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La bohème

La bohème (/ˌlɑː bˈɛm/;[1] Italian: [la boˈɛm]) is an opera in four acts,[N 1] composed by Giacomo Puccini between 1893 and 1895 to an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa, based on Scènes de la vie de bohème (1851) by Henri Murger.[2] The story is set in Paris around 1830 and shows the Bohemian lifestyle (known in French as "la bohème") of a poor seamstress and her artist friends.

La bohème
Opera by Giacomo Puccini
Original 1896 poster by Adolfo Hohenstein
Librettist
LanguageItalian
Based onHenri Murger's Scènes de la vie de bohème
Premiere
1 February 1896 (1896-02-01)

The world premiere of La bohème was in Turin on 1 February 1896 at the Teatro Regio,[3] conducted by the 28-year-old Arturo Toscanini. Since then, La bohème has become part of the standard Italian opera repertory and is one of the most frequently performed operas worldwide.[4]

In 1946, fifty years after the opera's premiere, Toscanini conducted a commemorative performance of it on radio with the NBC Symphony Orchestra. A recording of the performance was later released by RCA Victor on vinyl record, tape and compact disc. It is the only recording ever made of a Puccini opera by its original conductor (see Recording history below).

Origin of the story

 
Mimì's costume for act 1 of La bohème designed by Adolfo Hohenstein for the world premiere

As credited on its title page, the libretto of La bohème is based on Henri Murger's 1851 novel, Scènes de la vie de bohème, a collection of vignettes portraying young bohemians living in the Latin Quarter of Paris in the 1840s. Although often called a novel, the book has no unified plot. Like the 1849 play drawn from the book by Murger and Théodore Barrière, the opera's libretto focuses on the relationship between Rodolfo and Mimì, ending with her death. Also like the play, the libretto combines two characters from the novel, Mimì and Francine, into the single character of Mimì. Early in the composition stage Puccini was in dispute with the composer Ruggero Leoncavallo, who said that he had offered Puccini a completed libretto and felt that Puccini should defer to him. Puccini responded that he had had no idea of Leoncavallo's interest and that having been working on his own version for some time, he felt that he could not oblige him by discontinuing with the opera. Leoncavallo completed his own version in which Marcello was sung by a tenor and Rodolfo by a baritone. It was not as successful as Puccini's and is now rarely performed.[5]

 
Rodolfo, costume design by Adolfo Hohenstein for the premiere at Teatro Regio, 1896

Much of the libretto is original. Major sections of acts two and three are the librettists' invention, with only a few passing references to incidents and characters in Murger. Most of acts one and four follow the book, piecing together episodes from various chapters. The final scenes in acts one and four—the scenes with Rodolfo and Mimì—resemble both the play and the book. The story of their meeting closely follows chapter 18 of the book, in which the two lovers living in the garret are not Rodolphe and Mimì at all, but rather Jacques and Francine. The story of Mimì's death in the opera draws from two different chapters in the book, one relating Francine's death and the other relating Mimì's.[2]

The published libretto includes a note from the librettists briefly discussing their adaptation. Without mentioning the play directly, they defend their conflation of Francine and Mimì into a single character: "Chi può non confondere nel delicato profilo di una sola donna quelli di Mimì e di Francine?" ("Who cannot confuse in the delicate profile of one woman the personality both of Mimì and of Francine?"). At the time, the book was in the public domain, Murger having died without heirs, but rights to the play were still controlled by Barrière's heirs.[6]

Performance history and reception

Initial success

The world première performance of La bohème took place in Turin on 1 February 1896 at the Teatro Regio[3] and was conducted by the young Arturo Toscanini. The role of Rodolfo was played by Evan Gorga with Cesira Ferrani as Mimi, but Gorga was unable to accommodate the high tessitura and the music had to be transposed down for him.[7][8] The initial response of the audience at the first performance was subdued and critical responses were polarized.[9] Despite this varied introductory response, the opera quickly became popular throughout Italy and productions were soon mounted by the following companies: The Teatro di San Carlo (14 March 1896, with Elisa Petri as Musetta and Antonio Magini-Coletti as Marcello); The Teatro Comunale di Bologna (4 November 1896, with Amelia Sedelmayer as Musetta and Umberto Beduschi as Rodolfo); The Teatro Costanzi (17 November 1896, with Maria Stuarda Savelli as Mimì, Enrico Giannini-Grifoni as Rodolfo, and Maurizio Bensaude as Marcello); La Scala (15 March 1897, with Angelica Pandolfini as Mimì, Camilla Pasini as Musetta, Fernando De Lucia as Rodolfo, and Edoardo Camera as Marcello); La Fenice (26 December 1897, with Emilia Merolla as Mimì, Maria Martelli as Musetta, Giovanni Apostolu and Franco Mannucci as Rodolfo, and Ferruccio Corradetti as Marcello); Teatro Regio di Parma (29 January 1898, with Solomiya Krushelnytska as Mimì, Lina Cassandro as Musetta, Pietro Ferrari as Rodolfo, and Pietro Giacomello as Marcello); Paris Opera (13 June 1898); and the Teatro Donizetti di Bergamo (21 August 1898, with Emilia Corsi as Mimì, Annita Barone as Musetta, Giovanni Apostolu as Rodolfo, and Giovanni Roussel as Marcello).[10][11]

The first performance of La bohème outside Italy was at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on 16 June 1896. The opera was performed in Alexandria, Lisbon, and Moscow in early 1897. The United Kingdom premiere took place at the Theatre Royal in Manchester, on 22 April 1897, in a presentation by the Carl Rosa Opera Company supervised by Puccini.[12] This performance was given in English and starred Alice Esty as Mimì, Bessie McDonald as Musetta, Robert Cunningham as Rodolfo, and William Paull as Marcello.[12] On 2 October 1897 the same company gave the opera's first staging at the Royal Opera House in London and on 14 October 1897 in Los Angeles for the opera's United States premiere. The opera reached New York City on 16 May 1898 when it was performed at Wallack's Theatre with Giuseppe Agostini as Rodolfo.[13] The first production of the opera actually produced by the Royal Opera House itself premiered on 1 July 1899 with Nellie Melba as Mimì, Zélie de Lussan as Musetta, Fernando De Lucia as Rodolfo, and Mario Ancona as Marcello.[10]

La bohème premiered in Germany at the Kroll Opera House in Berlin on 22 June 1897. The French premiere of the opera was presented by the Opéra-Comique on 13 June 1898 at the Théâtre des Nations. The production used a French translation by Paul Ferrier and starred Julia Guiraudon as Mimì, Jeanne Tiphaine as Musetta, Adolphe Maréchal as Rodolfo, and Lucien Fugère as Marcello.[10] The Czech premiere of the opera was presented by the National Theatre on 27 February 1898.

20th and 21st centuries

La bohème continued to gain international popularity throughout the early 20th century and the Opéra-Comique alone had already presented the opera one hundred times by 1903. The Belgian premiere took place at La Monnaie on 25 October 1900 using Ferrier's French translation with Marie Thiérry as Mimì, Léon David as Rodolfo, Eugène-Charles Badiali as Marcello, sets by Pierre Devis, Armand Lynen, and Albert Dubosq, and Philippe Flon conducting. The Metropolitan Opera staged the work for the first time on 26 December 1900 with Nellie Melba as Mimì, Annita Occhiolini-Rizzini as Musetta, Albert Saléza as Rodolfo, Giuseppe Campanari as Marcello, and Luigi Mancinelli conducting.[10] La bohème was the last opera performed at New York's Metropolitan Opera's original 1883 building on April 16, 1966, conducted by George Schick.[14]

The opera was first performed in Brazil at the Theatro da Paz in Belém on 21 April 1900 with the Brazilian soprano Tilde Maragliano as Mimì, Maria Cavallini as Musetta, Giuseppe Agostini as Rodolfo and Alessandro Modesti as Marcello. The conductor was Giorgio Polacco [15]

The following year La bohème was presented at the Teatro Amazonas in Manaus, Brazil, on 2 July 1901 with Elvira Miotti as Mimì, Mabel Nelma as Musetta, Michele Sigaldi as Rodolfo, and Enrico De Franceschi as Marcello. Other premieres soon followed:

Puccini died in Brussels on 29 November 1924, and the news of his death reached Rome during a performance of La bohème. The opera was immediately stopped, and the orchestra played Chopin's Funeral March for the stunned audience.[17]

The first production of La bohème at the Salzburg Festival did not occur until as late as July 2012. However, that festival has not shown much interest in the operas of Puccini, only ever having one production each of Tosca and Turandot in its entire history.[18]

Critical reception

Despite the opera's popularity with audiences, Puccini has been the target of condescension by some music critics who find his music insufficiently sophisticated or difficult.[19] The composer Benjamin Britten wrote in 1951, "[A]fter four or five performances I never wanted to hear Bohème again. In spite of its neatness, I became sickened by the cheapness and emptiness of the music."[20]

Roles

 
Act 2 costume design for "la rappezzatrice" (the clothes mender) for the world premiere performance.
Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 1 February 1896[21]
Conductor: Arturo Toscanini
Rodolfo, a poet tenor Evan Gorga
Mimì, a seamstress soprano Cesira Ferrani
Marcello, a painter baritone Tieste Wilmant
Musetta, a singer soprano Camilla Pasini
Schaunard, a musician baritone Antonio Pini-Corsi
Colline, a philosopher bass Michele Mazzara
Benoît, their landlord bass Alessandro Polonini
Alcindoro, a state councillor bass Alessandro Polonini
Parpignol, a toy vendor tenor Dante Zucchi
A customs Sergeant bass Felice Foglia
Students, working girls, townsfolk, shopkeepers, street-vendors, soldiers, waiters, children

Synopsis

Place: Paris
Time: Around 1830.[22]

Act 1

In the four bohemians' garret (Christmas Eve)

Marcello is painting while Rodolfo gazes out of the window. They complain of the cold. In order to keep warm, they burn the manuscript of Rodolfo's drama. Colline, the philosopher, enters shivering and disgruntled at not having been able to pawn some books. Schaunard, the musician of the group, arrives with food, wine and cigars. He explains the source of his riches: a job with an eccentric English gentleman, who ordered him to play his violin to a parrot until it died. The others hardly listen to his tale as they set up the table to eat and drink. Schaunard interrupts, telling them that they must save the food for the days ahead: tonight they will all celebrate his good fortune by dining at Cafe Momus, and he will pay.

The friends are interrupted by Benoît, the landlord, who arrives to collect the rent. They flatter him and ply him with wine. In his drunkenness, he begins to boast of his amorous adventures, but when he also reveals that he is married, they thrust him from the room—without the rent payment—in comic moral indignation. The rent money is divided for their evening out in the Quartier Latin.

Marcello, Schaunard and Colline go out, but Rodolfo remains alone for a moment in order to finish an article he is writing, promising to join his friends soon. There is a knock at the door. It is a girl who lives in another room in the building. Her candle has blown out, and she has no matches; she asks Rodolfo to light it. She is briefly overcome with faintness, and Rodolfo helps her to a chair and offers her a glass of wine. She thanks him. After a few minutes, she says that she is better and must go. But as she turns to leave, she realizes that she has lost her key.

Her candle goes out in the draught and Rodolfo's candle goes out too; the pair stumble in the dark. Rodolfo, eager to spend time with the girl, to whom he is already attracted, finds the key and pockets it, feigning innocence. He takes her cold hand (Che gelida manina—"What a cold little hand") and tells her of his life as a poet, then asks her to tell him more about her life. The girl says her name is Mimì (Sì, mi chiamano Mimì—"Yes, they call me Mimì"), and describes her simple life as an embroiderer. Impatiently, the waiting friends call Rodolfo. He answers and turns to see Mimì bathed in moonlight (duet, Rodolfo and Mimì: O soave fanciulla—"Oh lovely girl"). They realize that they have fallen in love. Rodolfo suggests remaining at home with Mimì, but she decides to accompany him to the Cafe Momus. As they leave, they sing of their newfound love.

Act 2

Quartier Latin (same evening)

 
Set design by Adolfo Hohenstein for act 2 in the première

A great crowd, including children, has gathered with street sellers announcing their wares (chorus: Aranci, datteri! Caldi i marroni!—"Oranges, dates! Hot chestnuts!"). The friends arrive; Rodolfo buys Mimì a bonnet from a vendor, while Colline buys a coat and Schaunard a horn. Parisians gossip with friends and bargain with the vendors; the children of the streets clamor to see the wares of Parpignol, the toy seller. The friends enter the Cafe Momus.

As the men and Mimì dine at the cafe, Musetta, formerly Marcello's sweetheart, arrives with her rich (and elderly) government minister admirer, Alcindoro, whom she is tormenting. It is clear she is tired of him. To the delight of the Parisians and the embarrassment of her patron, she sings a risqué song (Musetta's waltz: Quando me'n vo'—"When I go along"), hoping to reclaim Marcello's attention. The ploy works; at the same time, Mimì recognizes that Musetta truly loves Marcello. To be rid of Alcindoro for a bit, Musetta pretends to be suffering from a tight shoe and sends him to the shoemaker to get her shoe mended. Alcindoro leaves, and Musetta and Marcello fall rapturously into each other's arms.

The friends are presented with their bill. However, Schaunard's purse has gone missing and no one else has enough money to pay. The sly Musetta has the entire bill charged to Alcindoro. The sound of a military band is heard, and the friends leave. Alcindoro returns with the repaired shoe seeking Musetta. The waiter hands him the bill and, dumbfounded, Alcindoro sinks into a chair.

Act 3

 
Advertisement for the music score, showing the quartet that ends act 3

At the toll gate at the Barrière d'Enfer (late February)

Peddlers pass through the barriers and enter the city. Mimì appears, coughing violently. She tries to find Marcello, who is currently living in a little tavern where he paints signs for the innkeeper. She tells him of her hard life with Rodolfo, who abandoned her the night before, and of Rodolfo's terrible jealousy (O buon Marcello, aiuto!—"Oh, good Marcello, help me!"). Marcello tells her that Rodolfo is asleep inside, and expresses concern about Mimì's cough. Rodolfo wakes up and comes out looking for Marcello. Mimì hides and overhears Rodolfo first telling Marcello that he left Mimì because of her coquettishness, but finally confessing that his jealousy is a sham: he fears she is slowly being consumed by a deadly illness (most likely tuberculosis, known by the catchall name "consumption" in the nineteenth century). Rodolfo, in his poverty, can do little to help Mimì and hopes that his pretended unkindness will inspire her to seek another, wealthier suitor (Marcello, finalmente—"Marcello, finally").

Out of kindness towards Mimì, Marcello tries to silence him, but she has already heard all. Her weeping and coughing reveal her presence, and Rodolfo hurries to her. Musetta's laughter is heard and Marcello goes to find out what has happened. Mimì tells Rodolfo that she is leaving him, and asks that they separate amicably (Mimì: Donde lieta uscì—"From here she happily left"); but their love for one another is too strong for the pair to part. As a compromise, they agree to remain together until the spring, when the world is coming to life again and no one feels truly alone. Meanwhile, Marcello has found Musetta, and the couple quarrel fiercely about Musetta's flirtatiousness: an antithetical counterpoint to the other pair's reconciliation (quartet: Mimì, Rodolfo, Musetta, Marcello: Addio dolce svegliare alla mattina!—"Goodbye, sweet awakening in the morning!").

Act 4

Back in the garret (some months later)

Marcello and Rodolfo are trying to work, though they are primarily talking about their girlfriends, who have left them and found wealthy lovers. Rodolfo has seen Musetta in a fine carriage and Marcello has seen Mimì dressed like a queen. The men both express their nostalgia (duet: O Mimì, tu più non torni—"O Mimì, will you not return?"). Schaunard and Colline arrive with a very frugal dinner and all parody eating a plentiful banquet, dance together and sing, before Schaunard and Colline engage in a mock duel.

Musetta suddenly appears; Mimì, who took up with a wealthy viscount after leaving Rodolfo in the spring, has left her patron. Musetta found her that day in the street, severely weakened by her illness, and Mimì begged Musetta to bring her to Rodolfo. Mimì, haggard and pale, is assisted onto a bed. Briefly, she feels as though she is recovering. Musetta and Marcello leave to sell Musetta's earrings in order to buy medicine, and Colline leaves to pawn his overcoat (Vecchia zimarra—"Old coat"). Schaunard leaves with Colline to give Mimì and Rodolfo some time together. Mimì tells Rodolfo that her love for him is her whole life (aria/duet, Mimì and Rodolfo: Sono andati?—"Have they gone?").

To Mimì's delight, Rodolfo presents her with the pink bonnet he bought her, which he has kept as a souvenir of their love. They remember past happiness and their first meeting—the candles, the lost key. Mimì is overwhelmed by a seizure of coughing. The others return, with a gift of a muff to warm Mimì's hands and a cordial to soothe her cough. Mimì gently thanks Rodolfo for the muff, which she believes is a present from him, reassures him that she is better, and falls asleep. Musetta prays. Schaunard discovers that Mimì has died. Rodolfo rushes to the bed, calling Mimì's name in anguish. He sobs helplessly as the curtain falls.

Instrumentation

La bohème is scored for:

Recording history

 
 
Prop designs for act 2 of La bohème for the world premiere performance

The discography of La bohème is a long one with many distinguished recordings, including the 1972 Decca recording conducted by Herbert von Karajan with Luciano Pavarotti as Rodolfo and Mirella Freni as Mimì (made before Pavarotti became an international superstar of opera),[24] and the 1973 RCA Victor recording conducted by Sir Georg Solti with Montserrat Caballé as Mimì and Plácido Domingo as Rodolfo which won the 1974 Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording. The 1959 recording conducted by Tullio Serafin with Renata Tebaldi as Mimì and Carlo Bergonzi was included in the soundtrack of the 1987 movie Moonstruck.

The earliest commercially released full-length recording was probably that recorded in February 1917 and released on HMV's Italian label La Voce del Padrone.[25] Carlo Sabajno conducted the La Scala Orchestra and Chorus with Gemma Bosini and Reno Andreini as Mimì and Rodolfo. One of the most recent is the 2008 Deutsche Grammophon release conducted by Bertrand de Billy with Anna Netrebko and Rolando Villazón as Mimì and Rodolfo.[24]

There are several recordings with conductors closely associated with Puccini. In the 1946 RCA Victor recording, Arturo Toscanini, who conducted the world premiere of the opera, conducts the NBC Symphony Orchestra with Jan Peerce as Rodolfo and Licia Albanese as Mimì. It is the only recording of a Puccini opera by its original conductor. Thomas Beecham, who worked closely with Puccini when preparing a 1920 production of La bohème in London,[26] conducted a performance of the opera in English released by Columbia Records in 1936 with Lisa Perli as Mimì and Heddle Nash as Rodolfo. Beecham also conducts on the 1956 RCA Victor recording with Victoria de los Ángeles and Jussi Björling as Mimì and Rodolfo.

Although the vast majority of recordings are in the original Italian, the opera has been recorded in several other languages. These include: a recording in French conducted by Erasmo Ghiglia with Renée Doria and Alain Vanzo as Mimì and Rodolfo (1960);[27] a recording in German with Richard Kraus conducting the Deutsche Oper Berlin Orchestra and Chorus with Trude Eipperle and Fritz Wunderlich as Mimì and Rodolfo (1956); and the 1998 release on the Chandos Opera in English label with David Parry conducting the Philharmonia Orchestra and Cynthia Haymon and Dennis O'Neill as Mimì and Rodolfo.

Enrico Caruso, who was closely associated with the role of Rodolfo, recorded the famous aria "Che gelida manina" in 1906. This aria has been recorded by nearly 500 tenors in at least seven different languages between 1900 and 1980.[28] In 1981 the A.N.N.A. Record Company released a six LP set with 101 different tenors singing the aria.

The missing act

In 1957 Illica's widow died and his papers were given to the Parma Museum. Among them was the full libretto to La bohème. It was discovered that the librettists had prepared an act which Puccini decided not to use in his composition.[29] It is noteworthy for explaining Rodolfo's jealous remarks to Marcello in act 3.

The "missing act" is located in the timeline between the Café Momus scene and act 3 and describes an open-air party at Musetta's dwelling. Her protector has refused to pay further rent out of jealous feelings, and Musetta's furniture is moved into the courtyard to be auctioned off the following morning. The four Bohemians find in this an excuse for a party and arrange for wine and an orchestra. Musetta gives Mimì a beautiful gown to wear and introduces her to a Viscount. The pair dances a quadrille in the courtyard, which moves Rodolfo to jealousy. This explains his act 3 reference to the "moscardino di Viscontino" (young fop of a Viscount). As dawn approaches, furniture dealers gradually remove pieces for the morning auction.

Ruggero Leoncavallo composed an opera based the same source material, also titled La bohème; this episode is included in Leoncavallo's treatment which premiered in 1897.

Derivative works

In 1959 "Musetta's Waltz" was adapted by songwriter Bobby Worth for the pop song "Don't You Know?", a hit for Della Reese.[30] Earlier, it was used for another song, "One Night of Love".[5]

In 1969 in Paris, American free-jazz pianist Dave Burrell recorded his La Vie de Bohème with a seven-piece group of European and American musicians. The music on the double-LP is improvised and experimental, but the listener can still discern Puccini's themes, as well as the narrative arc of the complete opera.[31]

Rent, a 1996 musical by Jonathan Larson, is based on La bohème. Here the lovers, Roger and Mimi, are faced with AIDS and progress through the action with songs such as "Light My Candle", which have direct reference to La bohème.[32] Many of the character names are retained or are similar (e.g. the character Angel is given the surname "Schunard"), and at another point in the play, Roger's roommate and best friend Mark makes a wry reference to "Musetta's Waltz", which is a recurring theme throughout the first act and is played at the end of the second act.

The opera was adapted into a 1983 short story by the novelist V. S. Pritchett for publication by the Metropolitan Opera Association.[33]

Modernizations

 
Stage design for act 1 of La bohème, Reginald Gray, 2010

Baz Luhrmann produced the opera for Opera Australia in 1990[34] with modernized supertitle translations, and a budget of only A$60,000 (A$130,545.17 in 2022). A DVD was issued of the stage show. According to Luhrmann, this version was set in 1957 (rather than the original period of 1830) because "...[they] discovered that 1957 was a very, very accurate match for the social and economic realities of Paris in the 1840s."[34] In 2002, Luhrmann restaged his version on Broadway, the production won two Tony Awards out of six nominations; for Best Scenic Design and Best Lighting Design as well as a special award, the Tony Honor for Excellence in Theatre.[35][36] To play the eight performances per week on Broadway, three casts of Mimìs and Rodolfos, and two Musettas and Marcellos, were used in rotation.[37]

Robin Norton-Hale directed a new production at the Cock Tavern Theatre, Kilburn, for OperaUpClose in December 2009.[38][39] For act 2 the entire audience and cast moved downstairs to the pub itself, with the pub's patrons serving as extras in the Cafe Momus scene. In 2010 the production was transferred to the West End's Soho Theatre and won a Laurence Olivier Award.[40]

A 2019 production by Canada's Against the Grain Theatre featured a translated English libretto, and transposed the story to a contemporary Canadian urban setting.[41] This production toured several Canadian cities before its production at Toronto's Tranzac Club was livestreamed by CBC Gem on October 13.[41] The CBC broadcast received two Canadian Screen Award nominations at the 9th Canadian Screen Awards in 2021, for Best Performing Arts Program and Best Direction in a TV Movie.[42]

Notes

  1. ^ Puccini called the divisions quadri, tableaux or "images", rather than atti (acts).

References

  1. ^ "La Bohème". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d.
  2. ^ a b Groos & Parker 1986, p. 1.
  3. ^ a b Budden 2002, p. 494.
  4. ^ . Operabase. Archived from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 18 May 2012.
  5. ^ a b Colin Kendell, The Complete Puccini, Amberley Publishing 2012
  6. ^ Julian Budden: "La bohème", Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed 23 November 2008), (subscription access) 16 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Bourne, Joyce (2010). A Dictionary of Opera Characters (Revised ed.). OUP Oxford. p. 255. ISBN 978-0-19-955039-5.
  8. ^ Atthill, Catherine (1979). Phaidon book of the opera: a survey of 780 operas from 1597. Phaidon. p. 314.
  9. ^ Wilson, Alexandra (2007). The Puccini Problem. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 40. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "La bohème". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  11. ^ "La prima della Boheme a Parigi". La Stampa (in Italian). 14 June 1898. p. 2.
  12. ^ a b The Manchester Guardian, 23 April 1897, p. 6[not specific enough to verify]
  13. ^ Brown, Thomas Allston. A History of the New York Stage, Vol. 3. (Dodd, Mead and Company; New York; 1903), p. 359; and "Musical and Dramatic. Puccini's La bohème Sung in Italian Last Night at Wallack's Theatre," The New York Times, 17 May 1898
  14. ^ "An Aria of Lincoln Center – The Metropolitan Opera" by Veronica Shine, Opera Today, 3 February 2012; Met performances 1966
  15. ^ Páscoa, Márcio: Cronologia Lírica de Belém, p. 145
  16. ^ Irvin 1985, p. [page needed].
  17. ^ "The Death of Giacomo Puccini". The British Newspaper Archive. 29 November 2012. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  18. ^ Salzburg Festival. Retrieved 28 October 2014
  19. ^ Groos & Parker 1986, p. 127.
  20. ^ Britten, Benjamin. "Verdi – A Symposium", Opera magazine, February 1951, pp. 113–114
  21. ^ Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "La bohème, 1 February 1896". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  22. ^ Melitz 1913, pp. 173–175.
  23. ^ "La bohème, SC 67 (Puccini, Giacomo) - IMSLP: Free Sheet Music PDF Download". imslp.org. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
  24. ^ a b Greenfield & Layton 2009, p. 806.
  25. ^ Operadis, La bohème discography
  26. ^ Tommasini, Anthony, "Look What They're Doing to Opera", The New York Times, 22 December 2002
  27. ^ Details at Operadis
  28. ^ Shaman, William et al., More EJS: Discography of the Edward J. Smith recordings, Issue 81 of Discographies Series, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1999, pp. 455–56. ISBN 0-313-29835-1
  29. ^ Kalmanoff, Martin (1984). "The Missing Act". Archived from the original on 26 May 2012. Retrieved 21 September 2009.
  30. ^ Ginell, Cary (2008). "Smart Licensing: Where Have I Heard That Before?". Music Reports Inc. Retrieved 14 August 2008.[permanent dead link]
  31. ^ Burke, Brandon. David Burrell: La Vie de Bohème at AllMusic. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
  32. ^ Anthony Tommasini (17 March 1996). "Theather [sic]; The Seven-Year Odyssey that Led to Rent". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 July 2008.
  33. ^ Pritchett 1983.
  34. ^ a b Maggie Shiels (10 July 2002). "Baz's Broadway opera". BBC News. Retrieved 15 August 2008.
  35. ^ "Internet Broadway Database, IBDB". Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved 27 December 2012.
  36. ^ 2002 production details at the IBDB database
  37. ^ Maggie Shiels (21 October 2002). "Baz's brilliant La Bohème". BBC News. Retrieved 15 August 2008.
  38. ^ Stephen Moss, "OperaUpClose: Puccini in the pub", The Guardian (London), 3 December 2009. Retrieved 21 January 2012
  39. ^ Anna Picard, "La Bohème, Cock Tavern Theatre, Kilburn, London: A tiny and youthful production of La Bohème has authenticity..." 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine, The Independent (London), 21 January 2012
  40. ^ Time Masters, "Puccini in a pub triumphs at Olivier Awards", on bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 21 January 2012
  41. ^ a b "This reimagined version of La Bohème is set in a Toronto bar". CBC Arts, October 2, 2019.
  42. ^ Brent Furdyk, "Television Nominees Announced For 2021 Canadian Screen Awards, ‘Schitt’s Creek’ Leads The Pack With 21 Nominations". ET Canada, March 30, 2021.

Sources

External links

bohème, ruggero, leoncavallo, opera, same, name, leoncavallo, other, uses, disambiguation, ɑː, italian, boˈɛm, opera, four, acts, composed, giacomo, puccini, between, 1893, 1895, italian, libretto, luigi, illica, giuseppe, giacosa, based, scènes, bohème, 1851,. For Ruggero Leoncavallo s opera of the same name see La boheme Leoncavallo For other uses see La boheme disambiguation La boheme ˌ l ɑː b oʊ ˈ ɛ m 1 Italian la boˈɛm is an opera in four acts N 1 composed by Giacomo Puccini between 1893 and 1895 to an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa based on Scenes de la vie de boheme 1851 by Henri Murger 2 The story is set in Paris around 1830 and shows the Bohemian lifestyle known in French as la boheme of a poor seamstress and her artist friends La bohemeOpera by Giacomo PucciniOriginal 1896 poster by Adolfo HohensteinLibrettistLuigi Illica Giuseppe GiacosaLanguageItalianBased onHenri Murger s Scenes de la vie de bohemePremiere1 February 1896 1896 02 01 Teatro Regio TurinThe world premiere of La boheme was in Turin on 1 February 1896 at the Teatro Regio 3 conducted by the 28 year old Arturo Toscanini Since then La boheme has become part of the standard Italian opera repertory and is one of the most frequently performed operas worldwide 4 In 1946 fifty years after the opera s premiere Toscanini conducted a commemorative performance of it on radio with the NBC Symphony Orchestra A recording of the performance was later released by RCA Victor on vinyl record tape and compact disc It is the only recording ever made of a Puccini opera by its original conductor see Recording history below Contents 1 Origin of the story 2 Performance history and reception 2 1 Initial success 2 2 20th and 21st centuries 2 3 Critical reception 3 Roles 4 Synopsis 4 1 Act 1 4 2 Act 2 4 3 Act 3 4 4 Act 4 5 Instrumentation 6 Recording history 7 The missing act 8 Derivative works 8 1 Modernizations 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources 12 External linksOrigin of the story Edit Mimi s costume for act 1 of La boheme designed by Adolfo Hohenstein for the world premiere As credited on its title page the libretto of La boheme is based on Henri Murger s 1851 novel Scenes de la vie de boheme a collection of vignettes portraying young bohemians living in the Latin Quarter of Paris in the 1840s Although often called a novel the book has no unified plot Like the 1849 play drawn from the book by Murger and Theodore Barriere the opera s libretto focuses on the relationship between Rodolfo and Mimi ending with her death Also like the play the libretto combines two characters from the novel Mimi and Francine into the single character of Mimi Early in the composition stage Puccini was in dispute with the composer Ruggero Leoncavallo who said that he had offered Puccini a completed libretto and felt that Puccini should defer to him Puccini responded that he had had no idea of Leoncavallo s interest and that having been working on his own version for some time he felt that he could not oblige him by discontinuing with the opera Leoncavallo completed his own version in which Marcello was sung by a tenor and Rodolfo by a baritone It was not as successful as Puccini s and is now rarely performed 5 Rodolfo costume design by Adolfo Hohenstein for the premiere at Teatro Regio 1896 Much of the libretto is original Major sections of acts two and three are the librettists invention with only a few passing references to incidents and characters in Murger Most of acts one and four follow the book piecing together episodes from various chapters The final scenes in acts one and four the scenes with Rodolfo and Mimi resemble both the play and the book The story of their meeting closely follows chapter 18 of the book in which the two lovers living in the garret are not Rodolphe and Mimi at all but rather Jacques and Francine The story of Mimi s death in the opera draws from two different chapters in the book one relating Francine s death and the other relating Mimi s 2 The published libretto includes a note from the librettists briefly discussing their adaptation Without mentioning the play directly they defend their conflation of Francine and Mimi into a single character Chi puo non confondere nel delicato profilo di una sola donna quelli di Mimi e di Francine Who cannot confuse in the delicate profile of one woman the personality both of Mimi and of Francine At the time the book was in the public domain Murger having died without heirs but rights to the play were still controlled by Barriere s heirs 6 Performance history and reception EditInitial success Edit The world premiere performance of La boheme took place in Turin on 1 February 1896 at the Teatro Regio 3 and was conducted by the young Arturo Toscanini The role of Rodolfo was played by Evan Gorga with Cesira Ferrani as Mimi but Gorga was unable to accommodate the high tessitura and the music had to be transposed down for him 7 8 The initial response of the audience at the first performance was subdued and critical responses were polarized 9 Despite this varied introductory response the opera quickly became popular throughout Italy and productions were soon mounted by the following companies The Teatro di San Carlo 14 March 1896 with Elisa Petri as Musetta and Antonio Magini Coletti as Marcello The Teatro Comunale di Bologna 4 November 1896 with Amelia Sedelmayer as Musetta and Umberto Beduschi as Rodolfo The Teatro Costanzi 17 November 1896 with Maria Stuarda Savelli as Mimi Enrico Giannini Grifoni as Rodolfo and Maurizio Bensaude as Marcello La Scala 15 March 1897 with Angelica Pandolfini as Mimi Camilla Pasini as Musetta Fernando De Lucia as Rodolfo and Edoardo Camera as Marcello La Fenice 26 December 1897 with Emilia Merolla as Mimi Maria Martelli as Musetta Giovanni Apostolu and Franco Mannucci as Rodolfo and Ferruccio Corradetti as Marcello Teatro Regio di Parma 29 January 1898 with Solomiya Krushelnytska as Mimi Lina Cassandro as Musetta Pietro Ferrari as Rodolfo and Pietro Giacomello as Marcello Paris Opera 13 June 1898 and the Teatro Donizetti di Bergamo 21 August 1898 with Emilia Corsi as Mimi Annita Barone as Musetta Giovanni Apostolu as Rodolfo and Giovanni Roussel as Marcello 10 11 The first performance of La boheme outside Italy was at the Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires Argentina on 16 June 1896 The opera was performed in Alexandria Lisbon and Moscow in early 1897 The United Kingdom premiere took place at the Theatre Royal in Manchester on 22 April 1897 in a presentation by the Carl Rosa Opera Company supervised by Puccini 12 This performance was given in English and starred Alice Esty as Mimi Bessie McDonald as Musetta Robert Cunningham as Rodolfo and William Paull as Marcello 12 On 2 October 1897 the same company gave the opera s first staging at the Royal Opera House in London and on 14 October 1897 in Los Angeles for the opera s United States premiere The opera reached New York City on 16 May 1898 when it was performed at Wallack s Theatre with Giuseppe Agostini as Rodolfo 13 The first production of the opera actually produced by the Royal Opera House itself premiered on 1 July 1899 with Nellie Melba as Mimi Zelie de Lussan as Musetta Fernando De Lucia as Rodolfo and Mario Ancona as Marcello 10 La boheme premiered in Germany at the Kroll Opera House in Berlin on 22 June 1897 The French premiere of the opera was presented by the Opera Comique on 13 June 1898 at the Theatre des Nations The production used a French translation by Paul Ferrier and starred Julia Guiraudon as Mimi Jeanne Tiphaine as Musetta Adolphe Marechal as Rodolfo and Lucien Fugere as Marcello 10 The Czech premiere of the opera was presented by the National Theatre on 27 February 1898 20th and 21st centuries Edit La boheme continued to gain international popularity throughout the early 20th century and the Opera Comique alone had already presented the opera one hundred times by 1903 The Belgian premiere took place at La Monnaie on 25 October 1900 using Ferrier s French translation with Marie Thierry as Mimi Leon David as Rodolfo Eugene Charles Badiali as Marcello sets by Pierre Devis Armand Lynen and Albert Dubosq and Philippe Flon conducting The Metropolitan Opera staged the work for the first time on 26 December 1900 with Nellie Melba as Mimi Annita Occhiolini Rizzini as Musetta Albert Saleza as Rodolfo Giuseppe Campanari as Marcello and Luigi Mancinelli conducting 10 La boheme was the last opera performed at New York s Metropolitan Opera s original 1883 building on April 16 1966 conducted by George Schick 14 The opera was first performed in Brazil at the Theatro da Paz in Belem on 21 April 1900 with the Brazilian soprano Tilde Maragliano as Mimi Maria Cavallini as Musetta Giuseppe Agostini as Rodolfo and Alessandro Modesti as Marcello The conductor was Giorgio Polacco 15 The following year La boheme was presented at the Teatro Amazonas in Manaus Brazil on 2 July 1901 with Elvira Miotti as Mimi Mabel Nelma as Musetta Michele Sigaldi as Rodolfo and Enrico De Franceschi as Marcello Other premieres soon followed Melbourne 13 July 1901 Her Majesty s Theatre first performance in Australia 16 Monaco 1 February 1902 Opera de Monte Carlo in Monte Carlo with Nellie Melba as Mimi Enrico Caruso as Rodolfo Alexis Boyer as Marcello and Leon Jehin conducting 10 Prato 25 December 1902 Regio Teatro Metastasio with Ulderica Persichini as Mimi Norma Sella as Musetta Ariodante Quarti as Rodolfo and Amleto Pollastri as Marcello 10 Catania 9 July 1903 Politeama Pacini with Isabella Costa Orbellini as Mimi Lina Gismondi as Musetta Elvino Ventura as Rodolfo and Alfredo Costa as Marcello 10 Austria 25 November 1903 Vienna State Opera in Vienna with Selma Kurz as Mimi Marie Gutheil Schoder as Musetta Fritz Schrodter as Rodolfo Gerhard Stehmann as Marcello and Gustav Mahler conducting 10 Sweden 19 May 1905 Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm presented by the Royal Swedish Opera with Maria Labia as Mimi 10 Puccini died in Brussels on 29 November 1924 and the news of his death reached Rome during a performance of La boheme The opera was immediately stopped and the orchestra played Chopin s Funeral March for the stunned audience 17 The first production of La boheme at the Salzburg Festival did not occur until as late as July 2012 However that festival has not shown much interest in the operas of Puccini only ever having one production each of Tosca and Turandot in its entire history 18 Critical reception Edit Despite the opera s popularity with audiences Puccini has been the target of condescension by some music critics who find his music insufficiently sophisticated or difficult 19 The composer Benjamin Britten wrote in 1951 A fter four or five performances I never wanted to hear Boheme again In spite of its neatness I became sickened by the cheapness and emptiness of the music 20 Roles Edit Act 2 costume design for la rappezzatrice the clothes mender for the world premiere performance Roles voice types premiere cast Role Voice type Premiere cast 1 February 1896 21 Conductor Arturo ToscaniniRodolfo a poet tenor Evan GorgaMimi a seamstress soprano Cesira FerraniMarcello a painter baritone Tieste WilmantMusetta a singer soprano Camilla PasiniSchaunard a musician baritone Antonio Pini CorsiColline a philosopher bass Michele MazzaraBenoit their landlord bass Alessandro PoloniniAlcindoro a state councillor bass Alessandro PoloniniParpignol a toy vendor tenor Dante ZucchiA customs Sergeant bass Felice FogliaStudents working girls townsfolk shopkeepers street vendors soldiers waiters childrenSynopsis EditPlace Paris Time Around 1830 22 Act 1 Edit Opening Questo mar rosso source source Afro Poli Marcello Beniamino Gigli Rudolfo Duilio Baronti Colline 1938 Problems playing this file See media help In the four bohemians garret Christmas Eve Marcello is painting while Rodolfo gazes out of the window They complain of the cold In order to keep warm they burn the manuscript of Rodolfo s drama Colline the philosopher enters shivering and disgruntled at not having been able to pawn some books Schaunard the musician of the group arrives with food wine and cigars He explains the source of his riches a job with an eccentric English gentleman who ordered him to play his violin to a parrot until it died The others hardly listen to his tale as they set up the table to eat and drink Schaunard interrupts telling them that they must save the food for the days ahead tonight they will all celebrate his good fortune by dining at Cafe Momus and he will pay The friends are interrupted by Benoit the landlord who arrives to collect the rent They flatter him and ply him with wine In his drunkenness he begins to boast of his amorous adventures but when he also reveals that he is married they thrust him from the room without the rent payment in comic moral indignation The rent money is divided for their evening out in the Quartier Latin Che gelida manina source source source Beniamino Gigli 1931 Si mi chiamano Mimi source source Claudia Muzio 1911 O soave fanciulla source source Enrico Caruso Nellie Melba 1907 Marcello Schaunard and Colline go out but Rodolfo remains alone for a moment in order to finish an article he is writing promising to join his friends soon There is a knock at the door It is a girl who lives in another room in the building Her candle has blown out and she has no matches she asks Rodolfo to light it She is briefly overcome with faintness and Rodolfo helps her to a chair and offers her a glass of wine She thanks him After a few minutes she says that she is better and must go But as she turns to leave she realizes that she has lost her key Her candle goes out in the draught and Rodolfo s candle goes out too the pair stumble in the dark Rodolfo eager to spend time with the girl to whom he is already attracted finds the key and pockets it feigning innocence He takes her cold hand Che gelida manina What a cold little hand and tells her of his life as a poet then asks her to tell him more about her life The girl says her name is Mimi Si mi chiamano Mimi Yes they call me Mimi and describes her simple life as an embroiderer Impatiently the waiting friends call Rodolfo He answers and turns to see Mimi bathed in moonlight duet Rodolfo and Mimi O soave fanciulla Oh lovely girl They realize that they have fallen in love Rodolfo suggests remaining at home with Mimi but she decides to accompany him to the Cafe Momus As they leave they sing of their newfound love Act 2 Edit Quartier Latin same evening Set design by Adolfo Hohenstein for act 2 in the premiere A great crowd including children has gathered with street sellers announcing their wares chorus Aranci datteri Caldi i marroni Oranges dates Hot chestnuts The friends arrive Rodolfo buys Mimi a bonnet from a vendor while Colline buys a coat and Schaunard a horn Parisians gossip with friends and bargain with the vendors the children of the streets clamor to see the wares of Parpignol the toy seller The friends enter the Cafe Momus As the men and Mimi dine at the cafe Musetta formerly Marcello s sweetheart arrives with her rich and elderly government minister admirer Alcindoro whom she is tormenting It is clear she is tired of him To the delight of the Parisians and the embarrassment of her patron she sings a risque song Musetta s waltz Quando me n vo When I go along hoping to reclaim Marcello s attention The ploy works at the same time Mimi recognizes that Musetta truly loves Marcello To be rid of Alcindoro for a bit Musetta pretends to be suffering from a tight shoe and sends him to the shoemaker to get her shoe mended Alcindoro leaves and Musetta and Marcello fall rapturously into each other s arms The friends are presented with their bill However Schaunard s purse has gone missing and no one else has enough money to pay The sly Musetta has the entire bill charged to Alcindoro The sound of a military band is heard and the friends leave Alcindoro returns with the repaired shoe seeking Musetta The waiter hands him the bill and dumbfounded Alcindoro sinks into a chair Act 3 Edit Advertisement for the music score showing the quartet that ends act 3 At the toll gate at the Barriere d Enfer late February Peddlers pass through the barriers and enter the city Mimi appears coughing violently She tries to find Marcello who is currently living in a little tavern where he paints signs for the innkeeper She tells him of her hard life with Rodolfo who abandoned her the night before and of Rodolfo s terrible jealousy O buon Marcello aiuto Oh good Marcello help me Marcello tells her that Rodolfo is asleep inside and expresses concern about Mimi s cough Rodolfo wakes up and comes out looking for Marcello Mimi hides and overhears Rodolfo first telling Marcello that he left Mimi because of her coquettishness but finally confessing that his jealousy is a sham he fears she is slowly being consumed by a deadly illness most likely tuberculosis known by the catchall name consumption in the nineteenth century Rodolfo in his poverty can do little to help Mimi and hopes that his pretended unkindness will inspire her to seek another wealthier suitor Marcello finalmente Marcello finally Addio di Mimi Donde lieta usci source source Nellie Melba 1907 3 03 Out of kindness towards Mimi Marcello tries to silence him but she has already heard all Her weeping and coughing reveal her presence and Rodolfo hurries to her Musetta s laughter is heard and Marcello goes to find out what has happened Mimi tells Rodolfo that she is leaving him and asks that they separate amicably Mimi Donde lieta usci From here she happily left but their love for one another is too strong for the pair to part As a compromise they agree to remain together until the spring when the world is coming to life again and no one feels truly alone Meanwhile Marcello has found Musetta and the couple quarrel fiercely about Musetta s flirtatiousness an antithetical counterpoint to the other pair s reconciliation quartet Mimi Rodolfo Musetta Marcello Addio dolce svegliare alla mattina Goodbye sweet awakening in the morning Act 4 Edit Back in the garret some months later O Mimi tu piu non torni source source Enrico Caruso Antonio Scotti 1907 Vecchia zimarra source source Feodor Chaliapin Dorme Riposa finale source source Marcello and Rodolfo are trying to work though they are primarily talking about their girlfriends who have left them and found wealthy lovers Rodolfo has seen Musetta in a fine carriage and Marcello has seen Mimi dressed like a queen The men both express their nostalgia duet O Mimi tu piu non torni O Mimi will you not return Schaunard and Colline arrive with a very frugal dinner and all parody eating a plentiful banquet dance together and sing before Schaunard and Colline engage in a mock duel Musetta suddenly appears Mimi who took up with a wealthy viscount after leaving Rodolfo in the spring has left her patron Musetta found her that day in the street severely weakened by her illness and Mimi begged Musetta to bring her to Rodolfo Mimi haggard and pale is assisted onto a bed Briefly she feels as though she is recovering Musetta and Marcello leave to sell Musetta s earrings in order to buy medicine and Colline leaves to pawn his overcoat Vecchia zimarra Old coat Schaunard leaves with Colline to give Mimi and Rodolfo some time together Mimi tells Rodolfo that her love for him is her whole life aria duet Mimi and Rodolfo Sono andati Have they gone To Mimi s delight Rodolfo presents her with the pink bonnet he bought her which he has kept as a souvenir of their love They remember past happiness and their first meeting the candles the lost key Mimi is overwhelmed by a seizure of coughing The others return with a gift of a muff to warm Mimi s hands and a cordial to soothe her cough Mimi gently thanks Rodolfo for the muff which she believes is a present from him reassures him that she is better and falls asleep Musetta prays Schaunard discovers that Mimi has died Rodolfo rushes to the bed calling Mimi s name in anguish He sobs helplessly as the curtain falls Instrumentation EditLa boheme is scored for woodwinds piccolo 2 flutes 2 oboes cor anglais 2 clarinets A B flat bass clarinet A B flat 2 bassoons brass 4 horns in F 3 trumpets in F 3 trombones bass trombone percussion timpani snare drum triangle cymbals bass drum xylophone glockenspiel chimes strings harp violins I II viola cello double bass off stage end of act 2 4 piccolos 6 trumpets 2 snare drums occasionally on stage 23 Recording history EditMain article La boheme discography Prop designs for act 2 of La boheme for the world premiere performance The discography of La boheme is a long one with many distinguished recordings including the 1972 Decca recording conducted by Herbert von Karajan with Luciano Pavarotti as Rodolfo and Mirella Freni as Mimi made before Pavarotti became an international superstar of opera 24 and the 1973 RCA Victor recording conducted by Sir Georg Solti with Montserrat Caballe as Mimi and Placido Domingo as Rodolfo which won the 1974 Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording The 1959 recording conducted by Tullio Serafin with Renata Tebaldi as Mimi and Carlo Bergonzi was included in the soundtrack of the 1987 movie Moonstruck The earliest commercially released full length recording was probably that recorded in February 1917 and released on HMV s Italian label La Voce del Padrone 25 Carlo Sabajno conducted the La Scala Orchestra and Chorus with Gemma Bosini and Reno Andreini as Mimi and Rodolfo One of the most recent is the 2008 Deutsche Grammophon release conducted by Bertrand de Billy with Anna Netrebko and Rolando Villazon as Mimi and Rodolfo 24 There are several recordings with conductors closely associated with Puccini In the 1946 RCA Victor recording Arturo Toscanini who conducted the world premiere of the opera conducts the NBC Symphony Orchestra with Jan Peerce as Rodolfo and Licia Albanese as Mimi It is the only recording of a Puccini opera by its original conductor Thomas Beecham who worked closely with Puccini when preparing a 1920 production of La boheme in London 26 conducted a performance of the opera in English released by Columbia Records in 1936 with Lisa Perli as Mimi and Heddle Nash as Rodolfo Beecham also conducts on the 1956 RCA Victor recording with Victoria de los Angeles and Jussi Bjorling as Mimi and Rodolfo Although the vast majority of recordings are in the original Italian the opera has been recorded in several other languages These include a recording in French conducted by Erasmo Ghiglia with Renee Doria and Alain Vanzo as Mimi and Rodolfo 1960 27 a recording in German with Richard Kraus conducting the Deutsche Oper Berlin Orchestra and Chorus with Trude Eipperle and Fritz Wunderlich as Mimi and Rodolfo 1956 and the 1998 release on the Chandos Opera in English label with David Parry conducting the Philharmonia Orchestra and Cynthia Haymon and Dennis O Neill as Mimi and Rodolfo Enrico Caruso who was closely associated with the role of Rodolfo recorded the famous aria Che gelida manina in 1906 This aria has been recorded by nearly 500 tenors in at least seven different languages between 1900 and 1980 28 In 1981 the A N N A Record Company released a six LP set with 101 different tenors singing the aria The missing act EditIn 1957 Illica s widow died and his papers were given to the Parma Museum Among them was the full libretto to La boheme It was discovered that the librettists had prepared an act which Puccini decided not to use in his composition 29 It is noteworthy for explaining Rodolfo s jealous remarks to Marcello in act 3 The missing act is located in the timeline between the Cafe Momus scene and act 3 and describes an open air party at Musetta s dwelling Her protector has refused to pay further rent out of jealous feelings and Musetta s furniture is moved into the courtyard to be auctioned off the following morning The four Bohemians find in this an excuse for a party and arrange for wine and an orchestra Musetta gives Mimi a beautiful gown to wear and introduces her to a Viscount The pair dances a quadrille in the courtyard which moves Rodolfo to jealousy This explains his act 3 reference to the moscardino di Viscontino young fop of a Viscount As dawn approaches furniture dealers gradually remove pieces for the morning auction Ruggero Leoncavallo composed an opera based the same source material also titled La boheme this episode is included in Leoncavallo s treatment which premiered in 1897 Derivative works EditIn 1959 Musetta s Waltz was adapted by songwriter Bobby Worth for the pop song Don t You Know a hit for Della Reese 30 Earlier it was used for another song One Night of Love 5 In 1969 in Paris American free jazz pianist Dave Burrell recorded his La Vie de Boheme with a seven piece group of European and American musicians The music on the double LP is improvised and experimental but the listener can still discern Puccini s themes as well as the narrative arc of the complete opera 31 Rent a 1996 musical by Jonathan Larson is based on La boheme Here the lovers Roger and Mimi are faced with AIDS and progress through the action with songs such as Light My Candle which have direct reference to La boheme 32 Many of the character names are retained or are similar e g the character Angel is given the surname Schunard and at another point in the play Roger s roommate and best friend Mark makes a wry reference to Musetta s Waltz which is a recurring theme throughout the first act and is played at the end of the second act The opera was adapted into a 1983 short story by the novelist V S Pritchett for publication by the Metropolitan Opera Association 33 Modernizations Edit Stage design for act 1 of La boheme Reginald Gray 2010 Baz Luhrmann produced the opera for Opera Australia in 1990 34 with modernized supertitle translations and a budget of only A 60 000 A 130 545 17 in 2022 A DVD was issued of the stage show According to Luhrmann this version was set in 1957 rather than the original period of 1830 because they discovered that 1957 was a very very accurate match for the social and economic realities of Paris in the 1840s 34 In 2002 Luhrmann restaged his version on Broadway the production won two Tony Awards out of six nominations for Best Scenic Design and Best Lighting Design as well as a special award the Tony Honor for Excellence in Theatre 35 36 To play the eight performances per week on Broadway three casts of Mimis and Rodolfos and two Musettas and Marcellos were used in rotation 37 Robin Norton Hale directed a new production at the Cock Tavern Theatre Kilburn for OperaUpClose in December 2009 38 39 For act 2 the entire audience and cast moved downstairs to the pub itself with the pub s patrons serving as extras in the Cafe Momus scene In 2010 the production was transferred to the West End s Soho Theatre and won a Laurence Olivier Award 40 A 2019 production by Canada s Against the Grain Theatre featured a translated English libretto and transposed the story to a contemporary Canadian urban setting 41 This production toured several Canadian cities before its production at Toronto s Tranzac Club was livestreamed by CBC Gem on October 13 41 The CBC broadcast received two Canadian Screen Award nominations at the 9th Canadian Screen Awards in 2021 for Best Performing Arts Program and Best Direction in a TV Movie 42 Notes Edit Puccini called the divisions quadri tableaux or images rather than atti acts References Edit La Boheme Dictionary com Unabridged Online n d a b Groos amp Parker 1986 p 1 a b Budden 2002 p 494 Opera Statistics on operabase com Operabase Archived from the original on 5 September 2015 Retrieved 18 May 2012 a b Colin Kendell The Complete Puccini Amberley Publishing 2012 Julian Budden La boheme Grove Music Online ed L Macy Accessed 23 November 2008 subscription access Archived 16 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Bourne Joyce 2010 A Dictionary of Opera Characters Revised ed OUP Oxford p 255 ISBN 978 0 19 955039 5 Atthill Catherine 1979 Phaidon book of the opera a survey of 780 operas from 1597 Phaidon p 314 Wilson Alexandra 2007 The Puccini Problem Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 40 Retrieved 12 October 2015 a b c d e f g h i Casaglia Gherardo 2005 La boheme L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian La prima della Boheme a Parigi La Stampa in Italian 14 June 1898 p 2 a b The Manchester Guardian 23 April 1897 p 6 not specific enough to verify Brown Thomas Allston A History of the New York Stage Vol 3 Dodd Mead and Company New York 1903 p 359 and Musical and Dramatic Puccini s La boheme Sung in Italian Last Night at Wallack s Theatre The New York Times 17 May 1898 An Aria of Lincoln Center The Metropolitan Opera by Veronica Shine Opera Today 3 February 2012 Met performances 1966 Pascoa Marcio Cronologia Lirica de Belem p 145 Irvin 1985 p page needed The Death of Giacomo Puccini The British Newspaper Archive 29 November 2012 Retrieved 16 January 2015 Salzburg Festival Retrieved 28 October 2014 Groos amp Parker 1986 p 127 Britten Benjamin Verdi A Symposium Opera magazine February 1951 pp 113 114 Casaglia Gherardo 2005 La boheme 1 February 1896 L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian Melitz 1913 pp 173 175 La boheme SC 67 Puccini Giacomo IMSLP Free Sheet Music PDF Download imslp org Retrieved 16 October 2022 a b Greenfield amp Layton 2009 p 806 Operadis La boheme discography Tommasini Anthony Look What They re Doing to Opera The New York Times 22 December 2002 Details at Operadis Shaman William et al More EJS Discography of the Edward J Smith recordings Issue 81 of Discographies Series Greenwood Publishing Group 1999 pp 455 56 ISBN 0 313 29835 1 Kalmanoff Martin 1984 The Missing Act Archived from the original on 26 May 2012 Retrieved 21 September 2009 Ginell Cary 2008 Smart Licensing Where Have I Heard That Before Music Reports Inc Retrieved 14 August 2008 permanent dead link Burke Brandon David Burrell La Vie de Boheme at AllMusic Retrieved 17 April 2015 Anthony Tommasini 17 March 1996 Theather sic The Seven Year Odyssey that Led to Rent The New York Times Retrieved 17 July 2008 Pritchett 1983 a b Maggie Shiels 10 July 2002 Baz s Broadway opera BBC News Retrieved 15 August 2008 Internet Broadway Database IBDB Internet Broadway Database Retrieved 27 December 2012 2002 production details at the IBDB database Maggie Shiels 21 October 2002 Baz s brilliant La Boheme BBC News Retrieved 15 August 2008 Stephen Moss OperaUpClose Puccini in the pub The Guardian London 3 December 2009 Retrieved 21 January 2012 Anna Picard La Boheme Cock Tavern Theatre Kilburn London A tiny and youthful production of La Boheme has authenticity Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine The Independent London 21 January 2012 Time Masters Puccini in a pub triumphs at Olivier Awards on bbc co uk Retrieved 21 January 2012 a b This reimagined version of La Boheme is set in a Toronto bar CBC Arts October 2 2019 Brent Furdyk Television Nominees Announced For 2021 Canadian Screen Awards Schitt s Creek Leads The Pack With 21 Nominations ET Canada March 30 2021 Sources EditBudden Julian 2002 Puccini His Life and Works Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 816468 5 Groos Arthur Parker Roger eds 1986 La boheme Cambridge Opera Handbooks Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 26489 8 Irvin Eric 1985 Dictionary of the Australian Theatre 1788 1914 Hale amp Iremonger ISBN 978 0 86806 127 6 Greenfield Edward Layton Robert 2009 March Ivan Czajkowski Paul eds The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music 2010 Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 104162 9 Melitz Leo 1913 The Opera Goer s Complete Guide Salinger Richard translator New York Dodd Mead and Company Pritchett V S 1983 La boheme London Michael Joseph ISBN 0 7181 2303 4 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to La boheme La boheme Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Vocal Score from the Indiana University School of Music Mi chiamano Mimi in German 1917 on YouTube Lotte Lehmann San Diego OperaTalk with Nick Reveles La boheme Libretto in Italian from OperaGlass Synopsis photos Archived 25 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine in German Opera guide Portal Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title La boheme amp oldid 1136833308, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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