Showing posts with label de Fabritiis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label de Fabritiis. 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.

TURANDOT
Giacomo Puccini (1858 - 1924)
Opera three acts in Italian
Libretto: Adami & Simoni based on Gozzi’s fable
Premièr at Teatro alla Scala, Milan – 25 April 1926
13, 17, 21 January - 04, 07, 17 February 1962
Teatro San Carlo, Napoli
 
Conductor: Oliviero de Fabritiis
Chorus master: Michele Lauro
Stage director: Enrico Frigerio
Scene and costumes: C.M. Cristini
 
Princess Turandot LUCILLE UDOVIC soprano
The Emperor Altoum LUIGI PAOLILLO tenor
Timur exiled King of Tartary JOSHUA HECHT tenor 
Calaf his son FRANCO CORELLI tenor
Liù a slave girl LEYLA GENCER soprano
Ping Grand Chancellor of China RENATO CESARI baritone
Pang supreme lord of provisions MARIO CARLIN tenor
Pong supreme lord of the Imperial Kitchen PIERO DE PALMA tenor
A mandarin ANTONINI SACCHETTI baritone
 
Time: Antiquity
Place: Beijing, China
 
Recording date

Photos © FOTO TRONCONE, Napoli






















OPERA MAGAZINE                                                  

1962 January

OPERA MAGAZINE                                                  

1962 May
                       

COMPLETE RECORDING

1962.01.13

Recording Excerpts [1962.01.13]

Signore, ascolta! Ah, signore, ascolta! Act I
Il nome che cercate Act III Scene I
Tu, che di gel sei cinta Act III Scene I

FROM CD BOOKLET
TURANDOT

FRANCO CORELLI started his 1961/62 season after his duties at the Arena in Verona in October 1961 with Il Trovatore when the Rome Opera House gave some performances in Berlin, surrounded by Mirella Parutto, Fedora Barbieri, and Ettore Bastianini. He performed Manrico also for the inaugurazione of the Teatro Nuovo di Torino, this time with Margherita Roberti, again Fedora Barbieri, and Dino Dondi. Next came a TOSCA at the Barcelona Teatro del Liceo with Luisa Maragliano and Piero Cappuccilli, before he starred at the La Scala opening in La battaglia di Legnano with Antonietta Stella and Ettore Bastianini. After Milan he spent one night at Nice, France, for a Tosca with Christiane Castelli and José Faggianelli. Franco Corelli's Calàf was already considered as one of his greatest impersonations when he joined the Teatro di San Carlo at Naples for this new production, having sung the part in many of the world's greatest opera houses and especially in the historic 1961 Metropolitan Opera production conducted by Leopold Stokowski and with Birgit Nilsson and Anna Moffo as his partners. The San Carlo had assembled a strong supporting cast for his divo.
LUCILLE UDOVICH was American by birth (1920) but spent the best part of her important career in Italy. After some years in the Italian provinces the soprano had her break-through as Agnese di Hohenstaufen at the 1953 Maggio Musicale Fiorentino. This brought her many important engagements in the leading theatres in Italy and at the Glyndebourne Festival. In 1958 she starred as Turandot in the filmed RAI production with Franco Corelli, Renata Mattioli, and Plinio Clabassi. She appeared also at London's Royal Opera, Bruxelles, Amsterdam, and through all the French provincial companies. In her homeland she appeared at the Chicago Lyric Opera, San Francisco Opera, and the Philadelphia Lyric and Grand Opera companies. Her only official recording seems to be the Glyndebourne Festival recording of Mozart's Idomeneo with Sena Jurinac, Léopold Simoneau, and Richard Lewis, John Pritchard conducting. For the RAI, she recorded Britten's Peter Grimes with Mirto Picchi, Piero Guelfi, and Plinio Clabassi under Fernando Previtali in 1956. In 1964 Udovich recorded also La Gioconda with Anna Maria Rota, Anna Di Stasio, Daniele Barioni, Mario Sereni, and Plinio Clabassi, under Oliviero de Fabritiis. She retired in the midseventies and died in 1999.
LEYLA GENCER doesn't need much introduction as she is universally regarded as one of the most important singers during 1950 and 1980, and her career is well known. It seems that this Liù is the only surviving recording of her impersonation.
After these Naples Turandot, Corelli went again to America to sing in Aida, Turandot, and La Gioconda at the Met, and in Tosca and Carmen at the Philadelphia Lyric Opera, this last opera with the then unknown Marilyn Horne as the gypsy. May saw Corelli returning for Milan's La Scala for more Turandot with Birgit Nilsson and Amy Shuard alternating as Turandot, and Mirella Freni and Rosanna Carteri sharing the Liùs, before he starred as Raoul in the now legendary revival of Meyerbeer's Gli Ugonotti with Joan Sutherland, Giulietta Simionato, Fiorenza Cossotto, Vladimiro Ganzarolli, Giorgio Tozzi, and Nicolai Ghiaurov. Fiorenza Cossotto was also his Carmen in June at the Venice Teatro La Fenice before Corelli went to the Salzburg Festival to appear in another production which has since become almost mythical, Verdi's Il Trovatore with Leontyne Price, Giulietta Simionato, Ettore Bastianini, and Nicola Zaccaria, produced and conducted by that Maestrissimo, Herbert von Karajan. Just one season in the career of Franco Corelli....

IL TROVATORE    

Giuseppe Verdi (1813 - 1901)                                         
Opera in four acts in Italian
Libretto: Salvatore Cammarano from Spanish drama of the same tittle by Atonio Garcia Gutiérrez
Premièr at Teatro Apollo, Rome – 19 January 1853
28, 30 March, 04 April 1959                      
Teatro Comunale, Genova (Teatro Carlo Felice)

Conductor: Oliviero de Fabritiis
Chorus master: n/a
Stage director: Franco Zeffirelli
Scene: Franco Zeffirelli
Costumes: Ditta Saphas


Count di Luna ANSELMO COLZANI baritone
Ferrando di Luna’s captain of the guard AGOSTINO FERRIN bass
Manrico a chieftain under the Prince of Biscay and reputed son of Azucena FRANCO CORELLI tenor
Duchess Leonora lady-in-waiting to the Princess of Aragon LEYLA GENCER soprano
Ruiz a soldier in Manrico’s service n/a tenor
An Old Gypsy LODOVICO POLOTTO baritone
Inez confident of Leonora LORETTA DI LELIO soprano
Azucena a Biscayan gypsy woman FEDORA BARBIERI mezzo-soprano

Time: Fifteenth Century
Place: Biscay and Aragon

Photos © FOTO LEONI, Genoa






CONTRACT FOR THE PERFORMANCES

1959.03.12

OPERA MAGAZINE
1959 June

OPERA MAGAZINE
1959 December

LA REPUBBLICA
2011.03.27
ROBERTO IOVINO

Zeffirelli torna nel 'suo' Carlo Felice

"Sono commosso all'idea di tornare a Genova. Ho vivo in me il ricordo del vecchio Carlo Felice, una meravigliosa rovina. Lo guidava una donna eccezionale, Celeste Lanfranco, e c'era un pubblico straordinario. In condizioni inimmaginabili abbiamo creato grandi spettacoli. Si poteva contare su cast eccezionali, perché artisti eccellenti accettavano con entusiasmo di cantare in quel teatro". Ricorda così le sue lontane esperienze genovesi Franco Zeffirelli, rispondendo al telefono dalla sua casa romana.

Il grande regista firmerà il 5 aprile prossimo al Carlo Felice "Pagliacci" di Leoncavallo con la direzione di Fabio Luisi. Sarà per lui un ritorno sotto la Lanterna, dopo quarantanove anni di lontananza. Il giovane Zeffirelli era arrivato per la prima volta nel vecchio teatro del Barabino nel 1956: "Firmai una "Carmen" bellissima con Giulietta Simionato che aveva un vestito particolarmente vezzoso e interpretò la sensuale protagonista in maniera così efficace da portare lo scompiglio sul palcoscenico".
Negli anni successivi Zeffirelli ha diretto "Rigoletto" con la Moffo (1957), "Don Pasquale" e "Boris Godunov" (1958), "Barbiere di Siviglia" con Teresa Berganza e Gino Bechi e "Trovatore" con Corelli e la Gencer (1959) e poi fra il 1960 e il 1961 con Joan Sutherland ha affrontato "Lucia di Lammermoor" e "Puritani" per congedarsi dal nostro teatro nel 1962 con "La figlia del reggimento": "Genova per me è stata una grande scuola. Su quel palcoscenico ho imparato tutto quello che mi sono portato poi dietro nella mia vita professionale. E alcune di quelle produzioni le ho poi rifatte in America e in tanti teatri".
Parliamo dei suoi "Pagliacci". "L'opera di Leoncavallo costituisce una grande tentazione per chi si occupa di lirica. Nasce in una forma sbagliata, l'atto unico, che le impedisce di diventare titolo di repertorio. L'abbinamento con un altro atto unico infatti la penalizza. Io ho deciso di farne una rilettura molto forte, accesa, mettendola in scena da sola. Ho esordito ad Atene, poi a Tel Aviv, a Mosca. Ovunque ha suscitato entusiasmo".
Nella sua intensa carriera ha lavorato con grandi attori (pensiamo a Liz Taylor, scomparsa qualche giorno fa) e cantanti (dalla Callas alla Sutherland), dividendosi fra prosa, cinema, lirica. Cosa l'ha affascinata di un genere piuttosto che dell'altro? "A me affascina l'idea di raccontare una favola che faccia sognare il pubblico. E questo avviene nella prosa, come nella lirica, come nel cinema. Bisogna saper emozionare. "Pagliacci" lo sa fare anche nei confronti dei giovani. Quando lavoro io penso sempre al mio pubblico. E certo la lirica regala una possibilità che il cinema non può dare: il contatto diretto con la platea".
Ci sono opere che non ha fatto e che avrebbe voluto fare? "Ripensando al mio catalogo direi di no. Ho fatto tutto Puccini ad eccezione di "Manon Lescaut" perché l'aveva diretta già Visconti e non mi volevo cimentare con il mio Maestro. Ho fatto tante "Traviate"e poi Donizettie molto Settecento. Sono soddisfatto". Cosa pensa della situazione dei Teatri? "Viviamo un momento davvero difficile. Ma non solo in Italia. Anche il Metropolitan viaggia in brutte acque. Sono stati fatti molti errori nelle gestioni teatrali. Speriamo che si conservi l'amore per il teatro. Io ho avuto dal Governo l'autorizzazione a portare avanti la mia Fondazione che ha una splendida sede qui a Roma. Lavoreremo per i giovani, avviando una sorta di scuola delle arti e dello spettacolo, con l'obbiettivo di avvicinare le nuove generazioni al nostro mondo artistico".
Quando la vedremo a Genova? "Arriverò con molta trepidazione per la prova generale. L'allestimento è solido, non ci sono particolari problemi e io debbo ultimare la preparazione di uno spettacolo che l'11 ottobre prossimo inaugurerà il nuovo teatro del Sultanato di Oman".