-born American composer and librettist. He wrote the classic Christmas opera Amahl and the Night Visitors. He founded the noted Il Festival dei Due Mondi (the Festival of Two Worlds) in 1958, and its American counterpart, Spoleto Festival USA, in 1977.

Menotti began writing songs when he was 7 and at 11 wrote both the libretto and music for his first opera, The Death of Pierrot. He began formal training at Milan's Verdi Conservatory in 1923.

After the death of his father, Menotti and his mother came to the United States and he enrolled in Philadelphia's Curtis Institute of Music. Fellow students at Curtis included Leonard Bernstein, and Samuel Barber, who became Menotti's partner in life and in work, with Menotti crafting the libretto for Barber's most famous opera, Vanessa, which premiered in 1958 at the Metropolitan Opera. It was at Curtis that he wrote his first mature opera, Amelia al Ballo (Amelia Goes to the Ball), to his own Italian text. The Island of God and The Last Savage were the only other operas he wrote in Italian, the rest being in English. He wrote the libretti of all his operas. His most successful works were composed in the 1940s and 1950s. Menotti also taught at the Curtis Institute of Music, one of his most successful students and protogés being American composer Stanley Hollingsworth.

He wrote the libretti to two Samuel Barber operas, Vanessa and A Hand of Bridge, as well as revising the latter for Antony and Cleopatra. Amelia was so successful that NBC commissioned an opera for radio; The Old Maid and the Thief was the first such work ever written. Following this, he wrote a ballet, Sebastian (1944), and a piano concerto (1945) before returning to opera with The Medium and The Telephone.

His first full-length opera, The Consul, was premiered in 1950; it won both the Pulitzer Prize for Music and the New York Drama Circle Critics' Award for Musical Play of the Year (the latter in 1954). In 1951, Menotti wrote his beloved Christmas opera Amahl and the Night Visitors for the Hallmark Hall of Fame. In 1958, he founded the Festival of Two Worlds in Spoleto, Italy; he founded its companion festival, in Charleston, South Carolina, in 1977.

He left Spoleto USA in 1993 to take the helm of the Rome Opera. In 1984 Menotti was awarded the Kennedy Center Honor for achievement in the arts, and in 1991 he was chosen Musical America's "Musician of the Year". In addition to composing operas to his own texts, on his own chosen subject matter, Menotti directs most productions of his work.

After he and his partner Samuel Barber sold their Westchester County, New York home, Capricorn, Menotti had a long intimate relationship with the conductor Thomas Schippers, who died in 1977. Barber died in 1981.

His influence extends beyond the realm of modern classical music, inasmuch as international platinum-selling pop star Laura Branigan ("Gloria," "How Am I Supposed To Live Without You") gave credit to Menotti as her vocal coach on several of her albums of the 1980s and 1990s.

Menotti has written several ballets, and numerous choral works as well; of these, the most notable is his cantata The Death of the Bishop of Brindisi, written in 1963. He has also written a violin concerto, and a stage play (The Leper). It is in the field of opera, however, that he has made his most notable contributions to American cultural life. His operas include:

(Source: usopera.com)

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