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La fanciulla del West

La fanciulla del West (The Girl of the West) is an opera in three acts by Giacomo Puccini to an Italian libretto by Guelfo Civinini and Carlo Zangarini, based on the 1905 play The Girl of the Golden West by the American author David Belasco. Fanciulla followed Madama Butterfly, which was also based on a Belasco play. The opera has fewer of the show-stopping highlights that characterize Puccini's other works, but is admired for its impressive orchestration and for a score that is more melodically integrated than is typical of his previous work. Fanciulla displays influences from composers Claude Debussy and Richard Strauss, without being in any way imitative. Similarities between the libretto and the work of Richard Wagner have also been found though some attribute this more to the original plot of the play, and have asserted that the opera remains quintessentially Italian.

La fanciulla del West
Opera by Giacomo Puccini
"Una partita a poker" – a crucial scene with Emmy Destinn in the title role in the premiere
TranslationThe Girl of the West
Librettist
LanguageItalian
Based onDavid Belasco's play The Girl of the Golden West
Premiere
10 December 1910 (1910-12-10)

At the time of its debut performance, Puccini declared La fanciulla del West to be the greatest composition of his career as a composer. The work had a highly publicized premiere at the Metropolitan Opera, New York City, in 1910 that was immensely popular with audiences, but, to the disappointment of Puccini, received a less than positive reaction from American critics who felt the composer failed to effectively integrate an American aesthetic into the opera's score. The opera was widely performed internationally in the three years following the premiere for performances in cities throughout the United States, Europe, and South America. However, critical reaction to the work was largely negative internationally with the exception of critics in Italy at this time in history.

After 1913, stagings of La fanciulla del West during the early and mid 20th century were more infrequent; although the opera has never left the performance repertoire. While overall public reception of the work has remained mixed, critical assessment of the opera underwent a reversal among Puccini scholars beginning in the late 20th century. Despite the plot being a source of significant criticism, the majority of published writers on Puccini and his music in the late 20th century and 21 century agree in calling La fanciulla del West Puccini's magnum opus, particularly lauding its craftsmanship.

This critical reassessment of La fanciulla del West coincided with an increase of performances of the opera at opera houses internationally during the late 20th and 21st centuries. Today performances of the opera are not rare, but the work is still not as frequently programmed as Puccini's other mature operas, such as La bohème and Tosca.

In 2006 the philanthropist Bruce Kovner donated a large collection of original manuscripts to the Juilliard School, including Puccini's manuscript for La fanciulla del West.

Early performance history and critical assessment edit

 
Cover design for libretto (1954)

La fanciulla del West was commissioned by, and first performed at, the Metropolitan Opera in New York on 10 December 1910 with Met stars Enrico Caruso and Emmy Destinn for whom Puccini created the leading roles of Dick Johnson and Minnie. Also in the cast was Pasquale Amato as Jack Rance. The Met's music director Arturo Toscanini conducted.[1] Toscanini, called the opera a "great symphonic poem".[2] This was the first world premiere of an opera at the Met,[3] and it was extremely well received by audiences in this initial production.[4][5] At the premiere performance, the composer received fourteen curtain calls after the first act, nineteen curtain calls after the second act, and twenty after the finale.[6]

Puccini himself was incredibly thrilled with the work and both he and his publisher, Ricordi, assumed that the opera's enthusiastic response from New York audiences would translate into another popular success on the international stage.[5] In some respects this was initially the case, as the opera enjoyed a large number of stagings in the two years after its premiere with many performances in major American cities, over 20 productions in German opera houses, and performances in theaters in London, Liverpool, Buenos Aires, Naples, Milan, Rome, and Budapest.[7] Critical reaction to the opera, however, never matched Puccini's own favorable view of his opera, and the work struggled to a find a place in the regularly performed opera repertoire after this initial flurry of performances.[8]

American critics were lukewarm in their reception of the opera;[8] largely criticizing the work for failing to successfully incorporate American idioms into the opera's musical score.[9] In analyzing the disparity between audience response and critical reaction to the work by Americans, musicologist Kathryn Fenton asserts that American critics were trying to wrestle with their conceptions of American identity stating,

Marked by ambivalence, the reviews expose the New York City critics' struggle to reconcile the opera they expected to see with the one they actually saw. Their view of the opera's place in Puccini's repertoire and in the early 20th-century opera canon differed—in some cases drastically—with the composer's own assessment. One of the strongest objections made concerned its local color, its attempt to portray a Californian mining camp during the 1849 Gold Rush through characters, dialect, body language, clothing, buildings, landscape, customs, situation, and—most importantly—music considered stereotypical of the region. Critics found the manner in which Puccini attempted to musically depict the American locale problematic.[5]

Immediately following the Met premiere, La fanciulla del West was programed by several American opera companies. American soprano Carolina White, who had previously established herself as a leading soprano in opera houses in Italy and Switzerland, made her United States opera debut as Minnie in the Chicago premiere of the opera on December 27, 1910, at the Chicago Auditorium by the Chicago Grand Opera Company.[10] White performed the role again for the opera's first stagings in Milwaukee (1910)[10] and Boston (1911); the latter with the Boston Opera Company.[11] The theatrical impresario Henry Wilson Savage staged the first English language production of the opera for the work's Connecticut premiere at the Poll's Theater in Bridgeport on October 27, 1911, with Luisa Villani as Minnie.[12]

While American critics were less than enthusiastic in their reviews of La fanciulla del West, English critics were even more harsh in their initial assessment of the opera.[8] The work was poorly reviewed when the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, staged the European and United Kingdom première of the work on 29 May 1911 under the baton of Cleofonte Campanini with largely the same cast as the Met premiere with the exception of Amedeo Bassi in the role of Johnson.[8] Italian critics, however, were more positive in their assessment of the opera when the work premiered in Italy at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome on June 12, 1911.[8] This performance was attended by King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy and Queen Elena of Montenegro who reportedly warmly received the opera.[13] However, while praised by Italian critics and the Italian monarchy, the opera did not achieve popularity with the Italian public and failed to gain a place among the regularly programmed opera repertoire in that nation.[8]

Puccini himself conducted La fanciulla del West for its first performance in Lucca at the Teatro del Giglio in 1911; with the theatre's orchestra pit being redesigned by Puccini and rebuilt just prior to the performance of the opera.[14] The work was first staged at La Scala on December 12, 1912, with Tina Poli Randaccio as Minnie and Tullio Serafin conducting where it ran thirteen performances.[15]

As in the United States, the German premiere of La fanciulla del West enjoyed a positive response from audiences but a negative reaction from critics when it was staged at the Deutsches Opernhaus in Berlin (now known as the Deutsche Oper) on 28 March 1913, under the musical direction of Ignatz Waghalter.[16] Other premieres took place at the Teatro Colón, Buenos Aires on 25 July 1911; and in Melbourne on 11 June 1912 at Her Majesty's Theatre.[citation needed] the world première in French took place in the Opéra de Monte-Carlo on 12 April 1912 in an adaptation by Maurice Vaucaire [fr].[17] The Zimin Opera presented the work's Russian premiere on October 2, 1913, at the Solodovnikov Theatre in Moscow.[18]

In spite of criticism, Puccini insisted that La fanciulla del West was his greatest composition up to that point in his career.[8] Yet the opera struggled to find a place in the standard opera repertory in the 20th century, even in the United States, enjoying only periodic performances.[8] Critical reaction and public reception of the work has been divided, and the opera has never achieved the popularity enjoyed by many of Puccini's other operas.[19] Only late in the 20th century was the opera re-assessed as a work of quality, and Puccini scholars have acknowledged that the opera was an important departure in Puccini's body of work from a predominant quality of feminine softness in his other works towards a decidedly masculine aesthetic.[8] Likewise, the complexity of the opera's harmonic language and its use of a wide range of instrumental colour has led some writers on music to label it as Puccini's greatest opera.[6]

La fanciulla del West has fewer of the show-stopping highlights that characterize Puccini's other works, but is admired for its impressive orchestration and for a score that is more melodically integrated than is typical of his previous work. The work displays influences from composers Claude Debussy and Richard Strauss,[2] without being in any way imitative. Similarities between the libretto and the work of Richard Wagner have also been found,[2][20] though some attribute this more to the original plot of the play,[20] and have asserted that the opera remains quintessentially Italian.[2]

Yet, some critics of the opera, particularly in America, have deemed the opera as conceived "silly"; largely in relation to its American storyline being told through the vehicle of an Italian opera.[21] For example, music critic Robert Levine stated the following in his review of a 2004 production at the Glimmerglass Opera: “The entire concept of an Italian opera taking place during the California Gold Rush of the 1850s is a mite silly.”[22] Smith College musicology professor Ruth A. Solie has written about the hypocrisy of such criticisms, noting that Americans often have no trouble accepting Italian operas set in foreign locales like Egypt (Aida) and China (Turandot).[21] In analyzing this general reaction among American reviews, Annie J. Randall observed in her book Puccini and the Girl: History and Reception of “The Girl of the Golden West (2005, University of Chicago Press) that European operas often feature the "exotic" and suggests that American critics have professed “annoyance that Americans had been made the object of the voyeuristic imperial gaze on the opera stage.”[23]

Despite the plot being a source of significant criticism, the majority of academics and musicians today agree in calling it a magnum opus, particularly lauding its musical craftsmanship.[2]

Later performance history edit

While La fanciulla del West has failed to gain the popularity of some of Puccini's other works, such as La bohème and Tosca, the work has never completely left the opera reportory. For periodic stretches of time in the 20th century performances of the opera occurred with less frequency, but the opera has had a resurge of interest on the opera stage internationally in the late 20th and early 21st century.[24] Today the opera is not performed nearly as often as Puccini's other mature operas,[2] but stagings of the opera are not a rare occurrence.[25]

In 1921 the opera was staged at the Opéra de Monte-Carlo where Puccini was particularly impressed by soprano Gilda dalla Rizza, remarking, "At last I have seen my true Fanciulla."[26] In 1922 the Chicago Civic Opera staged the opera with Rosa Raisa as Minnie; a production which the company toured to New York's Manhattan Opera House.[27] In 1927 the Vienna State Opera staged the work with a critically lauded performance by Maria Jeritza in the role of Minnie; with the soprano receiving fourteen curtain calls in her final performance of the production.[28] In 1934 the opera was given its Swedish premiere in Stockholm at the Royal Swedish Opera with Jussi Björling as Dick Johnson and Helga Görlin as Minnie.[29]

The Metropolitan Opera has revived La fanciulla del West several times during the company's history after the initial production of the opera left its repertoire in 1914. The first time was in 1929 with Jeritza as Minnie and Giovanni Martinelli as Dick Johnson; a production which remained in the Met's performance repertoire through 1931.[30][31] In 1930 the opera was presented for the first time on the Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts for a live national broadcast with New Zealand soprano Frances Alda singing the role of Minnie.[32]

After a 30-year absence from the Met stage, La fanciulla del West was revived again at the Met in 1961 with a production directed by Henry Butler with an initial cast of Leontyne Price as Minnie and Richard Tucker as Dick Johnson.[33] Butler's staging of the work remained in the Met's performance repertoire for periodic performances over the next nine years; with its final performances being in 1970 with soprano Renata Tebaldi as Minnie.[34] The work as staged by Butler was notably the very first opera performance presented at the newly built Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center on April 11, 1966, with soprano Beverly Bower in the role of Minnie.[35] More recently the Met revived the opera in 1991 with Barbara Daniels as Minnie; using a staging by Giancarlo del Monaco which has remained in the Met's rotating repertoire for periodic performance; most recently in 2018 with Eva-Maria Westbroek as Minnie.[36] The Met also presented this staging of the work in the 2010–2011 season with Deborah Voigt as Minnie to mark the 100th anniversary of the opera's premiere in 1910.[37]

The San Francisco Opera (SFO) staged the work for the first time on September 15, 1930, with Jeritza as Minnie, Frederick Jagel as Dick Johnson, and Gaetano Viviani as Jack Rance.[38] The company has since presented the opera in five more of its opera seasons, including productions in 1943 with Florence Kirk as Minnie and Robert Weede as Jack Rance; in 1960 with Dorothy Kirsten as Minnie and Sandor Konya as Dick Johnson;[39] in 1965 with Chester Ludgin as Jack Rance and Marie Collier as Minnie using a production staged by Lotfi Mansouri;[40] in 1979 with Carol Neblett as Minnie and Giovanni Gibin as Dick Johnson;[41] and in 2010 with Deborah Voigt as Minnie.[42]

In 1949 the Festival Puccini in Torre del Lago, Italy staged a new production of La fanciulla del West to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Puccini's death; and the opera has remained a part of the festival's rotating repertoire into the 21st century.[43] In 1950 the Teatro dell'Opera di Roma mounted the opera in a production starring Maria Caniglia as Minnie and Vasco Campagnano as Johnson.[39] In 1954 soprano Eleanor Steber portrayed Minnie at a production at La Fenice.[39] La Scala staged the opera in 1956 with tenor Franco Corelli as Johnson; a role he repeated at the Teatro di San Carlo in 1957.[39] The opera remained in La Scala's repertoire for several seasons with the role of Minnie being performed at the theatre by sopranos Gigliola Frazzoni (1956-1957) and Birgit Nilsson (1958).[39] In 1958 soprano Anny Schlemm performed the role of Minnie at the Oper Frankfurt, and soprano Gerda Scheyrer sang the part at the Vienna State Opera.[39]

In 1963 the opera was staged by the Fujiwara Opera in Tokyo with Antonietta Stella as Minnie.[39] The Theatro Municipal (Rio de Janeiro) mounted the work in 1964 with Magda Olivero as Minnie; a role the soprano repeated at the Teatro Lirico Giuseppe Verdi in 1965.[39] The Philadelphia Lyric Opera staged the work at the Academy of Music in 1964 under the music direction of Anton Guadagno.[44]

The New York City Opera (NYCO) first presented the opera in 1977 in a production directed by Frank Corsaro with Maralin Niska as Minnie and Ermanno Mauro as Dick Johnson with Sergiu Comissiona conducting.[45] The NYCO unveiled a new production of the opera staged by James De Blasis in 1990 starring Linda Roark-Strummer as Minnie and Stefano Algieri as Dick Johnson.[46] The NYCO staged the opera a third time in 2005 with Stephanie Friede as Minnie, Renzo Zulian as Dick Johnson, and George Manahan conducting.[47] Most recently the NYCO presented the opera in 2017 with Kristin Sampson as Minnie.[48]

In 1979 the Teatro Colón performed La fanciulla del West with Plácido Domingo as Dick Johnson.[49] In 1982 the Deutsche Oper Berlin staged the opera with Ghena Dimitrova as Minnie.[50] That same year the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden mounted a production of the opera starring Domingo and Carol Neblett which was filmed for television broadcast in the UK and the United States.[51] In 1983 the Canadian Opera Company performed the work with Johanna Meier as Minnie.[39] In 1985 the Spoleto Festival USA performed the opera with Belgian soprano Anne-Marie Antoine as Minnie.[52] In 1991 the Santa Fe Opera presented the work during its 35th season with Mary Jane Johnson as Minnie and Craig Sirianni as Dick Johnson.[53] That same year La Scala revived the opera with Mara Zampieri, Plácido Domingo, and Juan Pons singing under the baton ofLorin Maazel; a performance which was recorded live for commercial release.[54]

An incomplete list of more recent stagings include performances at the Teatro Real (1983),[39] the Liceu (1984),[39] Arena di Verona (1986),[39] Vienna State Opera (1988 and 2013),[39][55] Lyric Opera of Chicago (1990 and 2011),[39][56] Welsh National Opera (1991),[39] the Teatro Regio Torino (1991),[39] Tulsa Opera (1991),[57] the Los Angeles Opera (1991 and 2002),[39][58] Oper Frankfurt (1992),[39] Opéra de Marseille (1993),[59] the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden (1994 and 2005),[39][60] La Scala (1995),[39] the Zürich Opera House (1998 and 2014),[61][62] the Teatro del Giglio (2000),[63] the Austin Lyric Opera (2002),[64] Seattle Opera (2004),[65] Glimmerglass Opera (2004),[65] the Opera Orchestra of New York (2004),[66] the Deutsche Oper Berlin (2006, 2015, and 2021),[67][68][69] the New National Theatre Tokyo (2006),[68] the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra (2007),[39] the Malmö Opera (2007),[39] the Opéra de Montréal (2008),[70] the Teatro dell'Opera di Roma (2008-2009),[39] the Dutch National Opera (2009),[71] the Adelaide Festival Theatre (2009),[39] the Edinburgh International Festival (2010),[72] Opera Australia (2010),[73] the Mobile Opera (2013),[74] the Castleton Festival (2013),[75] the Minnesota Opera (2014)[76] the Paris Opera (2014),[61] Opera Holland Park (2014),[24] the English National Opera (2014),[77] Opera North (2014),[25] the Virginia Opera (2017),[78] the Michigan Opera Theatre (2017),[79] the Hungarian State Opera (2018),[80] the Bavarian State Opera (2019),[81] the National Centre for the Performing Arts (China) (2019, Chinese premiere),[82] the Mariinsky Theatre (2019 and 2022),[18] the Berlin State Opera (2021),[83] the Seoul Arts Center (2021, South Korea première),[84] the Romanian National Opera, Cluj-Napoca (2022),[85] the Teatro Sociale, Como (2022),[86] the Teatro Fraschini (2022),[87] and the Estonian National Opera (2022-2023).[88]

In 2006 the philanthropist Bruce Kovner donated a large collection of original manuscripts to the Juilliard School, including Puccini's manuscript for La fanciulla del West.[89]

Roles edit

 
Enrico Caruso as Dick Johnson
Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 10 December 1910
Conductor: Arturo Toscanini
Minnie soprano Emmy Destinn
Jack Rance, sheriff baritone Pasquale Amato
Dick Johnson alias Ramerrez, bandit tenor Enrico Caruso
Nick, bartender at the Polka saloon tenor Albert Reiss
Ashby, Wells Fargo agent bass Adamo Didur
Sonora, miner baritone Dinh Gilly
Trin, miner tenor Angelo Badà
Sid, miner baritone Giulio Rossi [ca]
Bello,[N 1] miner baritone Vincenzo Reschiglian
Harry, miner tenor Pietro Audisio
Joe, miner tenor Glenn Hall
Happy, miner baritone Antonio Pini-Corsi
Jim Larkens, miner bass Bernard Bégué
Billy Jackrabbit, a Red Indian bass Georges Bourgeois
Wowkle, his squaw mezzo-soprano Marie Mattfeld
Jake Wallace, a traveling camp minstrel baritone Andrés de Segurola
José Castro, a mestizo "greaser", from Ramirez' band bass Edoardo Missiano
The Pony Express rider tenor Lamberto Belleri
Men of the camp and boys of the ridge
  1. ^ Bello is often named Handsome in productions in English speaking countries

Synopsis edit

Time:1849 to 1850.
Place: A mining camp at the foot of the Cloudy Mountains, California.[90]

Act 1 edit

Inside the Polka Saloon

A group of Gold Rush miners enter the "Polka" saloon after a day working at the mine ("Hello! Hello! Alla 'Polka'"). After a song by traveling minstrel Jake Wallace ("Che faranno i vecchi miei"), one of the miners, Jim Larkens, is homesick and the miners collect enough money for his fare home ("Jim, perché piangi?").

A group of miners playing cards discover that Sid is cheating and want to attack him. Sheriff Jack Rance quiets the fight and pins two cards to Sid's jacket, as a sign of a cheat.

A Wells Fargo agent, Ashby, enters and announces that he is chasing the bandit Ramerrez and his gang of Mexicans. Rance toasts Minnie, the woman who owns the saloon, as his future wife, which makes Sonora jealous. The two men begin to fight. Rance draws his revolver but at that moment, a shot rings out and Minnie stands next to the bar with a rifle in her hands ("Hello, Minnie!"). She gives the miners a reading lesson from the Bible ("Dove eravamo?").

The Pony Express rider arrives ("La posta!") and delivers a telegram from Nina Micheltorena, offering to reveal Ramerrez's hideout. The sheriff tells Minnie that he loves her, but Minnie puts him off as she is waiting for the right man ("Ti voglio bene, Minnie").

A stranger enters the saloon and asks for a whisky and water. He introduces himself as Dick Johnson from Sacramento, whom Minnie had met earlier. Johnson invites Minnie to dance with him and she accepts. Angrily, Rance watches them.

Ashby returns with the captured Ramerrez gang member, Castro. Upon seeing his leader, Johnson, in the saloon, Castro agrees to lead Rance, Ashby and the miners in a search for Ramerrez, and the group then follows him on a false trail and in what turns out to be a wild goose chase. But before Castro leaves, he whispers to Johnson that somebody will whistle and Johnson must reply to confirm that the place is clear. A whistle is heard, but Johnson fails to reply.

Minnie shows Johnson the keg of gold that she and the miners take turns to guard at night and Johnson reassures her that the gold will be safe there. Before he leaves the saloon, he promises to visit her at her cabin. They confess their love for each other. Minnie begins to cry, and Johnson comforts her before he leaves.

Act 2 edit

Minnie's dwelling, later that evening

Wowkle, a Native American woman who is Minnie's servant, her lover Billy Jackrabbit and their baby are present as Minnie enters, wanting to get ready for Johnson's visit. Johnson enters Minnie's cabin and she tells him all about her life. It begins to snow. They kiss and Minnie asks him to stay till morning. He denies knowing Nina Micheltorena. As Johnson hides, a posse enters looking for Ramerrez and reveal to Minnie that Johnson is the bandit Ramerrez himself. Angry, she orders Johnson to leave. After he leaves, Minnie hears a gunshot and she knows Johnson has been shot. Johnson staggers in and collapses, Minnie helps him by hiding him up in the loft. Rance enters Minnie's cabin looking for the bandit and is about to give up searching for Johnson when drops of blood fall on his hand. Rance forces Johnson to climb down. Minnie desperately makes Rance an offer: if she beats him at poker, he must let Johnson go free; if Rance wins, she will marry him. Hiding some cards in her stockings, Minnie cheats and wins. Rance honors the deal and Minnie throws herself on the unconscious Johnson on the floor.

 
Scene from act 3 of the premiere, with Enrico Caruso, Emmy Destinn, and Pasquale Amato

Act 3 edit

In the Great Californian Forest at dawn, sometime later

Johnson is again on the run from Ashby and the miners. Nick and Rance are discussing Johnson and wonder what Minnie sees in him when Ashby arrives in triumph: Johnson has been captured. Rance and the miners all want Johnson to be hanged. Johnson accepts the sentence and only asks the miners not to tell Minnie about his capture and his fate ("Ch'ella mi creda"). Minnie arrives, armed with a pistol, just before the execution and throws herself in front of Johnson to protect him. While Rance tries to proceed, she convinces the miners that they owe her too much to kill the man she loves, and asks them to forgive him ("Ah! Ah! È Minnie! ... Non vi fu mai chi disse 'Basta!' "). One by one, the miners yield to her plea ("E anche tu lo vorrai, Joe"). Rance is not happy but finally he too gives in. Sonora unties Johnson and sets him free. The miners bid Minnie farewell ("Le tue parole sono di Dio"). Minnie and Johnson leave California to start a new life together.

Instrumentation edit

La fanciulla del West is scored for piccolo; three flutes; three oboes; one English horn; three clarinets in B-flat; one bass clarinet in B-flat; three bassoons; one contrabassoon; four French horns in F; three trumpets in F; three tenor trombones; one bass trombone; a percussion section with timpani, cymbals, one triangle, one snare drum, one bass drum, and one glockenspiel; three onstage fonicas;[a] one celesta; two harps; and strings.[92]

Recordings edit

Year Cast: (Minnie,
Dick Johnson,
Jack Rance)
Conductor,
Opera house and orchestra
Label[93]
1950 Carla Gavazzi,
Vasco Campagnano,
Ugo Savarese
Arturo Basile,
RAI Orchestra and Chorus, Milan
CD: Warner Fonit
Cat: 8573 87488-2
1954 Eleanor Steber,
Mario Del Monaco,
Giangiacomo Guelfi
Dmitri Mitropoulos,
La Maggio Musicale Fiorentino Orchestra and Chorus
(Recording of a performance at L’Opera di Firenze, 6 June)
CD: MYTO
Cat: 975.169
1956 Gigliola Frazzoni,
Franco Corelli,
Tito Gobbi
Antonino Votto,
Teatro alla Scala Orchestra and Chorus
(Recording of a performance at La Scala, 4 April)
CD: Opera d'Oro
Cat: 7036
1957 Magda Olivero,
Giacomo Lauri-Volpi,
Giangiacomo Guelfi
Vincenzo Bellezza [it]  
1958 Renata Tebaldi,
Mario Del Monaco,
Cornell MacNeil
Franco Capuana,
Santa Cecilia Academy Orchestra and Chorus
CD: Decca[94]
Cat: 421595
1958 Birgit Nilsson,
João Gibin,
Andrea Mongelli
Lovro von Matačić,
Teatro alla Scala Orchestra and chorus
CD: EMI Classics
Cat: 81862[95]
1961 Renata Tebaldi,
Daniele Barioni,
Giangiacomo Guelfi
Arturo Basile,
Roma Italiana Opera Orchestra e Coro
CD: Opera d'Oro
Cat:1242
1963 Antonietta Stella,
Gastone Limarilli,
Anselmo Colzani
Oliviero De Fabritiis,
NHK Symphony Orchestra Tokyo, Nikikai Chorus, Fujiwara Opera Chorus
DVD: Video Artists Int'l
Cat: 4439
1977 Carol Neblett,
Plácido Domingo,
Sherrill Milnes
Zubin Mehta,
Royal Opera House Orchestra and Chorus
CD:Deutsche Grammophon[96]
Cat: 419640
1982 Carol Neblett,
Plácido Domingo,
Silvano Carroli
Nello Santi,
Royal Opera House Orchestra and Chorus
DVD: Kultur Video
Cat: 032031203891
1991 Éva Marton,
Dennis O'Neill,
Alain Fondary
Leonard Slatkin,
Munich Radio Symphony Orchestra, Bavarian Radio Chorus
CD: RCA Victor Red Seal
Cat: 60597
1991 Mara Zampieri,
Plácido Domingo,
Juan Pons
Lorin Maazel,
Teatro alla Scala Orchestra and chorus
DVD: BBC / Opus Arte
Cat: OA LS3004 D
1992 Barbara Daniels,
Plácido Domingo,
Sherrill Milnes
Leonard Slatkin,
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus
DVD: Deutsche Grammophon
Cat: 00440 073 4023
2011 Deborah Voigt,
Marcello Giordani,
Lucio Gallo
Nicola Luisotti,
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus
DVD: Deutsche Grammophon
Cat: 80016679-09
2013 Nina Stemme,
Jonas Kaufmann,
Tomasz Konieczny
Franz Welser-Möst,
Wiener Staatsoper Orchestra and Chorus
Blu-ray: Sony Records
Cat: 88875064079

Other influences edit

The melody for Jake Wallace's song near the beginning of the first act is derived from two songs in a collection of Zuni melodies "recorded and harmonized" by ethnomusicologist Carlos Troyer, published in 1909. Puccini had obtained this publication in an effort to find authentic Native American music for the role of Wowkle, but he ended up using it for Jake Wallace instead. (Several books about Puccini repeat Mosco Carner's claim that the song is based on Stephen Foster's "Old Dog Tray"; it is not.)[97]

A climactic phrase sung by Johnson, "E provai una gioia strana" (alternatively "Ho provato una gioia strana" in some versions of the libretto) from "Quello che tacete" near the end of the first act, is widely cited to resemble a similar phrase in the Phantom's song "The Music of the Night" in Andrew Lloyd Webber's 1986 musical The Phantom of the Opera.[98][99][100][101] The Puccini estate sued Lloyd Webber over copyright infringement and the matter was settled out of court.[citation needed]

The opera was first portrayed in film in 1915 by famed director Cecil B. DeMille, and subsequently by directors Edwin Carewe in 1923, and John Francis Dillon, whose 1930 film was lost. A 1938 film directed by Robert Z. Leonard was based not on the opera but on the original play by Belasco; Sigmund Romberg wrote songs for this film.

Notes and references edit

Notes

  1. ^ The fonica is an electronic instrument invented by Puccini for La fanciulla del West. Casa Ricordi had a set created and rented them out for early productions of the opera, but the result was unsatisfactory and the instrument's use was ceased shortly after the premiere. A marimba is commonly substituted in modern productions.[91]

References

  1. ^ Smith 2004, p. 544.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Fisher, Burton D. (2005). Opera Classics Library Series: Puccini's the Girl of the Golden West. Opera Journeys Publishing. p. 22. ISBN 978-0977145591.
  3. ^ Randall & David 2006, p. 42.
  4. ^ "Great Welcome for New Opera; Brilliant Audience Wildly Applauds Puccinl's Girl of the Golden West". The New York Times. December 11, 1910. p. 1.
  5. ^ a b c Kathryn M. Fenton (30 August 2019). "Puccini's La Fanciulla Del West and American Musical Identity". Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781351594875.
  6. ^ a b Burton D. Fisher (2005). Puccini's The Girl of the Golden West. Opera Journeys Publishing. p. 16. ISBN 9780977145591.
  7. ^ Anthony Tommasini (October 9, 2002). "Books of the Times; The Procrastinating Idol of an Opera-Mad World". The New York Times.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Julian Budden (2001). "Fanciulla del West, La ('The Girl of the West' [The Girl of the Golden West])". Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O007114. ISBN 9781561592630.
  9. ^ Richard Aldrich (December 18, 1910). "Critics Find Little American Color in Puccini's Opera, The Girl of the Golden West". The New York Times. p. D10.
  10. ^ a b "Carolina White as Minnie; Soprano Makes a Distinct Success in The Girl of the Golden West". The New York Times. December 28, 1910. p. 3.
  11. ^ Henry Charles Lahee (1912). The Grand Opera Singers of To-day:An Account of the Leading Operatic Stars who Have Sung During Recent Years, Together with a Sketch of the Chief Operatic Enterprises. L.C. Page. pp. 425–427.
  12. ^ "Puccini's Opera in English; Henry W. Savage Produces The Girl of the Golden West". The New York Times. October 28, 1911. p. 13.
  13. ^ "King Praises Puccini; Victor Emmanuel and Queen See Girl of the Golden West?". The New York Times. June 13, 1911. p. 9.
  14. ^ Annasue McCleave Wilson (March 15, 1998). "Puccini's Stage: All of Lucca". The New York Times. Retrieved 2023-10-10.
  15. ^ William Ashbrook (1985). "La fanciulla del West". The Operas of Puccini. Cornell University Press. p. 141. ISBN 9780801493096.
  16. ^ Annie J. Randall, Rosalind Gray Davis (2005). Puccini and The Girl: History and Reception of The Girl of the Golden West. University of Chicago Press. p. 123. ISBN 9780226703893.
  17. ^ "La fanciulla del West", work details, Bibliothèque nationale de France
  18. ^ a b "La fanciulla del West". mariinsky.ru. Retrieved March 31, 2023.
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  22. ^ Robert Levine. "Puccini's Girl Rides Triumphantly at Glimmerglass". classicstoday.com.
  23. ^ Annie J. Randall and Rosalind Gray Davis (2005). Puccini and the Girl: History and Reception of "The Girl of the Golden West.". Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 131.
  24. ^ a b Richard Fairman (June 4, 2014). "La fanciulla del West, Holland Park, London – review". Financial Times.
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  26. ^ Colin Kendell, The Complete Puccini, Amberley Publishing 2012
  27. ^ Richard Aldrich (January 27, 1922). "Opera; The Girl of the Golden West". The New York Times.
  28. ^ "Jeritza in Vienna Triumph". The New York Times. September 29, 1927.
  29. ^ Stephen Hastings (2012). The Björling Sound: A Recorded Legacy. University of Rochester Press. p. 187. ISBN 9781580464062.
  30. ^ "Girl of the Golden West Repeated". The New York Times. November 26, 1929. p. 28.
  31. ^ "Music; The Girl of the Golden West". The New York Times. November 10, 1931. p. A3.
  32. ^ "The Microphone Will Present; Gigli and de Gogorza in Radio Recitals—Puccini Opera, Girl of the Golden West Goes on the Air". The New York Times. January 12, 1930. p. 141.
  33. ^ Harold C. Schonberg (October 24, 1961). "Opera: Fanciulla in Realistic Revival; Met Production Opens on Elegant Note". The New York Times. p. 43.
  34. ^ Harold C. Schonberg (February 12, 1970). "Opera: New Golden Girl". The New York Times. p. 31.
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  41. ^ "American Soprano Carol Neblett, 71, New York City". Opera News. November 2017.
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  45. ^ Joseph Horowitz (October 14, 1977). "Thar's Gold in Puccini Horse Opera". The New York Times. p. 69.
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  47. ^ Anne Midgette (April 3, 2005). "Nuggets of True Romance, With Weepy Gold Miners Singing in Italian". The New York Times.
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  49. ^ Ralph Blumenthal (November 7, 1996). "A High-Voltage Dynamo Named Domingo". The New York Times.
  50. ^ Paul Hofmann (November 25, 1984). "Ghena Dimitrova: a Diva Discovered". Section 6. The New York Times. p. 75.
  51. ^ Steve Schneider (November 17, 1985). "Cable TV Notes; Puccini and Purlie". The New York Times. p. 34.
  52. ^ Will Crutchfield (May 30, 1985). "Opera: Spoleto Festival's Fanciulla". The New York Times.
  53. ^ Bernard Holland (August 6, 1991). "Review/Opera; Seldom-Staged Strauss Amid a Desert Downpour". The New York Times.
  54. ^ Kenneth Furie (August 30, 1992). "Recordings View; An Uplifting Fanciulla". The New York Times.
  55. ^ Chanda VanderHart (10 October 2013). "La fanciulla del West triumphs at the Vienna Staatsoper with Kaufmann and Stemme". bachtrack.com.
  56. ^ Lawrence A. Johnson (January 23, 2011). "Lyric Opera's lively and engaging "Fanciulla" almost golden". Chicago Classical Review.
  57. ^ Rick Rogers (August 24, 1997). "Tulsa Opera Season To Mark Anniversary". The Oklahoman.
  58. ^ Lawrence Van Gelder (September 3, 2002). "Footlights". The New York Times.
  59. ^ Laura Colby (March 14, 1993). "Marseilles Adds a Bit of Polish". The New York Times.
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  64. ^ Kathryn Jones (February 17, 2002). "What's Doing In; Austin". The New York Times.
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  72. ^ Usher Hall (25 August 2010). "Review: La fanciulla del West". The Guardian.
  73. ^ Diana Simmonds (July 15, 2010). "Review: La fanciulla del West". Stagenoise.
  74. ^ Thomas B. Harrison (March 23, 2013). "Minnie get your gun: Mobile Opera's 'La Fanciulla del West' is a wild, romantic ride". Press-Register.
  75. ^ Vivien Schweitzer (May 17, 2013). "Summer Stages: Classical and Opera". The New York Times.
  76. ^ Larry Fuchsberg (December 2014). . Opera News. 79 (6). Archived from the original on December 1, 2020.
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  78. ^ Gina Dalfonzo (December 3, 2017). "Review: 'The Girl of the Golden West' at the Virginia Opera".
  79. ^ Patrice Nolan (April 3, 2017). "MOT's 'Girl of the Golden West' is gold indeed". Encore Michigan.
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  82. ^ "Puccini's classic opera La Fanciulla del West has its Chinese premiere". NCPA.
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  87. ^ M.G.P. (January 27, 2022). "Rizzo dirige La fanciulla del West stasera e domenica al Fraschini". La Provincia Pavese.
  88. ^ Francisco Salazar (August 9, 2022). "José Cura, Olga Mykytenko & Pavlo Hunka Lead Estonian National Opera's 2022-23 Season". Opera Wire.
  89. ^ Daniel J. Wakin (March 1, 2006). "Juilliard Receives Music Manuscript Collection". The New York Times.
  90. ^ La fanciulla del West libretto, Franco Colombo, New York, 1847 at the Internet Archive
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  93. ^ Recordings of La fanciulla on-opera-discography.org.uk
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  95. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-06-08. Retrieved 2008-03-19.
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  97. ^ Atlas, Allan W., "Belasco and Puccini: 'Old Dog Tray' and the Zuni Indians", The Musical Quarterly, Vol. 75, No. 3, Autumn, 1991, pp. 362–398.
  98. ^ "La fanciulla del West review" by David Patrick Stearns, Gramophone, December 2011
  99. ^ "La fanciulla del West, Opera Holland Park London" by Edward Seckerson, The Independent, 21 June 2004
  100. ^ "Review: La fanciulla del West/Lyric Opera" by Dennis Polkow, Newcity Stage
  101. ^ "Quello che tacete" (La fanciulla del West) on YouTube; the excerpt in question sung by Daniele Barioni

Sources edit

External links edit

  • David Belasco. The Girl of the Golden West at Project Gutenberg
  • "Puccini and New York", lecture by Professor Roger Parker on the opera, given at Gresham College on 11 June 2007 (with video and audio files available for download).

fanciulla, west, girl, golden, west, redirects, here, other, uses, girl, golden, west, disambiguation, girl, west, opera, three, acts, giacomo, puccini, italian, libretto, guelfo, civinini, carlo, zangarini, based, 1905, play, girl, golden, west, american, aut. Girl of the Golden West redirects here For other uses see The Girl of the Golden West disambiguation La fanciulla del West The Girl of the West is an opera in three acts by Giacomo Puccini to an Italian libretto by Guelfo Civinini and Carlo Zangarini based on the 1905 play The Girl of the Golden West by the American author David Belasco Fanciulla followed Madama Butterfly which was also based on a Belasco play The opera has fewer of the show stopping highlights that characterize Puccini s other works but is admired for its impressive orchestration and for a score that is more melodically integrated than is typical of his previous work Fanciulla displays influences from composers Claude Debussy and Richard Strauss without being in any way imitative Similarities between the libretto and the work of Richard Wagner have also been found though some attribute this more to the original plot of the play and have asserted that the opera remains quintessentially Italian La fanciulla del WestOpera by Giacomo Puccini Una partita a poker a crucial scene with Emmy Destinn in the title role in the premiereTranslationThe Girl of the WestLibrettistGuelfo Civinini Carlo ZangariniLanguageItalianBased onDavid Belasco s play The Girl of the Golden WestPremiere10 December 1910 1910 12 10 Metropolitan Opera At the time of its debut performance Puccini declared La fanciulla del West to be the greatest composition of his career as a composer The work had a highly publicized premiere at the Metropolitan Opera New York City in 1910 that was immensely popular with audiences but to the disappointment of Puccini received a less than positive reaction from American critics who felt the composer failed to effectively integrate an American aesthetic into the opera s score The opera was widely performed internationally in the three years following the premiere for performances in cities throughout the United States Europe and South America However critical reaction to the work was largely negative internationally with the exception of critics in Italy at this time in history After 1913 stagings of La fanciulla del West during the early and mid 20th century were more infrequent although the opera has never left the performance repertoire While overall public reception of the work has remained mixed critical assessment of the opera underwent a reversal among Puccini scholars beginning in the late 20th century Despite the plot being a source of significant criticism the majority of published writers on Puccini and his music in the late 20th century and 21 century agree in calling La fanciulla del West Puccini s magnum opus particularly lauding its craftsmanship This critical reassessment of La fanciulla del West coincided with an increase of performances of the opera at opera houses internationally during the late 20th and 21st centuries Today performances of the opera are not rare but the work is still not as frequently programmed as Puccini s other mature operas such as La boheme and Tosca In 2006 the philanthropist Bruce Kovner donated a large collection of original manuscripts to the Juilliard School including Puccini s manuscript for La fanciulla del West Contents 1 Early performance history and critical assessment 2 Later performance history 3 Roles 4 Synopsis 4 1 Act 1 4 2 Act 2 4 3 Act 3 5 Instrumentation 6 Recordings 7 Other influences 8 Notes and references 8 1 Sources 9 External linksEarly performance history and critical assessment edit nbsp Cover design for libretto 1954 La fanciulla del West was commissioned by and first performed at the Metropolitan Opera in New York on 10 December 1910 with Met stars Enrico Caruso and Emmy Destinn for whom Puccini created the leading roles of Dick Johnson and Minnie Also in the cast was Pasquale Amato as Jack Rance The Met s music director Arturo Toscanini conducted 1 Toscanini called the opera a great symphonic poem 2 This was the first world premiere of an opera at the Met 3 and it was extremely well received by audiences in this initial production 4 5 At the premiere performance the composer received fourteen curtain calls after the first act nineteen curtain calls after the second act and twenty after the finale 6 Puccini himself was incredibly thrilled with the work and both he and his publisher Ricordi assumed that the opera s enthusiastic response from New York audiences would translate into another popular success on the international stage 5 In some respects this was initially the case as the opera enjoyed a large number of stagings in the two years after its premiere with many performances in major American cities over 20 productions in German opera houses and performances in theaters in London Liverpool Buenos Aires Naples Milan Rome and Budapest 7 Critical reaction to the opera however never matched Puccini s own favorable view of his opera and the work struggled to a find a place in the regularly performed opera repertoire after this initial flurry of performances 8 American critics were lukewarm in their reception of the opera 8 largely criticizing the work for failing to successfully incorporate American idioms into the opera s musical score 9 In analyzing the disparity between audience response and critical reaction to the work by Americans musicologist Kathryn Fenton asserts that American critics were trying to wrestle with their conceptions of American identity stating Marked by ambivalence the reviews expose the New York City critics struggle to reconcile the opera they expected to see with the one they actually saw Their view of the opera s place in Puccini s repertoire and in the early 20th century opera canon differed in some cases drastically with the composer s own assessment One of the strongest objections made concerned its local color its attempt to portray a Californian mining camp during the 1849 Gold Rush through characters dialect body language clothing buildings landscape customs situation and most importantly music considered stereotypical of the region Critics found the manner in which Puccini attempted to musically depict the American locale problematic 5 Immediately following the Met premiere La fanciulla del West was programed by several American opera companies American soprano Carolina White who had previously established herself as a leading soprano in opera houses in Italy and Switzerland made her United States opera debut as Minnie in the Chicago premiere of the opera on December 27 1910 at the Chicago Auditorium by the Chicago Grand Opera Company 10 White performed the role again for the opera s first stagings in Milwaukee 1910 10 and Boston 1911 the latter with the Boston Opera Company 11 The theatrical impresario Henry Wilson Savage staged the first English language production of the opera for the work s Connecticut premiere at the Poll s Theater in Bridgeport on October 27 1911 with Luisa Villani as Minnie 12 While American critics were less than enthusiastic in their reviews of La fanciulla del West English critics were even more harsh in their initial assessment of the opera 8 The work was poorly reviewed when the Royal Opera House Covent Garden staged the European and United Kingdom premiere of the work on 29 May 1911 under the baton of Cleofonte Campanini with largely the same cast as the Met premiere with the exception of Amedeo Bassi in the role of Johnson 8 Italian critics however were more positive in their assessment of the opera when the work premiered in Italy at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome on June 12 1911 8 This performance was attended by King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy and Queen Elena of Montenegro who reportedly warmly received the opera 13 However while praised by Italian critics and the Italian monarchy the opera did not achieve popularity with the Italian public and failed to gain a place among the regularly programmed opera repertoire in that nation 8 Puccini himself conducted La fanciulla del West for its first performance in Lucca at the Teatro del Giglio in 1911 with the theatre s orchestra pit being redesigned by Puccini and rebuilt just prior to the performance of the opera 14 The work was first staged at La Scala on December 12 1912 with Tina Poli Randaccio as Minnie and Tullio Serafin conducting where it ran thirteen performances 15 As in the United States the German premiere of La fanciulla del West enjoyed a positive response from audiences but a negative reaction from critics when it was staged at the Deutsches Opernhaus in Berlin now known as the Deutsche Oper on 28 March 1913 under the musical direction of Ignatz Waghalter 16 Other premieres took place at the Teatro Colon Buenos Aires on 25 July 1911 and in Melbourne on 11 June 1912 at Her Majesty s Theatre citation needed the world premiere in French took place in the Opera de Monte Carlo on 12 April 1912 in an adaptation by Maurice Vaucaire fr 17 The Zimin Opera presented the work s Russian premiere on October 2 1913 at the Solodovnikov Theatre in Moscow 18 In spite of criticism Puccini insisted that La fanciulla del West was his greatest composition up to that point in his career 8 Yet the opera struggled to find a place in the standard opera repertory in the 20th century even in the United States enjoying only periodic performances 8 Critical reaction and public reception of the work has been divided and the opera has never achieved the popularity enjoyed by many of Puccini s other operas 19 Only late in the 20th century was the opera re assessed as a work of quality and Puccini scholars have acknowledged that the opera was an important departure in Puccini s body of work from a predominant quality of feminine softness in his other works towards a decidedly masculine aesthetic 8 Likewise the complexity of the opera s harmonic language and its use of a wide range of instrumental colour has led some writers on music to label it as Puccini s greatest opera 6 La fanciulla del West has fewer of the show stopping highlights that characterize Puccini s other works but is admired for its impressive orchestration and for a score that is more melodically integrated than is typical of his previous work The work displays influences from composers Claude Debussy and Richard Strauss 2 without being in any way imitative Similarities between the libretto and the work of Richard Wagner have also been found 2 20 though some attribute this more to the original plot of the play 20 and have asserted that the opera remains quintessentially Italian 2 Yet some critics of the opera particularly in America have deemed the opera as conceived silly largely in relation to its American storyline being told through the vehicle of an Italian opera 21 For example music critic Robert Levine stated the following in his review of a 2004 production at the Glimmerglass Opera The entire concept of an Italian opera taking place during the California Gold Rush of the 1850s is a mite silly 22 Smith College musicology professor Ruth A Solie has written about the hypocrisy of such criticisms noting that Americans often have no trouble accepting Italian operas set in foreign locales like Egypt Aida and China Turandot 21 In analyzing this general reaction among American reviews Annie J Randall observed in her book Puccini and the Girl History and Reception of The Girl of the Golden West 2005 University of Chicago Press that European operas often feature the exotic and suggests that American critics have professed annoyance that Americans had been made the object of the voyeuristic imperial gaze on the opera stage 23 Despite the plot being a source of significant criticism the majority of academics and musicians today agree in calling it a magnum opus particularly lauding its musical craftsmanship 2 Later performance history editWhile La fanciulla del West has failed to gain the popularity of some of Puccini s other works such as La boheme and Tosca the work has never completely left the opera reportory For periodic stretches of time in the 20th century performances of the opera occurred with less frequency but the opera has had a resurge of interest on the opera stage internationally in the late 20th and early 21st century 24 Today the opera is not performed nearly as often as Puccini s other mature operas 2 but stagings of the opera are not a rare occurrence 25 In 1921 the opera was staged at the Opera de Monte Carlo where Puccini was particularly impressed by soprano Gilda dalla Rizza remarking At last I have seen my true Fanciulla 26 In 1922 the Chicago Civic Opera staged the opera with Rosa Raisa as Minnie a production which the company toured to New York s Manhattan Opera House 27 In 1927 the Vienna State Opera staged the work with a critically lauded performance by Maria Jeritza in the role of Minnie with the soprano receiving fourteen curtain calls in her final performance of the production 28 In 1934 the opera was given its Swedish premiere in Stockholm at the Royal Swedish Opera with Jussi Bjorling as Dick Johnson and Helga Gorlin as Minnie 29 The Metropolitan Opera has revived La fanciulla del West several times during the company s history after the initial production of the opera left its repertoire in 1914 The first time was in 1929 with Jeritza as Minnie and Giovanni Martinelli as Dick Johnson a production which remained in the Met s performance repertoire through 1931 30 31 In 1930 the opera was presented for the first time on the Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts for a live national broadcast with New Zealand soprano Frances Alda singing the role of Minnie 32 After a 30 year absence from the Met stage La fanciulla del West was revived again at the Met in 1961 with a production directed by Henry Butler with an initial cast of Leontyne Price as Minnie and Richard Tucker as Dick Johnson 33 Butler s staging of the work remained in the Met s performance repertoire for periodic performances over the next nine years with its final performances being in 1970 with soprano Renata Tebaldi as Minnie 34 The work as staged by Butler was notably the very first opera performance presented at the newly built Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center on April 11 1966 with soprano Beverly Bower in the role of Minnie 35 More recently the Met revived the opera in 1991 with Barbara Daniels as Minnie using a staging by Giancarlo del Monaco which has remained in the Met s rotating repertoire for periodic performance most recently in 2018 with Eva Maria Westbroek as Minnie 36 The Met also presented this staging of the work in the 2010 2011 season with Deborah Voigt as Minnie to mark the 100th anniversary of the opera s premiere in 1910 37 The San Francisco Opera SFO staged the work for the first time on September 15 1930 with Jeritza as Minnie Frederick Jagel as Dick Johnson and Gaetano Viviani as Jack Rance 38 The company has since presented the opera in five more of its opera seasons including productions in 1943 with Florence Kirk as Minnie and Robert Weede as Jack Rance in 1960 with Dorothy Kirsten as Minnie and Sandor Konya as Dick Johnson 39 in 1965 with Chester Ludgin as Jack Rance and Marie Collier as Minnie using a production staged by Lotfi Mansouri 40 in 1979 with Carol Neblett as Minnie and Giovanni Gibin as Dick Johnson 41 and in 2010 with Deborah Voigt as Minnie 42 In 1949 the Festival Puccini in Torre del Lago Italy staged a new production of La fanciulla del West to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Puccini s death and the opera has remained a part of the festival s rotating repertoire into the 21st century 43 In 1950 the Teatro dell Opera di Roma mounted the opera in a production starring Maria Caniglia as Minnie and Vasco Campagnano as Johnson 39 In 1954 soprano Eleanor Steber portrayed Minnie at a production at La Fenice 39 La Scala staged the opera in 1956 with tenor Franco Corelli as Johnson a role he repeated at the Teatro di San Carlo in 1957 39 The opera remained in La Scala s repertoire for several seasons with the role of Minnie being performed at the theatre by sopranos Gigliola Frazzoni 1956 1957 and Birgit Nilsson 1958 39 In 1958 soprano Anny Schlemm performed the role of Minnie at the Oper Frankfurt and soprano Gerda Scheyrer sang the part at the Vienna State Opera 39 In 1963 the opera was staged by the Fujiwara Opera in Tokyo with Antonietta Stella as Minnie 39 The Theatro Municipal Rio de Janeiro mounted the work in 1964 with Magda Olivero as Minnie a role the soprano repeated at the Teatro Lirico Giuseppe Verdi in 1965 39 The Philadelphia Lyric Opera staged the work at the Academy of Music in 1964 under the music direction of Anton Guadagno 44 The New York City Opera NYCO first presented the opera in 1977 in a production directed by Frank Corsaro with Maralin Niska as Minnie and Ermanno Mauro as Dick Johnson with Sergiu Comissiona conducting 45 The NYCO unveiled a new production of the opera staged by James De Blasis in 1990 starring Linda Roark Strummer as Minnie and Stefano Algieri as Dick Johnson 46 The NYCO staged the opera a third time in 2005 with Stephanie Friede as Minnie Renzo Zulian as Dick Johnson and George Manahan conducting 47 Most recently the NYCO presented the opera in 2017 with Kristin Sampson as Minnie 48 In 1979 the Teatro Colon performed La fanciulla del West with Placido Domingo as Dick Johnson 49 In 1982 the Deutsche Oper Berlin staged the opera with Ghena Dimitrova as Minnie 50 That same year the Royal Opera House Covent Garden mounted a production of the opera starring Domingo and Carol Neblett which was filmed for television broadcast in the UK and the United States 51 In 1983 the Canadian Opera Company performed the work with Johanna Meier as Minnie 39 In 1985 the Spoleto Festival USA performed the opera with Belgian soprano Anne Marie Antoine as Minnie 52 In 1991 the Santa Fe Opera presented the work during its 35th season with Mary Jane Johnson as Minnie and Craig Sirianni as Dick Johnson 53 That same year La Scala revived the opera with Mara Zampieri Placido Domingo and Juan Pons singing under the baton ofLorin Maazel a performance which was recorded live for commercial release 54 An incomplete list of more recent stagings include performances at the Teatro Real 1983 39 the Liceu 1984 39 Arena di Verona 1986 39 Vienna State Opera 1988 and 2013 39 55 Lyric Opera of Chicago 1990 and 2011 39 56 Welsh National Opera 1991 39 the Teatro Regio Torino 1991 39 Tulsa Opera 1991 57 the Los Angeles Opera 1991 and 2002 39 58 Oper Frankfurt 1992 39 Opera de Marseille 1993 59 the Royal Opera House Covent Garden 1994 and 2005 39 60 La Scala 1995 39 the Zurich Opera House 1998 and 2014 61 62 the Teatro del Giglio 2000 63 the Austin Lyric Opera 2002 64 Seattle Opera 2004 65 Glimmerglass Opera 2004 65 the Opera Orchestra of New York 2004 66 the Deutsche Oper Berlin 2006 2015 and 2021 67 68 69 the New National Theatre Tokyo 2006 68 the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra 2007 39 the Malmo Opera 2007 39 the Opera de Montreal 2008 70 the Teatro dell Opera di Roma 2008 2009 39 the Dutch National Opera 2009 71 the Adelaide Festival Theatre 2009 39 the Edinburgh International Festival 2010 72 Opera Australia 2010 73 the Mobile Opera 2013 74 the Castleton Festival 2013 75 the Minnesota Opera 2014 76 the Paris Opera 2014 61 Opera Holland Park 2014 24 the English National Opera 2014 77 Opera North 2014 25 the Virginia Opera 2017 78 the Michigan Opera Theatre 2017 79 the Hungarian State Opera 2018 80 the Bavarian State Opera 2019 81 the National Centre for the Performing Arts China 2019 Chinese premiere 82 the Mariinsky Theatre 2019 and 2022 18 the Berlin State Opera 2021 83 the Seoul Arts Center 2021 South Korea premiere 84 the Romanian National Opera Cluj Napoca 2022 85 the Teatro Sociale Como 2022 86 the Teatro Fraschini 2022 87 and the Estonian National Opera 2022 2023 88 In 2006 the philanthropist Bruce Kovner donated a large collection of original manuscripts to the Juilliard School including Puccini s manuscript for La fanciulla del West 89 Roles edit nbsp Enrico Caruso as Dick Johnson Roles voice types premiere cast Role Voice type Premiere cast 10 December 1910Conductor Arturo Toscanini Minnie soprano Emmy Destinn Jack Rance sheriff baritone Pasquale Amato Dick Johnson alias Ramerrez bandit tenor Enrico Caruso Nick bartender at the Polka saloon tenor Albert Reiss Ashby Wells Fargo agent bass Adamo Didur Sonora miner baritone Dinh Gilly Trin miner tenor Angelo Bada Sid miner baritone Giulio Rossi ca Bello N 1 miner baritone Vincenzo Reschiglian Harry miner tenor Pietro Audisio Joe miner tenor Glenn Hall Happy miner baritone Antonio Pini Corsi Jim Larkens miner bass Bernard Begue Billy Jackrabbit a Red Indian bass Georges Bourgeois Wowkle his squaw mezzo soprano Marie Mattfeld Jake Wallace a traveling camp minstrel baritone Andres de Segurola Jose Castro a mestizo greaser from Ramirez band bass Edoardo Missiano The Pony Express rider tenor Lamberto Belleri Men of the camp and boys of the ridge Bello is often named Handsome in productions in English speaking countriesSynopsis editTime 1849 to 1850 Place A mining camp at the foot of the Cloudy Mountains California 90 Act 1 edit Inside the Polka SaloonA group of Gold Rush miners enter the Polka saloon after a day working at the mine Hello Hello Alla Polka After a song by traveling minstrel Jake Wallace Che faranno i vecchi miei one of the miners Jim Larkens is homesick and the miners collect enough money for his fare home Jim perche piangi A group of miners playing cards discover that Sid is cheating and want to attack him Sheriff Jack Rance quiets the fight and pins two cards to Sid s jacket as a sign of a cheat A Wells Fargo agent Ashby enters and announces that he is chasing the bandit Ramerrez and his gang of Mexicans Rance toasts Minnie the woman who owns the saloon as his future wife which makes Sonora jealous The two men begin to fight Rance draws his revolver but at that moment a shot rings out and Minnie stands next to the bar with a rifle in her hands Hello Minnie She gives the miners a reading lesson from the Bible Dove eravamo The Pony Express rider arrives La posta and delivers a telegram from Nina Micheltorena offering to reveal Ramerrez s hideout The sheriff tells Minnie that he loves her but Minnie puts him off as she is waiting for the right man Ti voglio bene Minnie A stranger enters the saloon and asks for a whisky and water He introduces himself as Dick Johnson from Sacramento whom Minnie had met earlier Johnson invites Minnie to dance with him and she accepts Angrily Rance watches them Ashby returns with the captured Ramerrez gang member Castro Upon seeing his leader Johnson in the saloon Castro agrees to lead Rance Ashby and the miners in a search for Ramerrez and the group then follows him on a false trail and in what turns out to be a wild goose chase But before Castro leaves he whispers to Johnson that somebody will whistle and Johnson must reply to confirm that the place is clear A whistle is heard but Johnson fails to reply Minnie shows Johnson the keg of gold that she and the miners take turns to guard at night and Johnson reassures her that the gold will be safe there Before he leaves the saloon he promises to visit her at her cabin They confess their love for each other Minnie begins to cry and Johnson comforts her before he leaves Act 2 edit Minnie s dwelling later that eveningWowkle a Native American woman who is Minnie s servant her lover Billy Jackrabbit and their baby are present as Minnie enters wanting to get ready for Johnson s visit Johnson enters Minnie s cabin and she tells him all about her life It begins to snow They kiss and Minnie asks him to stay till morning He denies knowing Nina Micheltorena As Johnson hides a posse enters looking for Ramerrez and reveal to Minnie that Johnson is the bandit Ramerrez himself Angry she orders Johnson to leave After he leaves Minnie hears a gunshot and she knows Johnson has been shot Johnson staggers in and collapses Minnie helps him by hiding him up in the loft Rance enters Minnie s cabin looking for the bandit and is about to give up searching for Johnson when drops of blood fall on his hand Rance forces Johnson to climb down Minnie desperately makes Rance an offer if she beats him at poker he must let Johnson go free if Rance wins she will marry him Hiding some cards in her stockings Minnie cheats and wins Rance honors the deal and Minnie throws herself on the unconscious Johnson on the floor nbsp Scene from act 3 of the premiere with Enrico Caruso Emmy Destinn and Pasquale Amato Act 3 edit In the Great Californian Forest at dawn sometime laterJohnson is again on the run from Ashby and the miners Nick and Rance are discussing Johnson and wonder what Minnie sees in him when Ashby arrives in triumph Johnson has been captured Rance and the miners all want Johnson to be hanged Johnson accepts the sentence and only asks the miners not to tell Minnie about his capture and his fate Ch ella mi creda Minnie arrives armed with a pistol just before the execution and throws herself in front of Johnson to protect him While Rance tries to proceed she convinces the miners that they owe her too much to kill the man she loves and asks them to forgive him Ah Ah E Minnie Non vi fu mai chi disse Basta One by one the miners yield to her plea E anche tu lo vorrai Joe Rance is not happy but finally he too gives in Sonora unties Johnson and sets him free The miners bid Minnie farewell Le tue parole sono di Dio Minnie and Johnson leave California to start a new life together Instrumentation editLa fanciulla del West is scored for piccolo three flutes three oboes one English horn three clarinets in B flat one bass clarinet in B flat three bassoons one contrabassoon four French horns in F three trumpets in F three tenor trombones one bass trombone a percussion section with timpani cymbals one triangle one snare drum one bass drum and one glockenspiel three onstage fonicas a one celesta two harps and strings 92 Recordings editYear Cast Minnie Dick Johnson Jack Rance Conductor Opera house and orchestra Label 93 1950 Carla Gavazzi Vasco Campagnano Ugo Savarese Arturo Basile RAI Orchestra and Chorus Milan CD Warner FonitCat 8573 87488 2 1954 Eleanor Steber Mario Del Monaco Giangiacomo Guelfi Dmitri Mitropoulos La Maggio Musicale Fiorentino Orchestra and Chorus Recording of a performance at L Opera di Firenze 6 June CD MYTOCat 975 169 1956 Gigliola Frazzoni Franco Corelli Tito Gobbi Antonino Votto Teatro alla Scala Orchestra and Chorus Recording of a performance at La Scala 4 April CD Opera d OroCat 7036 1957 Magda Olivero Giacomo Lauri Volpi Giangiacomo Guelfi Vincenzo Bellezza it 1958 Renata Tebaldi Mario Del Monaco Cornell MacNeil Franco Capuana Santa Cecilia Academy Orchestra and Chorus CD Decca 94 Cat 421595 1958 Birgit Nilsson Joao Gibin Andrea Mongelli Lovro von Matacic Teatro alla Scala Orchestra and chorus CD EMI ClassicsCat 81862 95 1961 Renata Tebaldi Daniele Barioni Giangiacomo Guelfi Arturo Basile Roma Italiana Opera Orchestra e Coro CD Opera d OroCat 1242 1963 Antonietta Stella Gastone Limarilli Anselmo Colzani Oliviero De Fabritiis NHK Symphony Orchestra Tokyo Nikikai Chorus Fujiwara Opera Chorus DVD Video Artists Int lCat 4439 1977 Carol Neblett Placido Domingo Sherrill Milnes Zubin Mehta Royal Opera House Orchestra and Chorus CD Deutsche Grammophon 96 Cat 419640 1982 Carol Neblett Placido Domingo Silvano Carroli Nello Santi Royal Opera House Orchestra and Chorus DVD Kultur VideoCat 032031203891 1991 Eva Marton Dennis O Neill Alain Fondary Leonard Slatkin Munich Radio Symphony Orchestra Bavarian Radio Chorus CD RCA Victor Red SealCat 60597 1991 Mara Zampieri Placido Domingo Juan Pons Lorin Maazel Teatro alla Scala Orchestra and chorus DVD BBC Opus ArteCat OA LS3004 D 1992 Barbara Daniels Placido Domingo Sherrill Milnes Leonard Slatkin Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus DVD Deutsche GrammophonCat 00440 073 4023 2011 Deborah Voigt Marcello Giordani Lucio Gallo Nicola Luisotti Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus DVD Deutsche GrammophonCat 80016679 09 2013 Nina Stemme Jonas Kaufmann Tomasz Konieczny Franz Welser Most Wiener Staatsoper Orchestra and Chorus Blu ray Sony RecordsCat 88875064079Other influences editThe melody for Jake Wallace s song near the beginning of the first act is derived from two songs in a collection of Zuni melodies recorded and harmonized by ethnomusicologist Carlos Troyer published in 1909 Puccini had obtained this publication in an effort to find authentic Native American music for the role of Wowkle but he ended up using it for Jake Wallace instead Several books about Puccini repeat Mosco Carner s claim that the song is based on Stephen Foster s Old Dog Tray it is not 97 A climactic phrase sung by Johnson E provai una gioia strana alternatively Ho provato una gioia strana in some versions of the libretto from Quello che tacete near the end of the first act is widely cited to resemble a similar phrase in the Phantom s song The Music of the Night in Andrew Lloyd Webber s 1986 musical The Phantom of the Opera 98 99 100 101 The Puccini estate sued Lloyd Webber over copyright infringement and the matter was settled out of court citation needed The opera was first portrayed in film in 1915 by famed director Cecil B DeMille and subsequently by directors Edwin Carewe in 1923 and John Francis Dillon whose 1930 film was lost A 1938 film directed by Robert Z Leonard was based not on the opera but on the original play by Belasco Sigmund Romberg wrote songs for this film Notes and references editNotes The fonica is an electronic instrument invented by Puccini for La fanciulla del West Casa Ricordi had a set created and rented them out for early productions of the opera but the result was unsatisfactory and the instrument s use was ceased shortly after the premiere A marimba is commonly substituted in modern productions 91 References Smith 2004 p 544 a b c d e f Fisher Burton D 2005 Opera Classics Library Series Puccini s the Girl of the Golden West Opera Journeys Publishing p 22 ISBN 978 0977145591 Randall amp David 2006 p 42 Great Welcome for New Opera Brilliant Audience Wildly Applauds Puccinl s Girl of the Golden West The New York Times December 11 1910 p 1 a b c Kathryn M Fenton 30 August 2019 Puccini s La Fanciulla Del West and American Musical Identity Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781351594875 a b Burton D Fisher 2005 Puccini s The Girl of the Golden West Opera Journeys Publishing p 16 ISBN 9780977145591 Anthony Tommasini October 9 2002 Books of the Times The Procrastinating Idol of an Opera Mad World The New York Times a b c d e f g h i Julian Budden 2001 Fanciulla del West La The Girl of the West The Girl of the Golden West Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article O007114 ISBN 9781561592630 Richard Aldrich December 18 1910 Critics Find Little American Color in Puccini s Opera The Girl of the Golden West The New York Times p D10 a b Carolina White as Minnie Soprano Makes a Distinct Success in The Girl of the Golden West The New York Times December 28 1910 p 3 Henry Charles Lahee 1912 The Grand Opera Singers of To day An Account of the Leading Operatic Stars who Have Sung During Recent Years Together with a Sketch of the Chief Operatic Enterprises L C Page pp 425 427 Puccini s Opera in English Henry W Savage Produces The Girl of the Golden West The New York Times October 28 1911 p 13 King Praises Puccini Victor Emmanuel and Queen See Girl of the Golden West The New York Times June 13 1911 p 9 Annasue McCleave Wilson March 15 1998 Puccini s Stage All of Lucca The New York Times Retrieved 2023 10 10 William Ashbrook 1985 La fanciulla del West The Operas of Puccini Cornell University Press p 141 ISBN 9780801493096 Annie J Randall Rosalind Gray Davis 2005 Puccini and The Girl History and Reception of The Girl of the Golden West University of Chicago Press p 123 ISBN 9780226703893 La fanciulla del West work details Bibliotheque nationale de France a b La fanciulla del West mariinsky ru Retrieved March 31 2023 Fairtile Linda 1998 Giacomo Puccini A Guide to Research Volume 1906 of Garland Reference Library of the Humanities Volume 48 of Garland composer resource manuals Routledge p 168 ISBN 978 0815320333 a b Amesen Iris J 2009 The Romantic World of Puccini McFarland p 27 ISBN 978 0786444823 a b Ruth A Solie Review Puccini and the Girl History and Reception of The Girl of the Golden West Women amp Music 11 82 86 Robert Levine Puccini s Girl Rides Triumphantly at Glimmerglass classicstoday com Annie J Randall and Rosalind Gray Davis 2005 Puccini and the Girl History and Reception of The Girl of the Golden West Chicago University of Chicago Press p 131 a b Richard Fairman June 4 2014 La fanciulla del West Holland Park London review Financial Times a b Fiona Maddocks 26 January 2014 La fanciulla del West review The Guardian Colin Kendell The Complete Puccini Amberley Publishing 2012 Richard Aldrich January 27 1922 Opera The Girl of the Golden West The New York Times Jeritza in Vienna Triumph The New York Times September 29 1927 Stephen Hastings 2012 The Bjorling Sound A Recorded Legacy University of Rochester Press p 187 ISBN 9781580464062 Girl of the Golden West Repeated The New York Times November 26 1929 p 28 Music The Girl of the Golden West The New York Times November 10 1931 p A3 The Microphone Will Present Gigli and de Gogorza in Radio Recitals Puccini Opera Girl of the Golden West Goes on the Air The New York Times January 12 1930 p 141 Harold C Schonberg October 24 1961 Opera Fanciulla in Realistic Revival Met Production Opens on Elegant Note The New York Times p 43 Harold C Schonberg February 12 1970 Opera New Golden Girl The New York Times p 31 Beverly Bower 76 Soprano Who Sang At the Met The New York Times April 13 2002 Retrieved August 10 2009 Corinna da Fonseca Wollheim October 5 2018 Review Puccini s American Opera Needs a New American Vision The New York Times Anthony Tommasini December 7 2010 Puccini s Western in Search of Lyrical Gold The New York Times Arthur Bloomfield 1972 50 Years of the San Francisco Opera San Francisco Book Company p 323 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Roger Flury 2012 La fanciulla del West Giacomo Puccini A Discography Scarecrow Press pp 597 609 ISBN 9780810883291 Martha L Hart 1998 The Art of Making Opera Two Seasons with San Diego Opera San Diego Opera p 184 ISBN 9780966199581 American Soprano Carol Neblett 71 New York City Opera News November 2017 Joshua Kosman June 11 2010 Opera Review The Girl of the Golden West San Francisco Chronicle Puccini Simonetta ed Giacomo Puccini in Torre del Lago Viareggio Tuscany Friends of Giacomo Puccini s Houses Association 2006 in English Opera Singers Shifted To Meet Emergency The New York Times November 5 1964 p 52 Joseph Horowitz October 14 1977 Thar s Gold in Puccini Horse Opera The New York Times p 69 James R Oestreich October 9 1990 Review Opera The West As Wild As Puccini Imagined It The New York Times p C16 Anne Midgette April 3 2005 Nuggets of True Romance With Weepy Gold Miners Singing in Italian The New York Times Anthony Tommasini September 7 2017 Review A Good Enough La fanciulla del West at New York City Opera The New York Times Ralph Blumenthal November 7 1996 A High Voltage Dynamo Named Domingo The New York Times Paul Hofmann November 25 1984 Ghena Dimitrova a Diva Discovered Section 6 The New York Times p 75 Steve Schneider November 17 1985 Cable TV Notes Puccini and Purlie The New York Times p 34 Will Crutchfield May 30 1985 Opera Spoleto Festival s Fanciulla The New York Times Bernard Holland August 6 1991 Review Opera Seldom Staged Strauss Amid a Desert Downpour The New York Times Kenneth Furie August 30 1992 Recordings View An Uplifting Fanciulla The New York Times Chanda VanderHart 10 October 2013 La fanciulla del West triumphs at the Vienna Staatsoper with Kaufmann and Stemme bachtrack com Lawrence A Johnson January 23 2011 Lyric Opera s lively and engaging Fanciulla almost golden Chicago Classical Review Rick Rogers August 24 1997 Tulsa Opera Season To Mark Anniversary The Oklahoman Lawrence Van Gelder September 3 2002 Footlights The New York Times Laura Colby March 14 1993 Marseilles Adds a Bit of Polish The New York Times Andrew Clements 17 September 2005 Review La Fanciulla del West The Guardian a b Elisabeth Hopkins December 22 2013 From Manon to Moby Dick in 2014 The New York Times Summer Festivals The New York Times May 15 1998 Bernard Holland August 13 2000 Within the Walls of Lucca Both Mystery and Music The New York Times Kathryn Jones February 17 2002 What s Doing In Austin The New York Times a b Anthony Tommasini June 27 2004 Music The First Spaghetti Western The New York Times Anthony Tommasini November 24 2004 The Demands of a Role and Ardent Ovations for It The New York Times Review La fanciulla del West Berlin Staatsoper unter den Linden 6 13 21 Opera News Vol 86 no 1 July 2021 Archived from the original on March 31 2023 a b Elisabeth Hopkins August 25 2006 Opera Guide for the 2006 07 season Arts amp Leisure International Herald Tribune The New York Times Christie Franke 15 March 2015 Love in the time of mining La fanciulla del West at the Deutsche Oper Berlin Bachtrack com A pleasing take on an Old West opera The Globe and Mail September 22 2008 George Loomis December 8 2009 A Modern Day Wild West Show from Puccini The New York Times Usher Hall 25 August 2010 Review La fanciulla del West The Guardian Diana Simmonds July 15 2010 Review La fanciulla del West Stagenoise Thomas B Harrison March 23 2013 Minnie get your gun Mobile Opera s La Fanciulla del West is a wild romantic ride Press Register Vivien Schweitzer May 17 2013 Summer Stages Classical and Opera The New York Times Larry Fuchsberg December 2014 La Fanciulla del West ST PAUL Minnesota Opera 9 20 14 Opera News 79 6 Archived from the original on December 1 2020 Hugo Shirley 11 October 2014 ENO s The Girl of the Golden West is irresistibly seductive The Spectator Gina Dalfonzo December 3 2017 Review The Girl of the Golden West at the Virginia Opera Patrice Nolan April 3 2017 MOT s Girl of the Golden West is gold indeed Encore Michigan Stephi Wild November 14 2018 La fanciulla del West Comes to the Erkel Theatre BroadwayWorld a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link In Review La Fanciulla del West MUNICH Bavarian State Opera 3 16 19 Opera News 83 12 June 2019 Archived from the original on March 31 2023 Puccini s classic opera La Fanciulla del West has its Chinese premiere NCPA Hugo Shirley 15 June 2021 Hearts of gold La fanciulla s soft centre shines through in a gritty Staatsoper staging bachtrack com Eun byel Im 2021 07 02 Herald Review Puccini s Wild West opera makes debut in Korea The Korea Herald Retrieved 2023 02 01 La Fanciulla del West de Giacomo Puccini in premieră la Opera Națională Romană din Cluj Napoca Actual de Cluj May 4 2022 Opera La fanciulla del West di Puccini al Teatro Sociale di Como L Osservatore Romano in Italian January 11 2022 M G P January 27 2022 Rizzo dirige La fanciulla del West stasera e domenica al Fraschini La Provincia Pavese Francisco Salazar August 9 2022 Jose Cura Olga Mykytenko amp Pavlo Hunka Lead Estonian National Opera s 2022 23 Season Opera Wire Daniel J Wakin March 1 2006 Juilliard Receives Music Manuscript Collection The New York Times La fanciulla del West libretto Franco Colombo New York 1847 at the Internet Archive Linda B Fairtile 1998 Giacomo Puccini A Guide to Research Routledge Music Bibliographies 1st ed Routledge ISBN 978 0815320333 Giacomo Puccini 2005 La fanciulla del West Ricordi reprint ed Ricordi ISBN 978 1423403470 Recordings of La fanciulla on opera discography org uk Harold C Schonberg August 30 1959 Disks Puccini and the Golden West The New York Times p X16 Puccini La fanciulla del West Matacic Nilsson et al ArkivMusic Archived from the original on 2011 06 08 Retrieved 2008 03 19 Peter G Davis November 19 1978 New Disks Spark Battle of Otellos The New York Times p D21 Atlas Allan W Belasco and Puccini Old Dog Tray and the Zuni Indians The Musical Quarterly Vol 75 No 3 Autumn 1991 pp 362 398 La fanciulla del West review by David Patrick Stearns Gramophone December 2011 La fanciulla del West Opera Holland Park London by Edward Seckerson The Independent 21 June 2004 Review La fanciulla del West Lyric Opera by Dennis Polkow Newcity Stage Quello che tacete La fanciulla del West on YouTube the excerpt in question sung by Daniele Barioni Sources edit Randall Annie J David Rosalind G 2006 Puccini amp the Girl history and reception of The Girl of the Golden West Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0226703894 Smith Peter Fox 2004 A Passion for Opera Trafalgar Square Books ISBN 978 1570762802 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to La fanciulla del West La fanciulla del West Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Libretto Italian Russian fanciulla100 org an educational website dedicated to the opera s centenary Retrieved 26 October 2010 David Belasco The Girl of the Golden West at Project Gutenberg Puccini and New York lecture by Professor Roger Parker on the opera given at Gresham College on 11 June 2007 with video and audio files available for download Portal nbsp Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title La fanciulla del West amp oldid 1206102134, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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