UN BALLO IN MASCHERA [Gustavus III]
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
OPERA MAGAZINE
Opera News - Un Ballo in Maschera
Recording Excerpts [1961.11.28]
Recording Excerpts [1961.11.25]
FROM CD BOOKLET
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.