|

Opera Books

The
Complete Opera Book
Gustav Kobbé

Pietro Mascagni
(1863 )
PIETRO MASCAGNI was born in Leghorn, Italy, December 7, 1863. His
father was a baker. The elder Mascagni, ambitious for his boy, wanted him to study law.
The son himself preferred music, and studied surreptitiously. An uncle, who sympathized
with his aims, helped him financially. After the uncles death a nobleman, Count
Florestan, sent him to the Milan Conservatory. There he came under the instruction and
influence of Ponchielli.
After two years study at the conservatory he began a
wandering life, officiating for the next five years as conductor of opera companies, most
of which disbanded unexpectedly and impecuniously. He eked out a meagre income, being
compelled at one time to subsist on a plate of macaroni a day. His finances were not
greatly improved when he settled in Cerignola, where he directed a school for orchestra
players and taught pianoforte and theory.
He was married and in most straitened circumstances when he
composed "Cavalleria Rusticana" and sent it off to the publisher Sonzogno, who
had offered a prize for a one-act opera. It received the award.
May 7, 1890, at the Constanzi Theatre, Rome, it had its
first performance. Before the representation had progressed very far, the half-filled
house was in a state of excitement and enthusiasm bordering on hysteria. The production of
"Cavalleria Rusticana" remains one of the sensational events in the history of
opera. It made Mascagni famous in a night. Everywhere it was givenand it was given
everywhereit made the same sensational success. Its vogue was so great, it
"took" so rapidly, that it was said to have infected the public with
"Mascagnitis."
In "Cavalleria Rusticana music and text
work in wonderful harmony in the swift and gloomy tragedy." Nothing Mascagni has
composed since has come within hailing distance of it. The list of his operas is a fairly
long one. Most of them have been complete failures. In America, "Iris" has,
since its production, been the subject of occasional revival. "Lodoletta,"
brought out by GattiCasazza at the Metropolitan Opera House in 1918, had the advantage of
a cast that included Caruso and Farrar. Isabeau" had its first performance in the
United States of America, in Chicago by the Chicago Opera Company under the direction of
Cleofante Campanini in 1917, and was given by the same organization in New York in 1918.
(See p. 125.)
With Mascagnis opera, "Le
Maschere" (The Maskers), which was produced in 1901, the curious experiment was made
of having the first night occur simultaneously in six Italian cities. It was a failure in
all, save Rome, where it survived for a short time.
Of the unfortunate results of Mascagnis American visit
in 1902 not much need be said. A "scratch" company was gotten together for him.
With this he gave poor performances at the Metropolitan Opera House, of "Cavalleria
Rusticana," "Zanetto," and "Iris." The tour ended in lawsuits and
failure. "Zanetto," which is orchestrated only for string band and a harp, was
brought out with "Cavalleria Rusticana" in a double bill, October 8, 1902;
"Iris," October 16th.
CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA
RUSTIC CHIVALRY
Opera, in one act,
by Mascagni; words by Giovanni Targioni-Toggetti and G. Menasci, the libretto being
founded on a story by Giovanni Verga. Produced, Constanzi Theatre, Rome, May 17, 1890.
London, Shaftesbury Theatre, October 19, 1891. Covent Garden, May 16, 1892. America:
Philadelphia, Grand Opera House, September 9, 1891, under the direction of Gustav
Hinrichs, with Selina Kronold (Santuzza), Miss Campbell (Lola), Jeannie Teal
(Lucia), Guille (Turridu), Del Puente (Alfio). Chicago, September 30,
1891, with Minnie Hauck as Santuzza . New York, October 1, 1891, at an afternoon
" dress rehearsal" at the Casino, under the direction of Rudolph Aronson, with
Laura Bellini (Santuzza) , Grace Golden (Lola), Helen von Doenhof (Lucia),
Charles Bassett (Turridu), William Pruette (A lflo) , Gustav Kerker,
conductor, Heinrich Conried, stage manager. Evening of same day, at the Lenox Lyceum,
under the direction of Oscar Hammerstein, with Mine. Janouschoffsky (Santuzza) ,
Mrs. Pemberton Hincks (Lola) , Mrs. Jennie Bohner (Lucia) , Payne Clarke (Turiddu)
, Herman Gerold (A iflo) , Adolph Neuendorff, conductor. Metropolitan Opera
House, December 30, 1891, with Eames as Santuzza; November 29, 1893, with Calvé
(début) as Santuzza.
CHARACTERS
| Turiddu, a young soldier |
Tenor |
| Alfio, the village teamster |
Baritone |
| Lola, his wife |
Mezzo-Soprano |
| Mamma Lucia, Turiddus mother |
Contralto |
| Santuzza, a village girl |
Soprano |
|
Villagers, peasants,
boys. |
TimeThe present, on Easter day.
PlaceA village in Sicily.
"Cavalleria
Rusticana " in its original form is a short story, compact and tense, by Giovanni
Verga. From it was made the stage tragedy, in which Eleonora Duse displayed her great
powers as an actress. It is a drama of swift action and intense emotion; of passion,
betrayal, and retribution. Much has been made of the rôle played by the "book"
in contributing to the success of the opera. It is a first-rate librettoone of the
best ever put forth. It inspired the composer to what so far has remained his only
significant achievement. But only in that respect is it responsible for the success of
"Cavalleria Rusticana" as an opera. The hot blood of the story courses through
the music of Mascagni, who in his score also has quieter passages, that make the cries of
passion the, more poignant. Like practically every enduring success, that of
"Cavalleria Rusticana" rests upon merit. From beginning to end it is an
inspiration. In it, in 1890, Mascagni, at the age of twenty-one, "found
himself," and ever since has been trying, unsuccessfully, to find himself again.
The prelude contains three passages of significance in the
development of the story. The first of these is the phrase of the despairing Santuzza, in
which she cries out to Turiddu that, despite his betrayal and desertion of her, she
still loves and pardons him. The second is the melody, of the duet between Santuzza and
Turiddu, in which she implores him to remain with her and not to. follow Lola into
the church. The third is the air in Sicilian style, the "Siciliano," which, as
part of the prelude, Turiddu sings behind the curtain, in the manner of a serenade
to Lola, "O Lola, bianca come for di spino" (O Lola, fair as a smiling
flower).
With the end of the "Siciliano" the curtain rises.
It discloses a public square in a Sicilian village. On one side, in the background, is a
church, on the other Mamma Lucias wineshop and dwelling. It is Easter
morning. Peasants, men, women, and children cross or move about the stage. The church
bells ring, the church doors swing open, people enter. A chorus, in which, mingled with
gladness over the mild beauty of the day, there also is the lilt of religious ecstasy,
follows. Like a refrain the women voice and repeat "Gli aranci. olezzano sui verdi
margini" (Sweet is the air with the blossoms of oranges) . They intone "
"La Virgine serena allietasi del Salvator "(The Holy Mother mild, in ecstasy
fondles the child), and sing of "Tempo e si momori," etc. (Murmurs of tender
song tell of a joyful world) . The men, meanwhile, pay a tribute to the industry and charm
of woman. Those who have not entered the church, go off singing. Their voices die away in
the distance.
Santuzza, sad of mien, approaches Mamma
Lucias house, just as her false lovers mother comes out. There is a brief
colloquy between the two women. Santuzza asks for Turiddu. His mother
answers that he has gone to Francofonte to fetch some wine. Santuzza tells her that
he was seen during the night in the village. The girls evident distress touches Mamma
Lucia. She bids her enter the house.
"I may not step across your threshold," exclaims Santuzza.
"I cannot pass it, I, most unhappy outcast ! Excommunicated!"
Mamma Lucia may have her suspicions of Santuzzas
plight. "What of my son?" she asks. "What have you to tell me?"
But at that moment the cracking of a whip and the jingling
of bells are heard from off stage. Alfio, the team- . ster, comes upon the scene.
He is accompanied by the villagers. Cheerfully he sings the praises of a teamsters
life, also of Lolas, his wifes, beauty. The villagers join him in
chorus, "Il cavallo scalpita" (Gayly moves the tramping horse).
Alfio asks Mamma Lucia if she still has on
hand some of her fine old wine. She tells him it has given out. Turiddu has gone
away to buy a fresh supply of it.
"No," says Alflo. "He is here. I saw
him this morning standing not far from my cottage."
Mamma Lucia is about to express great surprise. Santuzza
is quick to check her.
Alfio goes his way. A choir in the church intones the
"Regina Coeli." The people in the square join in the "Allelujas." Then
they kneel and, led by Santuzzas voice, sing the Resurrection hymn,
"Innegiamo, il Signor non e morto" (Let us sing of the Lord now victorious) .
The "Allelujas" resound in the church, which all, save Mamma Lucia and Santuzza,
enter.
Mamma Lucia asks the girl why she signalled her to
remain silent when Alfio spoke of Turiddus presence in the village.
"Voi lo sapete" (Now you shall know), exclaims Santuzza, and in one of
the most impassioned numbers of the score, pours into the ears of her lovers mother
the story of her betrayal. Before Turiddu left to serve his time in the army, he
and Lola were in love with each other. But, tiring of awaiting his return, the
fickle Lola married Alfio. Turridu, after he had come back, made love to Santuzza
and betrayed her; now, lured by Lola, he has taken advantage of Alfios
frequent absences, and has gone back to his first love. Mamma Lucia pities the
girl, who begs that she go into church and pray for her.
Turiddu comes, a handsome fellow. Santuzza upbraids
him for pretending to have gone away, when instead he has surreptitiously been visiting Lola
. It is a scene of vehemence. But when Turiddu intimates that his life would be
in danger were Alfio to know of his visits to Lola, the girl is terrified.
"Battimi, insultami, tamo e perdono" (Beat me, insult me, I still love and
forgive you).
Such is her mooddespairing, yet relenting. But Lolas
voice is heard off stage. Her song is carefree, a key to her character, which is
fickle and selfish, with a touch of the cruel. ""Fior di giaggiolo" (Bright
flower, so glowing) runs her song. Heard off stage, it yet conveys in its melody, its
pauses, and inflections, a quick sketch in music of the heartless coquette, who, to
gratify a whim, has stolen Turiddu from Santuzza. She mocks the girl, then
enters the church. Only a few minutes has she been on the stage, but Mascagni has let us
know all about her.
A highly dramatic scene, one of the most impassioned
outbursts of the score, occurs at this point. Turiddu turns to follow Lola into
the church. Santuzza begs him to stay. "No, no, Turiddu, rimani, rimani,
ancoraAbbandonarmi dunque tu vuoi?" (No, no, Turiddu! Remain with me now and
forever! Love me again! How can you forsake me?).

A highly dramatic phrase, already heard in the prelude,
occurs at "La tua Santuzza piange timplora (Lo! here thy Santuzza, weeping,
implores thee).
Turiddu repulses her. She clings to him. He loosens
her hold and casts her from him to the ground. When she rises, he has followed Lola into
the church.
But the avenger is nigh. Before Santuzza has time to
think, Alfio comes upon the scene. He is looking for Lola. To him in the
fewest possible words, and in the white voice of suppressed passion, Santuzza tells
him that his wife has been unfaithful with Turiddu. In the brevity of its
recitatives, the tense summing up in melody of each dramatic situation as it develops in
the inexorably swift unfolding of the tragic story, lies the strength of "Cavalleria
Rusticana."
Santuzza and Alfio leave. The square is empty.
But the action goes on in the orchestra. For the intermezzothe famous
intermezzowhich follows, recapitulates, in its forty-eight bars, what has gone
before, and foreshadows the tragedy that is impending. There is no restating here of
leading motives. The effect is accomplished by means of terse, vibrant melodic
progression. It is melody and yet it is drama. Therein lies its merit. For no piece of
serious music can achieve the world-wide popularity of this intermezzo and not possess
merit.

Mr. Krehbiel, in A Second Book of Operas, gives an
instance of its unexampled appeal to the multitude. A burlesque on this opera was staged
in Vienna. The author of the burlesque thought it would be a great joke to have the
intermezzo played on a hand-organ. Up to that point the audience had been hilarious. But
with the first wheezy tone of the grinder the people settled down to silent attention,
and, when the end came, burst into applause. Even the hand-organ could not rob the
intermezzo of its charm for the public!
What is to follow in the opera is quickly accomplished. The
people come out of church. Turiddu, in high spirits, because he is with Lola and
because Santuzza no longer is hanging around to reproach him, invites his friends
over to his mothers wineshop. Their glasses are filled. Turiddu dashes off a
drinking song, "Viva, I vino spumeggiante" (Hail! the ruby wine now flowing).
The theme of this song will be found quoted on p. 609.
Alfio joins them. Turiddu offers him wine. He
refuses it. The women leave, taking Lola with them. In a brief exchange of words Alfio
gives the challenge. In Sicilian fashion the two men embrace, and Turiddu, in
token of acceptance, bites Alflos ear. Alfio goes off in the direction
of the place where they are to test their skill with the stiletto.
Turiddu calls for Mamma Lucia. He is going
away, he tells her. At home the wine cup passes too freely. He must leave. If he should
not come back she must be like a kindly mother to Santuzza"Santa, whom
I have promised to lead to the altar."
"Un bacio, mamma! Un alto bacio !Addio!"
(One kiss, one kiss, my mother. And yet another. Farewell!)
He goes. Mamma Lucia wanders aimlessly to the back of
the stage. She is weeping. Santuzza comes on, throws her arms around the poor
womans neck. People crowd upon the scene. All is suppressed excitement. There is a
murmur of distant voices. A woman is heard calling from afar : "They have murdered
neighbour Turiddu!"
Several women enter hastily. One of them, the one whose
voice was heard in the distance, repeats, but now in a shriek, "Hanno ammazzato
compre compare Turiddu!"(They have murdered neighbour Turiddti!)
Santuzza falls in a swoon. The fainting form of Mamma
Lucia is supported by some of the women.
"Cala rapidamente la tela" (The curtain falls
rapidly).
A tragedy of Sicily, hot in the blood, is over.
When "Cavalleria Rusticana" was produced, no
Italian opera had achieved such a triumph since "Aïda "a period of nearly
twenty years. It was hoped that Mascagni would prove to be Verdis successor, a hope
which, needless to say, has not been fulfilled.
To "Cavalleria Rusticana," however, we owe the
succession of short operas, usually founded on debased and sordid material, in which other
composers have paid Mascagni the doubtful compliment of imitation in hopes of achieving
similar success. Of all these, "Pagliacci," by Leoncavallo, is the only one that
has shared the vogue of the Mascagni opera. The two make a remarkably effective double
bill.
LAMICO FRITZ
FRIEND FRITZ
Opera in three
acts, by Pietro Mascagni; text by Suaratoni, from the story by Erckmann-Chatrian.
Produced, Rome, 1891. Philadelphia, by Gustav Hinrichs, June 8, 1892. New York,
Metropolitan Opera House, with Calvé as Susel, January io, 1894.
CHARACTERS
| Fritz Kobus, a rich bachelor |
Tenor |
| David, a Rabbi |
Baritone |
| Frederico |
Tenor |
|
friends of Fritz [2] |
| Hanego |
Tenor |
| Susel, a farmers daughter |
Soprano |
| Beppe, a gypsy |
Soprano |
| Caternia, a housekeeper |
Contralto |
TimeThe present.
PlaceAlsace.
Act I. Fritz
Kobus, a well-to-do landowner and confirmed bachelor, receives felicitations on his
fortieth birthday. He invites his friends to dine with him. Among the guests is Susel, his
tenants daughter, who presents him with a nosegay, and sits beside him. Never before
has he realized her charm. Rabbi David, a confirmed matchmaker, wagers with the
protesting Fritz that he will soon be married.
Act II. Friend Fritz is visiting Susels father.
The charming girl mounts a ladder in the garden, picks cherries, and throws them down to Fritz,
who is charmed. When Rabbi David appears and tells him that he has found a
suitable husband for Susel, Fritz cannot help revealing his own feelings.
Act III. At home again Fritz finds no peace. David
tells him Susels marriage has been decided on. Fritz loses his
temper; says he will forbid the bans. Susel, pale and sad, comes in with a basket
of fruit. When her wedding is mentioned she bursts into tears. That gives Fritz his
chance which he improves. David wins his wager, one of Fritzs vineyards,
which he promptly bestows upon Susel as a dowry.
The duet of the cherries in the second act is the principal
musical number in the opera.
IRIS
Opera in three
acts, by Mascagni. Words by Luigi Illica. Produced, Constanzi Theatre, Rome, November 22,
1898; revised version, La Scala, Milan, 1899. Philadelphia, October 14, 1902, and
Metropolitan Opera House, New York, October 16, 1902, under the composers direction
(Marie Farneti, as Iris); Metropolitan Opera House, 1908, with Eames (Iris), Caruso
(Osaka), Scotti, and Journet; April 3, 1915, Bori, Botta, and Scotti.
CHARACTERS
| Il Cieco, the blind man |
Bass |
| Iris, his daughter |
Soprano |
| Osaka |
Tenor |
| Kyoto, a takiomati |
Baritone |
| Ragpickers, shopkeepers, geishas, mousmés
(laundry girls), sumarai, citizens, strolling players, three women representing
Beauty, Death, and the Vampire; a young girl. |
TimeNineteenth century.
PlaceJapan.
Act I. The home of Iris
near the city. The hour is before dawn. The music depicts the passage from night
into day. It rises to a crashing climaxthe instrumentation including tamtams,
cymbals, drums, and bellswhile voices reiterate, "Calore! Luce! Amor!"
(Warmth! Light! Love!). In warmth and light there are love and life. A naturalistic
philosophy, to which this opening gives the key, runs through "Iris."
Fujiyama glows in the early morning light, as Iris, who
loves only her blind father, comes to the door of her cottage. She has dreamed that
monsters sought to injure her doll, asleep under a rosebush. With the coming of the sun
the monsters have fled. Mousmés come to the bank of the stream and sing prettily
over their work.
Iris is young and beautiful. She is desired by Osaka,
a wealthy rake. Kyoto, keeper of a questionable resort, plots to obtain her for
or him. He comes to her cottage with a marionette show. While Iris is intent upon
the performance, three geisha girls, representing Beauty, Death, and the Vampire, dance
about her. They conceal her from view by spreading their skirts. She is seized and carried
off. Osaka, by leaving money for the blind old father, makes the abduction legal.
When Il Cieco returns, he is led to believe that his daughter has gone voluntarily
to the Yoshiwara. In a rage he starts out to find her.
Act II. Interior of the "Green House" in the
Yoshiwara. Iris awakens. At first she thinks it is an awakening after death. But
death brings paradise, while she is unhappy. Osaka, who has placed jewels beside
her, comes to woo, but vainly seeks to arouse her passions. In her purity she remains
unconscious of the significance of his words and caresses. His brilliant attire leads her
to mistake him for Tor, the sun god, but he tells her he is Pleasure. That frightens her.
For, as she narrates to him, one day, in the temple, a priest told her that pleasure and
death were one.
Osaka wearies of her innocence and leaves her. But Kyoto,
wishing to lure him back, attires her in transparent garments and places her upon a
balcony. The crowd in the street cries out in amazement over her beauty. Again Osaka wishes
to buy her. She hears her fathers voice. Joyously she makes her presence known to
him. He, ignorant of her abduction and believing her a voluntary inmate of the "Green
House," takes a handful of mud from the street, flings it. at her, and curses her. In
terror, she leaps from a window into the sewer below.
Act III. Ragpickers and scavengers are dragging the sewer
before daylight. In song they mock the moon. A flash of light from the mystic mountain
awakens what is like an answering gleam in the muck. They discover and drag out the body
of Iris. They begin to strip her of her jewels. She shows signs of life. The sordid
men and women flee. The rosy light from Fujiyama spreads over the sky. Warmth and light
come once more. Iris regains consciousness. Spirit voices whisper of earthly
existence and its selfish aspirations typified by the knavery of Kyoto, the lust of
Osaka, the desire of Iriss father, Il Cieco, for the comforts
of life through her ministrations.
Enough strength comes back to her for her to acclaim the
sanctity of the sun. In its warmth and lightthe expression of Natures
loveshe sinks, as if to be absorbed by Nature, into the blossoming field that
spreads about her. Again, as in the beginning, there is the choired tribute to warmth,
light, lovethe sun!
Partly sordid, partly ethereal in its exposition, the
significance of this story has escaped Mascagni, save in the climax of the opening
allegory of the work. Elsewhere he employs, instruments associated by us with Oriental
music, but the spirit of the Orient is lacking. In a score requiring subtlety of
invention, skill in instrumentation, and, in general, the gift for poetic expression in
music, these qualities are not. The scene of the mousmés in the first act with Iriss
song to the flowers of her garden, "In pure stille" ( ); the vagne, yet
unmistakable hum of Japanese melody in the opening of Act II.; and her narrative in the
scene with Osaka in the same act, "Un di al tempio" (One day at the
temple)these, with the hymn to the sun, are about the only passages that require
mention.
LODOLETTA
Opera in three
acts, by Mascagni. Words by Gioacchino Forzano, after Ouidas novel, Two Little
Wooden Shoes. Produced, Rome, April 30, 1917. Metropolitan Opera House, New York,
January 12, 1918, with Farrar (later in the season, Florence Easton) as Lodoletta, Caruso
(Flammen), Amato (Gianetto), and Didur
(Antonio).
CHARACTERS
| Lodoletta |
Soprano |
| Flammen |
Tenor |
| Franz |
Bass |
| Gianetto |
Baritone |
| Antonio |
Bass |
| A Mad Woman |
Mezzo-Soprano |
| Vannard |
Mezzo-Soprano |
| Maud |
Soprano |
| A Voice |
Tenor |
|
A letter carrier, an old
violinist. |
TimeSecond empire.
PlaceA Dutch village.
Lodoletta,
a
young girl, who lives in a little Dutch village, is a foundling, who has been brought up
by old Antonio. He discovered her as an infant in a basket of flowers at the
lakeside. When she has grown up to be sixteen, she is eager for a pair of red wooden
shoes, but Antonio cannot afford to buy them. Flammen, a painter from Paris,
offers him a gold piece for a roadside Madonna he owns. Antonio takes it, and with
it buys the shoes for Lodoletta. Soon afterwards the old man is killed by a fall
from a tree. Lodoletta is left alone in the world.
Flammen, who has conceived a deep affection for her,
persuades her to be his model. This makes the villagers regard her with suspicion. She
begs him to go. He returns to Paris, only to find that absence makes him fonder of the
girl than ever. He returns to the village. Lodoletta has disappeared. His efforts
to find her fail. On New Years his friends gather at his villa to celebrate, and
make him forget his love affair in gayety. The celebration is at its height, when Lodoletta,
who, in her turn, has been searching for Flammen, reaches the garden. She has
wandered far and is almost exhausted, but has found Flammens house at last.
She thinks he is expecting her, because the villa is so brilliantly illuminated. But, when
she looks through the window upon the gay scene, she falls, cold, exhausted, and
disillusioned, in the snow just as midnight sounds. Flammens party of friends
depart, singing merrily. As he turns back toward the house he discovers a pair of little
red wooden shoes. They are sadly worn. But he recognizes them. He looks for Lodoletta, only
to find her frozen to death in the snow.
It may be that " Lodolettas " success at its
production in Rome was genuine. Whatever acclaim it has received at the Metropolitan Opera
House is due to the fine cast with which it has been presented. There is little
spontaneity in the score. A spirit of youthfulness is supposed to pervade the first act,
but the composers efforts are so apparent that the result is childish rather than
youthful. Moreover, as Henry T. Finck writes in the N. Y. Evening Post, "Lodoletta"
seems to have revived some of the dramatic inconsistencies of the old-fashioned kind of
Italian opera. For instance, in the last act, the scene is laid outside Fammens villa
in Paris on New Years eveit is zero weather to all appearances, although there
is an intermittent snowstormbut Flammen and Franz, and later all his
guests, come out without wraps, and stay for quite awhile. Later Lodoletta, well
wrapped (though in rags), appears, and is quickly frozen to death.
The scene of the first act is laid in the village in April. Lodolettas
cottage is seen and the shrine with the picture of the Madonna. It is in order to copy
or obtain this that Flammen comes from Paris. In the background is the tree which Antonio
climbs and from which, while he is plucking blossom-laden branches for the spring
festival, he falls and is killeda great relief, the character is so dull There is
much running in and out, and singing by boys and girls in this act. The music allotted to
them is pretty without being extraordinarily fetching. An interchange of phrases between Fammen
and Lodoletta offers opportunity for high notes to the tenor, but there is
small dramatic significance in the music.
In the second act the stage setting is the same, except that
the season is autumn. There is a song for Lodoletta, and, as in Act I., episodes
for her and the children, who exclaim delightedly, when they see the picture Flammen has
been painting, "E Lodoletta viva, e bella" (See! Lodoletta, and so pretty!). But
there is little progress made in this act. Much of it has the effect of repetition.
In the third act one sees the exterior of Flammens villa,
and through the open gates of the courtyard Paris in the midst of New Years gayety.
The merriment within the villa is suggested by music and silhouetted figures against the
windows. Some of the guests dash out, throw confetti, and indulge in other pranks, which,
intended to be bright and lively, only seem silly. As in the previous acts, the sustained
measures for Lodoletta and for Flammen, while intended to be dramatic, lack
that qualityone which cannot be dispensed with in opera. "The spectacle of Flammen,
in full evening dress and without a hat, singing on his doorstep in a snowstorm, would
tickle the funny bone of any but an operatic audience," writes Grenville Vernon in
the N. Y. Tribune.
ISABEAU
With Rosa Raisa in
the title rôle, the Chicago Opera Company produced Mascagnis "Isabeau" at
the Auditorium, Chicago, November 12, 1918. The company repeated it at the Lexington
Theatre, New York, February 13, 1918, also with Rosa Raisa as Isabeau. The opera
had its first performances on any stage at Buenos Aires, June 2, 1911. The libretto, based
upon the story of Lady Godiva, is in three acts, and is the work of Luigi Illica. The
opera has made so little impression that I restrict myself to giving the story.
In Illica s version of the Godiva story, the heroine, Isa-beau,
is as renowned for her aversion to marriage as for her. beauty. Her father, King
Raimondo, eager to find for her a husband, arranges a tournament of love, at which she
is to award her hand as prize to the knight who wins her favour. She rejects them all. For
this obstinacy and because she intercedes in a quarrel, Raimondo dooms her to ride
unclad through the town at high noon of the same day. At the urging of the populace he
modifies his sentence, but only so far as to announce that, while she rides, no one shall
remain in the streets or look out of the windows. The order is disobeyed only by a
simpleton, a country lout named Folco. Dazed by Isabeaus beauty, he
strews flowers for her as she comes riding along. For this the people demand that he
suffer the full penalty for violation of the order, which is the loss of eyesight and
life. Isabeau, horrified by Folcos act, visits him in prison. Her
revulsion turns to love. She decides to inform her father that she is ready to marry. But
the Chancellor incites the populace to carry out the death sentence. Isabeau commits
suicide.
When "Isabeau" had its American production in
Chicago, more than twenty-seven years had elapsed since the first performance of
"Cavalleria Rusticana." A long list of operas by Mascagni lies between. But he
still remains a one-opera man, that opera, however, a masterpiece. Last updated
October 22, 2006 |