Showing posts with label Vassallo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vassallo. Show all posts

UN BALLO IN MASCHERA [Gustavus III]

Giuseppe Verdi (1813 - 1901)
Opera in three acts in Italian
Libretto: Antonio Somma
Premièr at Apollo Theatre, Rome  – 17 February 1859
25, 28 November - 03 December 1961
Teatro Comunale, Bologna

OPENING PERFORMANCE OF TEATRO COMUNALE DI BOLOGNA

Conductor: Oliviero de Fabritiis
Chorus master: Gaetano Riccitelli
Stage director: Aldo M. Vassallo
Scene and costumes: C.M. Cristini (from Teatro San Carlo di Napoli)

Count Riccardo Governor of Warwick (Gustavus III) CARLO BERGONZI tenor
Amelia LEYLA GENCER soprano
Renato Secretary to the Governor (Anckarstroem) MARIO ZANASI baritone
Samuele (Count Ribbing) enemy of the Governer ALESSANDRO MADDALENA bass
Tomaso (Count Horn) enemy of the Governer GIOVANNI FOIANI bass
Silvano a sailor (Cristian) FRANCO BORDONI baritone
Oscar a page DORA GATTA soprano
Ulrica a fortune-teller (Arvidson) ADRIANA LAZZARINI mezzo-soprano
Un guidice ANGELO MERCURIALI
Un servo d’Amelia LUIGI RONCHI

Time: Boston (USA) or Sweden
Place: End of Eighteenth Century or 1792

Recording date

Photos © Maria Jose MAS MARQUES, Barcelona











OPERA MAGAZINE                                                
1962 February

OPERA MAGAZINE                                                

1962 November

Bologna. The third and last opera of the season was Un Ballo in Maschera, conducted in an opulent fashion by Gavazzeni. Carlo Bergonzi was musically and dramatically effective as Riccardo. He was ably supported by Leyla Gencer, who has now become a very fine artist, and her interpretation of Amelia's role was first-class. Mario Zanasi gave a polished performance as Renato, Maria Manni Jottini was a pert Oscar, and Adriana Lazzarini was careful not to play Ulrica as a latter-day Azucena. Antonio Cassinelli and Alessandro Maddalena were the effective Sam and Tom. Maestrini was again the producer and Colonello the designer. 

OPERA NEWS
UN BALLO IN MASCHERA
Links from OPERA NEWS ARCHIVES related with Gencer’s performances

Opera News - Un Ballo in Maschera

... November 28, 1961, this performance (previously available on Myto and now reissued)
features two big-name stars in the leading roles — Leyla Gencer and Carol ...

COMPLETE RECORDING                  
1961.11.28

Recording Excerpts [1961.11.28]

Prelude Act I Scene I
Posa in pace Act I Scene I
La rivedra nell'estasi Act I Scene I
Alla vita che t'arride Act I Scene I
Volta la terrea fronte Act I Scene I
Ogni cura si doni al diletto Act I Scene I
Zitti … l'incanto non dessi turbare Act I Scene II
Re dell'abisso, affrettati Act I Scene II
Che v'agita così? Act I Scene II
Della citta all'occaso Act I Scene II
Su, profetessa, monta il treppie Act I Scene II
Di' tu se fedele Act I Scene II
Orsu, amici Act I Scene II
E' scherzo od e follia Act I Scene II
Finisci il vaticinio Act I Scene II
Prelude Act II Scene I
Ecco l'orrido campo Act II
Ma dall'arido stelo divulsa Act II
Teco io sto Act II
Ahime! S'appressa alcun Act II
Seguitemi Act II
Ve', se di notte qui colla sposa Act II
A tal colpa e nulla il pianto Act III Scene I
Morro, ma prima in grazia Act III Scene I
Alzati! la tuo figlio Act III Scene I
Alzati … Eri tu che macchiavi
Siam soli udite Act III Scene I
Dunque l'onta di tutti sol una Act III Scene I
D'una grazia vi supplico Act III Scene I
Il messaggio entri Act III Scene I
Di che fulgor Act III Scene II
Forse la soglia attinse Act III Scene II
Ma se m'e forza perderti Act III Scene II
Saper vorreste Act III Scene III
Fervono amori e danze  Act III Scene III
Ah! perche qui? Fuggite Act III Scene III
Ella e pura  Act III Scene III

Recording Excerpts [1961.11.25]

Amici miei.. soldat… la riverda nell’estasi Act I Scene I
Alla vita che t'arride Act I Scene I
Volta la terrea fronte Act I Scene I
Zitti... l'incanto non dèssi turbare … Re dell'abisso Act I Scene I
Di' tu se fedele Act I Scene I
E' scherzo od è follia Act I Scene I
Ecco l'orrido campo ove s'accoppia Act II
Non sai tu che se l'anima Act II
Morrò, ma prima in grazia Act III Scene I
Alzati; là tuo figlio … Eri tu che macchiavi ... Act III Scene I
Forse la soglia attinse … Ma se m'è forza perderti … Act III Scene II
Ah! perché qui! Fuggite Act III Scene III

FROM CD BOOKLET

UN BALLO IN MASCHERA

Paris: January 14, 1858. A large crowd had gathered before the Opéra to see the arrival of Napoleon III and the Empress for the Imperial Gala. Just as their carriage reached the Rue le Pelletier, three explosions were heard. Carnage, screams, corpses. Eventually 156 casualties were counted. Both Napoleon and the Empress were unharmed, although the bombs had exploded in their immediate vicinity. The Police Commissioner pleaded with the imperial couple nevertheless to attend the performance, in order not to cause further uproar. The perpetrator was later identified as Felice Orsini, an Italian aristocrat who wanted thereby to further the cause of Italian unification. Verily the very worst moment to write an opera about the assassination of a king - in a theatre, what's more. The whole thing was to be called "La Vendetta in Domino" and had been commissioned by the Teatro Carlo Naples. Now Naples, too, had every reason to be wary of regicide. Just one year previously the Kind had been attacked with a bayonet by one of his own soldiers. The Naples Chief of Police decided therefore to nip this particular opera in the bud. As Verdi put it: "Chance the protagonist into a lord, taking away any idea of sovereignity. Change the wife into a sister. Modify the fortune teller's scene, transferring it to a time when people believed in such things. No ball!! The murder must be off-stage. Cut the scene of the drawing of the lots, etc. etc. Therefore, no opera."
The San Carlo management decided thereupon to draft a new libretto for the music, in order to meet the censor's requirements but Verdi flatly refused to tolerate an "Adelia degli Adiman", set in 14th century Florence. Eventually the whole matter was called off, an out-of- court-settlement was agreed upon and Verdi was free to offer his opera to other, less politically circumspect, houses. He contacted the Teatro Apollo in Rome, but now the Papal censors started meddling with the libretto, insisting, among other points, that the opera be set in a non- European country. As a second litigation case would have been scandalous and ridiculous, Verdi decided to acquiesce, and the premiere duly took place on February 17, 1859. Despite 30 curtain calls, flowers etc, the opera was not really a success. that season it was given only six performances. The first foreign performance was in Lisbon on April 15, 1860. It was first heard in America at the New York Academy of Music on February 111, 1861. Lilli Lehmann (who some years previously had sung Oscar in Italian in Berlin) was the first Metropolitan Amelia, where this Italian opera about the assassination of a Swedish Kind who had metamorphosed into a Cavalier governor of a Puritan settlement in New England was sung in German. After four performances "Ein Maskenball" disappeared from the Met. "Un Ballo in Maschera" was first sung there on February 23, 1903.
One of the main functions - nay obligations - of private recording ventures is to rectify the sins and omissions of the commercial companies when documenting careers of important singers - and a lot of sins and omissions there are. The two great divas of the 1950s and 60s - Callas and Tebaldi - captured public attention to such a degree that the mighty recording companies were loath to venture further afield. Virtually a whole generation of important singers were relegated to undeserved secondary status. Leyla Gencer's career - and versatility - is indeed something to marvel at. Born in 1924 in Ankara of Turkish/Polish parents, she studied with Elvira de Hidalgo, making her debut in 1950 in Ankara as Santuzza. Subsequently she continued her studies with the legendary Giannina Arangi- Lombardi as well as Apollo Granforte. She made her Italian debut in 1954 at the San Carlo in Naples as Butterfly. That same season she also sang Tatjana. Her rise to fame was fast. Soon followed Charlotte in "Werther", Agathe in "Freischütz" (with Renata Scotto as Ännchen!), Zandonai's "Francesca da Rimini), Blanche in the world premiere of Poulenc's "Les Dialogues des Carmélites" (Gencer's La Scala debut in 1957) the world premiere of Pizetti's "Assassinio nella Cattedrale" (La Scala, 1958), Marguerita and Elena in Boito's "Mefistofele", Renata in Prokoviev's "The Fiery Angel", Lisa in "Pique Dame", "Figaro" Countess in Glyndebourne, Gluck's "Alceste", Monteverdi's Ottavia in "L'Incoronazione di Poppea", Mozart's Elettra, Elisabetta in Rossini's "Elisabetta, Regina d'Inghilterra not to mention the central - and not so central - roles in the Verdi, Donizetti and Bellini repertoire. It was Leyla Gencer who first rediscovered the vocal jewels hiding in such works as "Lucrezia Borgia", "Maria Stuarda", Beatrice di Tenda", "Belisario", Roberto Devereux" and "La Straniera". Her career took her to the Bolshoi Theatre, the Leningrad Opera, Stockholm, Warsaw, Brussels and Rio de Janeiro. Leyla Gencer knows her worth. Asked about "her greatest success" she replied with inimitable poise and grandezza: "The enthusiasm of the public was such that I only had great successes". "What about dream roles?" "I was fortunate in being able and allowed to sing everything I wanted to." History made amends after all; it seems.

TANNHÄUSER

Richard Wagner (1813 – 1883)                               
Opera in three acts in German [Sung in Italian]
Libretto: Richard Wagner
Premièr at Dresden – 19 October 1845
22 February 1972 (3 Performances)                                
Teatro Massimo Bellini, Catania

Conductor: Oliviero de Fabritiis
Chorus master: Rolando Maselli
Stage director: Aldo Mirabella Vassallo
Scene and costumes: Roberto Lagana
Choreography: Franca Bartolomei

Hermann Landgrave of Thuringia FRANCO PUGLIESE bass
Tannhauser GIORGIO LAMBERTI tenor
Wolfram von Eschenbach GIAN PIERO MASTROMEI baritone
Walter von der Vogelwide PIERO DE PALMA tenor
Bitenrolf ……………… bass
Heinrich der Schreiber …………… tenor
Reinmar von Zweter …………… bass
Elisabeth nice of Landgrave LEYLA GENCER soprano [Role Debut]
Venus LUISA BORDIN NAVE mezzo-soprano
A Young Shepherd ………….. soprano
Four Noble Pages …….. soprano and alto

Time: Thirteen Century
Place: Near Eisenach

C A N C E L L E D  
Tannhauser was going to be Gencer's first Wagnerian Opera, but she decided not to sing the opera, couple of days before the performances. She dropped all Wagnerian proposals for good.


OPERA MAGAZINE                                       
1972 February

LA TRAVIATA

Giuseppe Verdi (1813 - 1901)
Opera in three acts in Italian
Libretto: Francesco Maria Piave after Alexander Duma’s play La Dame aux Camélias
Premièr at Teatro la Fenice, Venice – 6 March 1853
12, 16, 19 July 1955
Castello di San Giusto, Trieste

Orchestra e Coro di Teatro Verdi di Trieste
Conductor: Pino Trost
Chorus master: n/a
Stage director: Aldo M. Vassallo
Scene and costumes: Veniero Colasanti

Alfredo Germont lover of Violetta GIANCINTO PRANDELLI tenor
Giorgio Germont his father ENZO MASCHERINI baritone
Gastone de Letorieres a young man about town RAIMONDO BOTTEGHELLI tenor
Baron Douphol a rival of Alfredo ENO MOCCHIUTTI baritone
Dr. Grenvil n/a bass
Marchese d’Obigny n/a bass
Giuseppe servant to Violetta n/a tenor
Violetta Valery a courtesan LEYLA GENCER soprano
Flora Bervoix her friend NIVES POLI mezzo-soprano
Annina Violetta’s confident and maid LILIANA HUSSU soprano

Time: 1850
Place: Paris and vicinity

Photos © FOTO DE ROTA, Trieste





CONTRACT FOR THE PERFORMANCES
1955.05.06                   

IL PICCOLO                                          
1955.07.10   

IL PICCOLO                                          
1955.07.13

Leyla Gencer sık sık sanatını bir üst boyuta çıkarıyor ve sesini “söyleyen” sanatçıların ulaşamayacakları bir noktaya getiriyor. O, derin, gölgeli ve yumuşak titreşimleriyle gerçekten “şarkı söylüyor”. Anlatılması, tarif edilmesi olanaksız iniş çıkışlarıyla insana sonsuz heyecan veriyor… Leyla Gencer, derin bir duygusallıkla ve asla yapaylığa kaçmadan sesini ve kişiliğini size ulaştırıyor. Halktan topladığı sempati ise karşı konulmaz cinsten… Lirik tiyatronun sıra dışı, özgün bir kimliği Leyla Gencer.

PICCOLA SERA                                                
1955.07.13                                                                                               
 
IL PICCOLO
1955.07.15

IL PICCOLO
1955.07.16

IL PICCOLO
1955.07.19

OPERA MAGAZINE                                              
1955 August

LA SCALA MAGAZINE
1955 September

Opera meraklılarına sunulabilecek en zevkli heyecanlardan biri de onları hiç tanınmayan biriyle karşılaştırmak, tanıştırmaktır. Bu kez bu heyecanı La Traviata’yı söyleyen ve şimdiye dek ismini hiç duymadığımız Leyla Gencer’le yaşadık…Gencer, izleyicileri, hareketli ve sıcak titreşimli sesiyle, kendini adanmışlığın aracı haline getirdiği çoşkulu yorumuyla ve müzikaliteyi bozmayan, çok ender rastlanan ifade yoğunluğuyla şaşırttı… Tepeden tırnağa büyülenen dinleyiciler, o ünlü Amami Alfredo aryasından sonra başarılı yorumcuyu alkış tufanına tuttu…


OPERA MAGAZINE                                              
1955 September  

ULUS DAILY NEWSPAPER

1956.06.07
İLHAN MİMAROĞLU

Dünya karşısında Türk musikişinasları
 
Yurt dışında olduğum sıralarda eve bir yığın dergi gelmiş. Ancak yeni yeni bunları gözden geçirmeye fırsat bulabiliyorum. Geçen akşam sıra, İngiltere’de neşredilen Opera adlı dergisinin Eylül 1955 sayısına geldi. Sayfaları karıştırırken gözüm şu satırlara ilişti: Takdim edilen ikinci opera La Traviata’ydı. Uzun zamandır bu seviyede bir Traviata seyretmemiştim. Buna üç yıl önce Maria Callas’ın Verona Arena’sında gördüğüm oyununu da dahil ediyorum.
Libera Danielis adlı münekkidin, geçen yaz sonunda Trieste’de verilen opera temsillerine dair bir yazıydı. Şöyle devam ediyordu: Başrolde Leyla Gencer – Türk’tür ve müteveffa Anagi Lombardi’nin öğrencisidir- harikulade bir parlaklıkla oynadı ve teganni etti. Sesinin berrak bir kalitesi var ki bu günümüzde nadir rastlanan bir şeydir. Hacmini ve sahalarını o kadar rahatlıkla kontrol ediyor, cümlelerine o kadar öyle nefis bir ifade veriyor ki insan hayret içinde kalıyor. Son perdede Violetta’nın ölümünü temsil edişi, muhakkak ki şimdiye kadar gördüğüm en heyecan verici tefsirdi.  
Bu yazıda bildiğimiz şeyler anlatılıyor. Fakat, çoğumuzun bilmekte cesaretsizlik gösterdiği bir şey var. Leyla Gencer’de olsun, yükselmiş diğer sanatkarlarımızda olsun, gördüğümüz vasıfları kendi ölçülerimiz içinde mütalaa ediyoruz. Onları, batı memleketlerinin en büyük sanatkarlarıyla kıyas etmeğe korkuyoruz. Edenler çok fazla istihza ile karşılanıyor.  Kurtulamadığımız bir aşağılık duygusu, bir Türk sanatkarının yabancılar seviyesinde olabileceği düşüncesini adeta çılgınlık sayıyor. Hesaba katmıyoruz ki o dünya çağında dene şey, üstün kabiliyet, disiplinli çalışma ve sanat ciddiyeti yanında iyi teşkilatlanmış bir musiki piyasasının hesaplı tanıtma faaliyetiyle reklamla ve propagandayla alakalıdır. Bizim asıl eksiğimiz buradadır.
Son aylarda muhtelif memleketlerde pek çok musikişinas ve bu arada birçok opera sanatkarı dinledim. Leyla Gencer’i ancak kendi ses kategorisinin en büyük isimleriyle mesela Tebaldi’yle, bir Milanov’la, bir Leontyn Price’la kıyaslarım. Yazısından kısımlar naklettiğim münekkit de Sn. Gencer’in Violetta’sını ismi efsaneleşmiş Maria Callas’ınkinden üstün bulmuyor mu?