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La traviata

La traviata (Italian pronunciation: [la traˈvjaːta]; The Fallen Woman)[1][2] is an opera in three acts by Giuseppe Verdi set to an Italian libretto by Francesco Maria Piave. It is based on La Dame aux camélias (1852), a play by Alexandre Dumas fils adapted from his own 1848 novel. The opera was originally titled Violetta, after the main character. It was first performed on 6 March 1853 at La Fenice opera house in Venice.

La traviata
Opera by Giuseppe Verdi
Violetta's costume, premiere 1853
LibrettistFrancesco Maria Piave
LanguageItalian
Based onLa Dame aux camélias
by Alexandre Dumas fils
Premiere
6 March 1853 (1853-03-06)

Piave and Verdi wanted to follow Dumas in giving the opera a contemporary setting, but the authorities at La Fenice insisted that it be set in the past, "c. 1700". It was not until the 1880s that the composer's and librettist's original wishes were carried out and "realistic" productions were staged.[3] La traviata has become immensely popular and is among the most frequently performed of all operas.[4]

Composition history

 
Verdi around 1850

For Verdi, the years 1851 to 1853 were filled with operatic activity. First, he had agreed with the librettist Salvadore Cammarano on a subject for what would become Il trovatore, but work on this opera could not proceed while the composer was writing Rigoletto, which premiered in Venice in March 1851. In addition, personal affairs in his home town limited his activities that spring, but after Rigoletto's success in Venice, an additional commission was offered by Brenna, the secretary of La Fenice.

Verdi sees The Lady of the Camellias play

Verdi and Giuseppina Strepponi visited Paris from late 1851 and into March 1852. In February the couple attended a performance of Alexander Dumas fils's The Lady of the Camellias. As a result of this, Verdi's biographer Mary Jane Phillips-Matz reports, the composer immediately began to compose music for what would later become La traviata.[5] However, Julian Budden notes that Verdi had probably read the Dumas novel some time before, and, after seeing the play and returning to Italy, "he was already setting up an ideal operatic cast for it in his mind",[6] shown by his dealings with La Fenice.

Composing for Venice

 
Francesco Maria Piave, librettist of the opera

Francesco Maria Piave was engaged to write the new libretto and the two men tried to come up with a suitable subject, but the composer complained that his librettist "had not yet offered him an 'original' or 'provocative' idea". Writing to Piave, he added that "I don't want any of those everyday subjects that one can find by the hundreds."[7] But at the same time, the composer expressed concern about censorship in Venice, something with which he was very familiar after his dealings with the censors concerning Rigoletto. As the months dragged on into October, it was agreed that Piave would come to Sant'Agata (Verdi's home near Busseto) and work with the composer. One subject was chosen, Piave set to work, and then Verdi threw in another idea, which may have been La traviata. Within a short time, a synopsis was dispatched to Venice under the title of Amore e morte (Love and Death).[8] However, as Budden reveals, Verdi writes to his friend De Sanctis telling him that "for Venice I'm doing La Dame aux camélias which will probably be called La traviata. A subject for our own age."[9] Although still bogged down at Sant'Agata, Piave was sanguine: "Everything will turn out fine, and we'll have a new masterpiece from this true wizard of modern harmonies".[10]

When back at Sant'Agata in late January 1853 Verdi was reminded that his contract called for him to be in Venice within a week or two and for the premiere to be held on the "first Saturday in March 1853".[11] However, it soon became clear that a modern-dress staging of the new opera was impossible—the requirement was that it should be set in the 17th century "in the era of Richelieu"—and reports from the opening of the season confirmed the limitations of the chosen soprano, the 38-year-old Fanny Salvini-Donatelli for taking the role of Violetta. Verdi was distraught, for he held on to the notion that the opera could be staged in modern dress—as Stiffelio had been done—Piave was sent back to Sant'Agata to no avail: he could not persuade the composer to back down on his insistence that another soprano be secured, yet the 15 January deadline for securing one had come and gone. Verdi was filled with premonitions of disaster upon his arrival in Venice on 21 February for rehearsals and he made his unhappiness clear to the singers.[10]

Performance history

 
Poster for the world premiere

The audience jeered at times during the premiere, directing some of their scorn at the casting of soprano Fanny Salvini-Donatelli in the lead role of Violetta. Though she was an acclaimed singer, they considered her to be too old (at 38) and overweight to credibly play a young woman dying of consumption. (Verdi had previously attempted to persuade the manager of La Fenice to re-cast the role with a younger woman, but with no success.) Nevertheless, the first act was met with applause and cheering at the end; but in the second act, the audience began to turn against the performance, especially after the singing of the baritone Felice Varesi and the tenor Lodovico Graziani. The next day, Verdi wrote to his friend Emanuele Muzio in what has now become perhaps his most famous letter: "La traviata last night a failure. Was the fault mine or the singers'? Time will tell."[12]

Coincidentally, as Philips-Matz points out, an Italian translation of the play La Dame aux camélias was being presented just a short distance from La Fenice.[10]

 
Felice Varesi, the first Germont père
(Litho: Josef Kriehuber)
 
Lodovico Graziani c. 1845, the first Alfredo

While there were demands for productions from impresarios in various Italian cities, Verdi was loath to allow them unless he could be sure of the strength of the singers, and in spite of their pleas, the composer refused. As Budden notes, it came to be Venice "that made an honest woman of Violetta"[13] when Verdi allowed a performance at the Teatro San Benedetto. Some revisions took place between 1853 and May 1854, mostly affecting acts 2 and 3, but the opera was performed again on 6 May 1854 and was a great success, largely due to Maria Spezia-Aldighieri's portrayal of Violetta. "Then [referring to the La Fenice performances] it was a fiasco; now it has created a furore. Draw your own conclusions!" reported Piave (who had overseen the production in Verdi's absence).[14]

The opera (in the revised version) was first performed in Madrid on 1 February 1855 with Spezia-Aldighieri at Teatro Real, in Vienna on 4 May 1855 in Italian and in Barcelona on 25 October at Gran Teatre del Liceu. It was first performed in England on 24 May 1856 in Italian at Her Majesty's Theatre in London,[15] where it was considered morally questionable, and "the heads of the Church did their best to put an injunction upon performance; the Queen refrained from visiting the theatre during the performances, though the music, words and all, were not unheard at the palace".[16] It was first performed in the United States by the Max Maretzek Italian Opera Company on 3 December 1856 in Italian at the Academy of Music in New York.[17] George Templeton Strong noted in his diary: "People say the plot's immoral, but I don't see that it's so much worse than many others, not to speak of Don Giovanni, which as put on the stage is little but rampant lechery",[18] while the Evening Post critic wrote: "Those who have quietly sat through the glaring improprieties of Don Giovanni will hardly blush or frown at anything in La traviata."[19]

The opera was first performed in France on 6 December 1856 in Italian by the Théâtre-Italien at the Salle Ventadour in Paris,[15] and on 27 October 1864 in French as Violetta (an adaptation by Édouard Duprez, older brother of the tenor Gilbert Duprez) at the Théâtre Lyrique on the Place du Châtelet with Christina Nilsson in the title role.[20] The French adaptation of the libretto was published in 1865.[21]

Today, the opera has become immensely popular. It is currently the mostly frequently represented opera in the repertoire.[4]

Roles

 
Fanny Salvini-Donatelli, the first Violetta
Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 6 March 1853[22]
Conductor: Gaetano Mares
Violetta Valéry, a courtesan soprano Fanny Salvini-Donatelli
Alfredo Germont, a young bourgeois from a provincial family tenor Lodovico Graziani
Giorgio Germont, Alfredo's father baritone Felice Varesi
Flora Bervoix, Violetta's friend mezzo-soprano Speranza Giuseppini
Annina, Violetta's maid soprano Carlotta Berini
Gastone de Letorières, Alfredo's friend tenor Angelo Zuliani
Barone Douphol, Violetta's lover, a rival of Alfredo baritone Francesco Dragone
Marchese d'Obigny bass Arnaldo Silvestri
Dottore Grenvil bass Andrea Bellini
Giuseppe, Violetta's servant tenor G. Borsato
Flora's servant bass G. Tona
Commissioner bass Antonio Mazzini

Synopsis

Place: Paris and its vicinity.[23]
Time: Beginning of the 19th century

Act 1

The salon in Violetta's house

 
Scene 1: Party (attrib. Carl d'Unker)

Violetta Valéry, a famed courtesan, throws a lavish party at her Paris salon to celebrate her recovery from an illness. Gastone, a viscount, has brought with him a friend, Alfredo Germont, a young bourgeois from a provincial family who has long adored Violetta from afar. While walking to the salon, Gastone tells Violetta that Alfredo loves her, and that while she was ill, he came to her house every day. Alfredo joins them, admitting the truth of Gastone's remarks.

Baron Douphol, Violetta's current lover, waits nearby to escort her to the salon. Once there, the Baron is asked to give a toast, but refuses, and the crowd turns to Alfredo, who agrees to sing a brindisi – a drinking song (Alfredo, Violetta, chorus: Libiamo ne' lieti calici – "Let's drink from the joyful cups").

From the next room, the sound of the orchestra is heard and the guests move there to dance. After a series of severe coughs and almost fainting, Violetta begins to feel dizzy and asks her guests to go ahead and to leave her to rest until she recovers. While the guests dance in the next room, Violetta looks at her pale face in her mirror. Alfredo enters and expresses his concern for her fragile health, later declaring his love for her (Alfredo, Violetta: Un dì, felice, eterea – "One day, happy and ethereal"). At first, she rejects him because his love means nothing to her, but there is something about Alfredo that touches her heart. He is about to leave when she gives him a flower, telling him to return it when it has wilted, which will be the very next day.

After the guests leave, Violetta wonders if Alfredo could actually be the one in her life (Violetta: È strano! ... Ah, fors' è lui – "Ah, perhaps he is the one"). But she concludes that she needs freedom to live her life (Violetta, Alfredo: Sempre libera – "Always free"). From off stage, Alfredo's voice is heard singing about love as he walks down the street.

Act 2

Scene 1: Violetta's country house outside Paris

Three months later, Alfredo and Violetta are living together in a peaceful country house outside Paris. Violetta has fallen in love with Alfredo and she has completely abandoned her former life. Alfredo sings of their happy life together (Alfredo: De' miei bollenti spiriti / Il giovanile ardore – "The youthful ardor of my ebullient spirits"). Annina, the maid, arrives from Paris, and, when questioned by Alfredo, tells him that she went there to sell the horses, carriages and everything owned by Violetta to support their country lifestyle.

Alfredo is shocked to learn this and leaves for Paris immediately to settle matters himself. Violetta returns home and receives an invitation from her friend, Flora, to a party in Paris that evening. Alfredo's father, Giorgio Germont, is announced and demands that she break off her relationship with his son for the sake of his family, since he reveals that Violetta's relationship with Alfredo has threatened his daughter's engagement (Giorgio: Pura siccome un angelo, Iddio mi diè una figlia – "Pure as an angel, God gave me a daughter") because of Violetta's reputation. Meanwhile, he reluctantly becomes impressed by Violetta's nobility, something which he did not expect from a courtesan. She responds that she cannot end the relationship because she loves Alfredo so much, but Giorgio pleads with her for the sake of his family. With growing remorse, she finally agrees (Violetta, Giorgio: Dite alla giovine, sì bella e pura, – "Tell the young girl, so beautiful and pure,") and says goodbye to Giorgio. In a gesture of gratitude for her kindness and sacrifice, Giorgio kisses her forehead before leaving her weeping alone.

Violetta gives a note to Annina to send to Flora accepting the party invitation and, as she is writing a farewell letter to Alfredo, he enters. She can barely control her sadness and tears; she tells him repeatedly of her unconditional love (Violetta: Amami, Alfredo, amami quant'io t'amo – "Love me, Alfredo, love me as I love you"). Before rushing out and setting off for Paris, she hands the farewell letter to her servant to give to Alfredo.

Soon, the servant brings the letter to Alfredo and, as soon as he has read it, Giorgio returns and attempts to comfort his son, reminding him of his family in Provence (Giorgio: Di Provenza il mar, il suol chi dal cor ti cancellò? – "Who erased the sea, the land of Provence from your heart?"). Alfredo suspects that the Baron is behind his separation from Violetta, and the party invitation, which he finds on the desk, strengthens his suspicions. He decides to confront Violetta at the party. Giorgio tries to stop Alfredo, but he rushes out.

Scene 2: Party at Flora's house

 
Act 2, scene 2 from Fife Opera's 2004 production

At the party, the Marquis tells Flora that Violetta and Alfredo have separated, much to the amazement of everyone who had previously seen the happy couple. She calls for the entertainers to perform for the guests (Chorus: Noi siamo zingarelle venute da lontano – "We are gypsy girls who have come from afar"; Di Madride noi siam mattadori – "We are matadors from Madrid"). Gastone and his friends join the matadors and sing (Gastone, chorus, dancers: È Piquillo un bel gagliardo Biscaglino mattador – "Piquillo is a bold and handsome matador from Biscay").

Violetta arrives with Baron Douphol. They see Alfredo at the gambling table. When he sees them, Alfredo loudly proclaims that he will take Violetta home with him. Feeling annoyed, the Baron goes to the gambling table and joins him in a game. As they bet, Alfredo wins some large sums until Flora announces that supper is ready. Alfredo leaves with handfuls of money.

As everyone is leaving the room, Violetta has asked Alfredo to see her. Fearing that the Baron's anger will lead him to challenge Alfredo to a duel, she gently asks Alfredo to leave. Alfredo misunderstands her apprehension and demands that she admit that she loves the Baron. In grief, she makes that admission and, furiously, Alfredo calls the guests to witness what he has to say (Questa donna conoscete? – "You know this woman?"). He humiliates and denounces Violetta in front of the guests and then throws his winnings at her feet in payment for her services. She faints onto the floor. The guests reprimand Alfredo: Di donne ignobile insultatore, di qua allontanati, ne desti orror! ("Ignoble insulter of women, go away from here, you fill us with horror!").

In search of his son, Giorgio enters the hall and, knowing the real significance of the scene, denounces his son's behavior (Giorgio, Alfredo, Violetta, chorus: Di sprezzo degno sè stesso rende chi pur nell'ira la donna offende. – "A man, who even in anger, offends a woman renders himself deserving of contempt.").

Flora and the ladies attempt to persuade Violetta to leave the dining room, but Violetta turns to Alfredo: Alfredo, Alfredo, di questo core non-puoi comprendere tutto l'amore... – "Alfredo, Alfredo, you can't understand all the love in this heart...".

Act 3

Violetta's bedroom

 
Cover of a circa 1855 vocal score with an engraving by Leopoldo Ratti

Dr. Grenvil tells Annina that Violetta will not live long since her tuberculosis has worsened. Alone in her room, Violetta reads a letter from Alfredo's father telling her that the Baron was only wounded in his duel with Alfredo. He has informed Alfredo of the sacrifice she has made for him and his sister; and he is sending his son to see her as quickly as possible to ask for her forgiveness. But Violetta senses it is too late (Violetta: Addio, del passato bei sogni ridenti – "Farewell, lovely, happy dreams of the past").

Annina rushes into the room to tell Violetta of Alfredo's arrival. The lovers are reunited and Alfredo suggests that they leave Paris (Alfredo, Violetta: Parigi, o cara, noi lasceremo – "We will leave Paris, O beloved").

But it is too late: she knows her death approaches (Alfredo, Violetta: Gran Dio!...morir sì giovane – "Great God!...to die so young"). Alfredo's father enters with the doctor, regretting what he has done. After singing a duet with Alfredo, Violetta suddenly revives, exclaiming that the pain and discomfort have left her. A moment later, she dies in Alfredo's arms.

Instrumentation

The opera uses an orchestra with the following instrumentation: 2 flutes (fl. 2 doubling piccolo), 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, harp, cimbasso, timpani, cymbals, bass drum, triangle, strings.

Banda: Verdi did not fully orchestrate the parts of the on-stage band, but rather composed it in the style of a piano reduction, leaving the actual realization to the person in charge of the band. Over the years many versions were created, varying from theater to theater depending on the instruments available, but none of them is authoritative. A widespread version is: 1 piccolo, 4 clarinets, 2 horns, flugelhorn, 3 trumpets, at least 2 trombones, low brasses (number unspecified), bass drum.[24]

Music

The prelude to the opera begins with very soft, very high strings depicting the frail heroine, followed by the main love theme of the opera, which is then played on lower strings while the higher instruments decorate the melody.[25]

This delicate atmosphere is altered on curtain rise by lively dance tunes in the orchestra. After the famous "Brindisi", an offstage band plays a series of waltzes (waltz rhythms pervade the first act of the opera, creating a Parisian atmosphere).[25] The concluding part of Violetta's solo scene that ends the first act is full of vocal decoration and feverish ornamentation as she swears to stay free ("Sempre libera"). These coloratura effects are not required for the character after the first act.[25]

The lengthy and crucial duet between the elder Germont and Violetta in act 2 is multi-sectioned with the music following the changing dramatic situation.[25]

La traviata is the only one of Verdi's many operas to be set entirely indoors. Unlike Il trovatore, which was composed simultaneously, La traviata is an intimate piece, full of tender lyricism. The character of Violetta dominates the work and her music changes as she develops through the drama, from the hectic, almost hysterical coloratura of the first act, to the more dramatic passages of the second, and the spiritual quality of her music as she dies in act 3.[25]

Recordings

Film versions

Inspired music

  • Donato Lovreglio (1841–1907), an Italian flautist and composer, wrote the "Concert Fantasy on themes from Verdi's La traviata", Op. 45, for clarinet and orchestra (published Ricordi, 1865); in it, Lovreglio used the overture and several arias from the opera.[29][30]
  • The Spanish composer Julián Arcas (1832–1882) wrote a "Fantasía sobre motivos de La traviata".[31]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Taruskin 2009, Chapter 11: Literally the woman gone astray or the led-astray woman, from Italian 'tra-' – beyond, across, and '-via' – the way
  2. ^ Meadows 1892, p. 582.
  3. ^ Kimbell 2001, p. 995.
  4. ^ a b . Operabase. Archived from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 14 October 2018.
  5. ^ Phillips-Matz 1993, p. 303.
  6. ^ Budden 1992, p. 115.
  7. ^ Verdi to Piave, 26 July 1852, in Phillips-Matz 1993, p. 318
  8. ^ Budden 1992, pp. 116–117.
  9. ^ Verdi to De Sanctis, 1 January 1853, in Budden 1992, p. 116
  10. ^ a b c Piave to Carlo Marzari at La Fenice announcing that the libretto was complete, 20 October 1852, in Phillips-Matz 1993, pp. 319–324
  11. ^ Phillips-Matz 1993, p. 318.
  12. ^ Verdi to Muzio, 7 March 1853, quoted in Loewenberg 1978, column 906: "La traviata ieri sera fiasco. La colpa è mia o dei cantanti? Il tempo giudicherà". Translated in Krehbiel 1909, p. 167.
  13. ^ Budden 1992, p. 124.
  14. ^ Piave to De Sanctis, 25 May 1854, in Budden 1992, p. 125
  15. ^ a b Loewenberg 1978, columns 906–908
  16. ^ Leslie's (13 December 1856), p. 18, quoted and cited in Lawrence 1995, p. 712.
  17. ^ George Whitney Martin (2011). Verdi in America: Oberto Through Rigoletto. University Rochester Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-58046-388-1.
  18. ^ Lawrence 1995, p. 712.
  19. ^ Evening Post (4 December 1856), p. 18, quoted and cited in Lawrence 1995, pp. 712–713.
  20. ^ Walsh 1981, p. 317.
  21. ^ Piave 1865.
  22. ^ Budden 1992, p. 114.
  23. ^ The synopsis is based in part on Melitz 1921, pp. 195–196.
  24. ^ "La traviata" (PDF). imslp.org. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  25. ^ a b c d e Parker 2002
  26. ^ La traviata (1967) at IMDb
  27. ^ La traviata (1983) at IMDb
  28. ^ Becoming Traviata at IMDb
  29. ^ Fantasia sull' opera La traviata di G. Verdi, for clarinet & piano, Op. 45 in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
  30. ^ "Fantasia on the opera La traviata by Guiseppi [[sic] Verdi : for clarinet and piano"], edited by Colin Bradbury for clarinet and piano (London: Chester Music, 1980)
  31. ^ Traviata Fantasía (Arcas, Julián): Scores at the International Music Score Library Project

Cited sources

  • Budden, Julian (1992). The Operas of Verdi: Volume 2: From Il Trovatore to La Forza del Destino. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-816262-9.
  • Kimbell, David (2001). Holden, Amanda (ed.). The New Penguin Opera Guide. New York: Penguin Putnam. ISBN 978-0-14-029312-8.
  • Krehbiel, Henry Edward (1909). A Book of Operas: Their Histories, Their Plots and Their Music. New York: Macmillan.
  • Lawrence, Vera Brodsky (1995). Strong on Music: The New York Music Scene in the Days of George Templeton Strong. Volume II. Reverberations, 1850–1856. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-47011-5.
  • Loewenberg, Alfred (1978). Annals of Opera 1597–1940 (3rd, revised ed.). Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman and Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-87471-851-5.
  • Meadows, F. C. (1892). Meadows' Italian and English Dictionary. London: Bernard Quaritch.
  • Melitz, Leo (1921). The Opera Goer's Complete Guide. Translated by Richard Salinger (revised by Louise Wallace Hackney ed.). Garden City, New York: Garden City Publishing.
  • Parker, Roger (2002) [1992]. "Traviata, La". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O005794. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  • Piave, Francesco Maria (1865). Violetta, la Traviata, opéra en 4 actes, musique de G. Verdi.
  • Phillips-Matz, Mary Jane (1993). Verdi: A Biography. London & New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-313204-7.
  • Taruskin, Richard (2009). Music in the Nineteenth Century: The Oxford History of Western Music. Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Press.
  • Walsh, T. J. (1981). Second Empire Opera: The Théâtre Lyrique Paris 1851–1870. New York: Riverrun Press. ISBN 978-0-7145-3659-0.

Further reading

External links

traviata, italian, pronunciation, traˈvjaːta, fallen, woman, opera, three, acts, giuseppe, verdi, italian, libretto, francesco, maria, piave, based, dame, camélias, 1852, play, alexandre, dumas, fils, adapted, from, 1848, novel, opera, originally, titled, viol. La traviata Italian pronunciation la traˈvjaːta The Fallen Woman 1 2 is an opera in three acts by Giuseppe Verdi set to an Italian libretto by Francesco Maria Piave It is based on La Dame aux camelias 1852 a play by Alexandre Dumas fils adapted from his own 1848 novel The opera was originally titled Violetta after the main character It was first performed on 6 March 1853 at La Fenice opera house in Venice La traviataOpera by Giuseppe VerdiVioletta s costume premiere 1853LibrettistFrancesco Maria PiaveLanguageItalianBased onLa Dame aux cameliasby Alexandre Dumas filsPremiere6 March 1853 1853 03 06 Teatro La Fenice VenicePiave and Verdi wanted to follow Dumas in giving the opera a contemporary setting but the authorities at La Fenice insisted that it be set in the past c 1700 It was not until the 1880s that the composer s and librettist s original wishes were carried out and realistic productions were staged 3 La traviata has become immensely popular and is among the most frequently performed of all operas 4 Contents 1 Composition history 1 1 Verdi sees The Lady of the Camellias play 1 2 Composing for Venice 2 Performance history 3 Roles 4 Synopsis 4 1 Act 1 4 2 Act 2 4 3 Act 3 5 Instrumentation 6 Music 6 1 Recordings 7 Film versions 8 Inspired music 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Cited sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksComposition history Edit Verdi around 1850 For Verdi the years 1851 to 1853 were filled with operatic activity First he had agreed with the librettist Salvadore Cammarano on a subject for what would become Il trovatore but work on this opera could not proceed while the composer was writing Rigoletto which premiered in Venice in March 1851 In addition personal affairs in his home town limited his activities that spring but after Rigoletto s success in Venice an additional commission was offered by Brenna the secretary of La Fenice Verdi sees The Lady of the Camellias play Edit Verdi and Giuseppina Strepponi visited Paris from late 1851 and into March 1852 In February the couple attended a performance of Alexander Dumas fils s The Lady of the Camellias As a result of this Verdi s biographer Mary Jane Phillips Matz reports the composer immediately began to compose music for what would later become La traviata 5 However Julian Budden notes that Verdi had probably read the Dumas novel some time before and after seeing the play and returning to Italy he was already setting up an ideal operatic cast for it in his mind 6 shown by his dealings with La Fenice Composing for Venice Edit Francesco Maria Piave librettist of the opera Francesco Maria Piave was engaged to write the new libretto and the two men tried to come up with a suitable subject but the composer complained that his librettist had not yet offered him an original or provocative idea Writing to Piave he added that I don t want any of those everyday subjects that one can find by the hundreds 7 But at the same time the composer expressed concern about censorship in Venice something with which he was very familiar after his dealings with the censors concerning Rigoletto As the months dragged on into October it was agreed that Piave would come to Sant Agata Verdi s home near Busseto and work with the composer One subject was chosen Piave set to work and then Verdi threw in another idea which may have been La traviata Within a short time a synopsis was dispatched to Venice under the title of Amore e morte Love and Death 8 However as Budden reveals Verdi writes to his friend De Sanctis telling him that for Venice I m doing La Dame aux camelias which will probably be called La traviata A subject for our own age 9 Although still bogged down at Sant Agata Piave was sanguine Everything will turn out fine and we ll have a new masterpiece from this true wizard of modern harmonies 10 When back at Sant Agata in late January 1853 Verdi was reminded that his contract called for him to be in Venice within a week or two and for the premiere to be held on the first Saturday in March 1853 11 However it soon became clear that a modern dress staging of the new opera was impossible the requirement was that it should be set in the 17th century in the era of Richelieu and reports from the opening of the season confirmed the limitations of the chosen soprano the 38 year old Fanny Salvini Donatelli for taking the role of Violetta Verdi was distraught for he held on to the notion that the opera could be staged in modern dress as Stiffelio had been done Piave was sent back to Sant Agata to no avail he could not persuade the composer to back down on his insistence that another soprano be secured yet the 15 January deadline for securing one had come and gone Verdi was filled with premonitions of disaster upon his arrival in Venice on 21 February for rehearsals and he made his unhappiness clear to the singers 10 Performance history Edit Poster for the world premiere The audience jeered at times during the premiere directing some of their scorn at the casting of soprano Fanny Salvini Donatelli in the lead role of Violetta Though she was an acclaimed singer they considered her to be too old at 38 and overweight to credibly play a young woman dying of consumption Verdi had previously attempted to persuade the manager of La Fenice to re cast the role with a younger woman but with no success Nevertheless the first act was met with applause and cheering at the end but in the second act the audience began to turn against the performance especially after the singing of the baritone Felice Varesi and the tenor Lodovico Graziani The next day Verdi wrote to his friend Emanuele Muzio in what has now become perhaps his most famous letter La traviata last night a failure Was the fault mine or the singers Time will tell 12 Coincidentally as Philips Matz points out an Italian translation of the play La Dame aux camelias was being presented just a short distance from La Fenice 10 Felice Varesi the first Germont pere Litho Josef Kriehuber Lodovico Graziani c 1845 the first Alfredo While there were demands for productions from impresarios in various Italian cities Verdi was loath to allow them unless he could be sure of the strength of the singers and in spite of their pleas the composer refused As Budden notes it came to be Venice that made an honest woman of Violetta 13 when Verdi allowed a performance at the Teatro San Benedetto Some revisions took place between 1853 and May 1854 mostly affecting acts 2 and 3 but the opera was performed again on 6 May 1854 and was a great success largely due to Maria Spezia Aldighieri s portrayal of Violetta Then referring to the La Fenice performances it was a fiasco now it has created a furore Draw your own conclusions reported Piave who had overseen the production in Verdi s absence 14 The opera in the revised version was first performed in Madrid on 1 February 1855 with Spezia Aldighieri at Teatro Real in Vienna on 4 May 1855 in Italian and in Barcelona on 25 October at Gran Teatre del Liceu It was first performed in England on 24 May 1856 in Italian at Her Majesty s Theatre in London 15 where it was considered morally questionable and the heads of the Church did their best to put an injunction upon performance the Queen refrained from visiting the theatre during the performances though the music words and all were not unheard at the palace 16 It was first performed in the United States by the Max Maretzek Italian Opera Company on 3 December 1856 in Italian at the Academy of Music in New York 17 George Templeton Strong noted in his diary People say the plot s immoral but I don t see that it s so much worse than many others not to speak of Don Giovanni which as put on the stage is little but rampant lechery 18 while the Evening Post critic wrote Those who have quietly sat through the glaring improprieties of Don Giovanni will hardly blush or frown at anything in La traviata 19 The opera was first performed in France on 6 December 1856 in Italian by the Theatre Italien at the Salle Ventadour in Paris 15 and on 27 October 1864 in French as Violetta an adaptation by Edouard Duprez older brother of the tenor Gilbert Duprez at the Theatre Lyrique on the Place du Chatelet with Christina Nilsson in the title role 20 The French adaptation of the libretto was published in 1865 21 Today the opera has become immensely popular It is currently the mostly frequently represented opera in the repertoire 4 Roles Edit Fanny Salvini Donatelli the first Violetta Roles voice types premiere cast Role Voice type Premiere cast 6 March 1853 22 Conductor Gaetano MaresVioletta Valery a courtesan soprano Fanny Salvini DonatelliAlfredo Germont a young bourgeois from a provincial family tenor Lodovico GrazianiGiorgio Germont Alfredo s father baritone Felice VaresiFlora Bervoix Violetta s friend mezzo soprano Speranza GiuseppiniAnnina Violetta s maid soprano Carlotta BeriniGastone de Letorieres Alfredo s friend tenor Angelo ZulianiBarone Douphol Violetta s lover a rival of Alfredo baritone Francesco DragoneMarchese d Obigny bass Arnaldo SilvestriDottore Grenvil bass Andrea BelliniGiuseppe Violetta s servant tenor G BorsatoFlora s servant bass G TonaCommissioner bass Antonio MazziniSynopsis Edit Prelude to act 1 source source source New York Philharmonic Arturo Toscanini 1929 Problems playing this file See media help Place Paris and its vicinity 23 Time Beginning of the 19th centuryAct 1 Edit The salon in Violetta s house Scene 1 Party attrib Carl d Unker Violetta Valery a famed courtesan throws a lavish party at her Paris salon to celebrate her recovery from an illness Gastone a viscount has brought with him a friend Alfredo Germont a young bourgeois from a provincial family who has long adored Violetta from afar While walking to the salon Gastone tells Violetta that Alfredo loves her and that while she was ill he came to her house every day Alfredo joins them admitting the truth of Gastone s remarks Libiamo ne lieti calici source source track track track Problems playing this file See media help Baron Douphol Violetta s current lover waits nearby to escort her to the salon Once there the Baron is asked to give a toast but refuses and the crowd turns to Alfredo who agrees to sing a brindisi a drinking song Alfredo Violetta chorus Libiamo ne lieti calici Let s drink from the joyful cups From the next room the sound of the orchestra is heard and the guests move there to dance After a series of severe coughs and almost fainting Violetta begins to feel dizzy and asks her guests to go ahead and to leave her to rest until she recovers While the guests dance in the next room Violetta looks at her pale face in her mirror Alfredo enters and expresses his concern for her fragile health later declaring his love for her Alfredo Violetta Un di felice eterea One day happy and ethereal At first she rejects him because his love means nothing to her but there is something about Alfredo that touches her heart He is about to leave when she gives him a flower telling him to return it when it has wilted which will be the very next day E strano Ah fors e lui source source Act 1 finale sung by Lucrezia Bori in 1910 for Edison Records Problems playing this file See media help After the guests leave Violetta wonders if Alfredo could actually be the one in her life Violetta E strano Ah fors e lui Ah perhaps he is the one But she concludes that she needs freedom to live her life Violetta Alfredo Sempre libera Always free From off stage Alfredo s voice is heard singing about love as he walks down the street Act 2 Edit Scene 1 Violetta s country house outside ParisThree months later Alfredo and Violetta are living together in a peaceful country house outside Paris Violetta has fallen in love with Alfredo and she has completely abandoned her former life Alfredo sings of their happy life together Alfredo De miei bollenti spiriti Il giovanile ardore The youthful ardor of my ebullient spirits Annina the maid arrives from Paris and when questioned by Alfredo tells him that she went there to sell the horses carriages and everything owned by Violetta to support their country lifestyle Alfredo is shocked to learn this and leaves for Paris immediately to settle matters himself Violetta returns home and receives an invitation from her friend Flora to a party in Paris that evening Alfredo s father Giorgio Germont is announced and demands that she break off her relationship with his son for the sake of his family since he reveals that Violetta s relationship with Alfredo has threatened his daughter s engagement Giorgio Pura siccome un angelo Iddio mi die una figlia Pure as an angel God gave me a daughter because of Violetta s reputation Meanwhile he reluctantly becomes impressed by Violetta s nobility something which he did not expect from a courtesan She responds that she cannot end the relationship because she loves Alfredo so much but Giorgio pleads with her for the sake of his family With growing remorse she finally agrees Violetta Giorgio Dite alla giovine si bella e pura Tell the young girl so beautiful and pure and says goodbye to Giorgio In a gesture of gratitude for her kindness and sacrifice Giorgio kisses her forehead before leaving her weeping alone Violetta gives a note to Annina to send to Flora accepting the party invitation and as she is writing a farewell letter to Alfredo he enters She can barely control her sadness and tears she tells him repeatedly of her unconditional love Violetta Amami Alfredo amami quant io t amo Love me Alfredo love me as I love you Before rushing out and setting off for Paris she hands the farewell letter to her servant to give to Alfredo Soon the servant brings the letter to Alfredo and as soon as he has read it Giorgio returns and attempts to comfort his son reminding him of his family in Provence Giorgio Di Provenza il mar il suol chi dal cor ti cancello Who erased the sea the land of Provence from your heart Alfredo suspects that the Baron is behind his separation from Violetta and the party invitation which he finds on the desk strengthens his suspicions He decides to confront Violetta at the party Giorgio tries to stop Alfredo but he rushes out Scene 2 Party at Flora s house Act 2 scene 2 from Fife Opera s 2004 production At the party the Marquis tells Flora that Violetta and Alfredo have separated much to the amazement of everyone who had previously seen the happy couple She calls for the entertainers to perform for the guests Chorus Noi siamo zingarelle venute da lontano We are gypsy girls who have come from afar Di Madride noi siam mattadori We are matadors from Madrid Gastone and his friends join the matadors and sing Gastone chorus dancers E Piquillo un bel gagliardo Biscaglino mattador Piquillo is a bold and handsome matador from Biscay Violetta arrives with Baron Douphol They see Alfredo at the gambling table When he sees them Alfredo loudly proclaims that he will take Violetta home with him Feeling annoyed the Baron goes to the gambling table and joins him in a game As they bet Alfredo wins some large sums until Flora announces that supper is ready Alfredo leaves with handfuls of money As everyone is leaving the room Violetta has asked Alfredo to see her Fearing that the Baron s anger will lead him to challenge Alfredo to a duel she gently asks Alfredo to leave Alfredo misunderstands her apprehension and demands that she admit that she loves the Baron In grief she makes that admission and furiously Alfredo calls the guests to witness what he has to say Questa donna conoscete You know this woman He humiliates and denounces Violetta in front of the guests and then throws his winnings at her feet in payment for her services She faints onto the floor The guests reprimand Alfredo Di donne ignobile insultatore di qua allontanati ne desti orror Ignoble insulter of women go away from here you fill us with horror In search of his son Giorgio enters the hall and knowing the real significance of the scene denounces his son s behavior Giorgio Alfredo Violetta chorus Di sprezzo degno se stesso rende chi pur nell ira la donna offende A man who even in anger offends a woman renders himself deserving of contempt Flora and the ladies attempt to persuade Violetta to leave the dining room but Violetta turns to Alfredo Alfredo Alfredo di questo core non puoi comprendere tutto l amore Alfredo Alfredo you can t understand all the love in this heart Act 3 Edit Violetta s bedroom Cover of a circa 1855 vocal score with an engraving by Leopoldo Ratti Dr Grenvil tells Annina that Violetta will not live long since her tuberculosis has worsened Alone in her room Violetta reads a letter from Alfredo s father telling her that the Baron was only wounded in his duel with Alfredo He has informed Alfredo of the sacrifice she has made for him and his sister and he is sending his son to see her as quickly as possible to ask for her forgiveness But Violetta senses it is too late Violetta Addio del passato bei sogni ridenti Farewell lovely happy dreams of the past Annina rushes into the room to tell Violetta of Alfredo s arrival The lovers are reunited and Alfredo suggests that they leave Paris Alfredo Violetta Parigi o cara noi lasceremo We will leave Paris O beloved But it is too late she knows her death approaches Alfredo Violetta Gran Dio morir si giovane Great God to die so young Alfredo s father enters with the doctor regretting what he has done After singing a duet with Alfredo Violetta suddenly revives exclaiming that the pain and discomfort have left her A moment later she dies in Alfredo s arms Instrumentation EditThe opera uses an orchestra with the following instrumentation 2 flutes fl 2 doubling piccolo 2 oboes 2 clarinets 2 bassoons 4 horns 2 trumpets 3 trombones harp cimbasso timpani cymbals bass drum triangle strings Banda Verdi did not fully orchestrate the parts of the on stage band but rather composed it in the style of a piano reduction leaving the actual realization to the person in charge of the band Over the years many versions were created varying from theater to theater depending on the instruments available but none of them is authoritative A widespread version is 1 piccolo 4 clarinets 2 horns flugelhorn 3 trumpets at least 2 trombones low brasses number unspecified bass drum 24 Music EditThe prelude to the opera begins with very soft very high strings depicting the frail heroine followed by the main love theme of the opera which is then played on lower strings while the higher instruments decorate the melody 25 This delicate atmosphere is altered on curtain rise by lively dance tunes in the orchestra After the famous Brindisi an offstage band plays a series of waltzes waltz rhythms pervade the first act of the opera creating a Parisian atmosphere 25 The concluding part of Violetta s solo scene that ends the first act is full of vocal decoration and feverish ornamentation as she swears to stay free Sempre libera These coloratura effects are not required for the character after the first act 25 The lengthy and crucial duet between the elder Germont and Violetta in act 2 is multi sectioned with the music following the changing dramatic situation 25 La traviata is the only one of Verdi s many operas to be set entirely indoors Unlike Il trovatore which was composed simultaneously La traviata is an intimate piece full of tender lyricism The character of Violetta dominates the work and her music changes as she develops through the drama from the hectic almost hysterical coloratura of the first act to the more dramatic passages of the second and the spiritual quality of her music as she dies in act 3 25 Recordings Edit Main article La traviata discographyFilm versions EditA 1967 film version by Mario Lanfranchi features Anna Moffo as Violetta Franco Bonisolli as Alfredo Gino Bechi as Giorgio Germont and the chorus and orchestra of the Teatro dell Opera di Roma conducted by Giuseppe Patane 26 Franco Zeffirelli directed La Traviata in 1983 with Teresa Stratas as Violetta Placido Domingo as Alfredo and Cornell MacNeil as Giorgio Germont 27 The 2012 documentary film Becoming Traviata chronicles at length rehearsals for a production of La traviata directed by Jean Francois Sivadier fr at the Aix en Provence Festival featuring Natalie Dessay and Charles Castronovo 28 Inspired music EditDonato Lovreglio 1841 1907 an Italian flautist and composer wrote the Concert Fantasy on themes from Verdi s La traviata Op 45 for clarinet and orchestra published Ricordi 1865 in it Lovreglio used the overture and several arias from the opera 29 30 The Spanish composer Julian Arcas 1832 1882 wrote a Fantasia sobre motivos de La traviata 31 References EditNotes Edit Taruskin 2009 Chapter 11 Literally the woman gone astray or the led astray woman from Italian tra beyond across and via the way Meadows 1892 p 582 Kimbell 2001 p 995 a b Opera statistics Operabase Archived from the original on 5 September 2015 Retrieved 14 October 2018 Phillips Matz 1993 p 303 Budden 1992 p 115 Verdi to Piave 26 July 1852 in Phillips Matz 1993 p 318 Budden 1992 pp 116 117 Verdi to De Sanctis 1 January 1853 in Budden 1992 p 116 a b c Piave to Carlo Marzari at La Fenice announcing that the libretto was complete 20 October 1852 in Phillips Matz 1993 pp 319 324 Phillips Matz 1993 p 318 Verdi to Muzio 7 March 1853 quoted in Loewenberg 1978 column 906 La traviata ieri sera fiasco La colpa e mia o dei cantanti Il tempo giudichera Translated in Krehbiel 1909 p 167 Budden 1992 p 124 Piave to De Sanctis 25 May 1854 in Budden 1992 p 125 a b Loewenberg 1978 columns 906 908 Leslie s 13 December 1856 p 18 quoted and cited in Lawrence 1995 p 712 George Whitney Martin 2011 Verdi in America Oberto Through Rigoletto University Rochester Press p 81 ISBN 978 1 58046 388 1 Lawrence 1995 p 712 Evening Post 4 December 1856 p 18 quoted and cited in Lawrence 1995 pp 712 713 Walsh 1981 p 317 Piave 1865 Budden 1992 p 114 The synopsis is based in part on Melitz 1921 pp 195 196 La traviata PDF imslp org Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 14 August 2020 a b c d e Parker 2002 La traviata 1967 at IMDb La traviata 1983 at IMDb Becoming Traviata at IMDb Fantasia sull opera La traviata di G Verdi for clarinet amp piano Op 45 in libraries WorldCat catalog Fantasia on the opera La traviata by Guiseppi sic Verdi for clarinet and piano edited by Colin Bradbury for clarinet and piano London Chester Music 1980 Traviata Fantasia Arcas Julian Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Cited sources Edit Budden Julian 1992 The Operas of Verdi Volume 2 From Il Trovatore to La Forza del Destino New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 816262 9 Kimbell David 2001 Holden Amanda ed The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam ISBN 978 0 14 029312 8 Krehbiel Henry Edward 1909 A Book of Operas Their Histories Their Plots and Their Music New York Macmillan Lawrence Vera Brodsky 1995 Strong on Music The New York Music Scene in the Days of George Templeton Strong Volume II Reverberations 1850 1856 Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 47011 5 Loewenberg Alfred 1978 Annals of Opera 1597 1940 3rd revised ed Totowa New Jersey Rowman and Littlefield ISBN 978 0 87471 851 5 Meadows F C 1892 Meadows Italian and English Dictionary London Bernard Quaritch Melitz Leo 1921 The Opera Goer s Complete Guide Translated by Richard Salinger revised by Louise Wallace Hackney ed Garden City New York Garden City Publishing Parker Roger 2002 1992 Traviata La Grove Music Online 8th ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article O005794 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 Piave Francesco Maria 1865 Violetta la Traviata opera en 4 actes musique de G Verdi Phillips Matz Mary Jane 1993 Verdi A Biography London amp New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 313204 7 Taruskin Richard 2009 Music in the Nineteenth Century The Oxford History of Western Music Oxford U K Oxford University Press Walsh T J 1981 Second Empire Opera The Theatre Lyrique Paris 1851 1870 New York Riverrun Press ISBN 978 0 7145 3659 0 Further reading EditBaldini Gabriele 1970 trans Roger Parker 1980 The Story of Giuseppe Verdi Oberto to Un Ballo in Maschera Cambridge et al Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 29712 7 Balthazar Scott The Cambridge Companion to Verdi New York Cambridge University Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 521 63535 6 Chusid Martin Ed 1997 Verdi s Middle Period 1849 to 1859 Chicago and London University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 10658 8 ISBN 978 0 226 10659 5 De Van Gilles trans Gilda Roberts 1998 Verdi s Theater Creating Drama Through Music Chicago amp London University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 14369 9 hardback ISBN 978 0 226 14370 5 Gossett Philip 2006 Divas and Scholar Performing Italian Opera Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 30482 3 Martin George Verdi His Music Life and Times 1983 New York Dodd Mead and Company ISBN 978 0 396 08196 8 Osborne Charles 1969 The Complete Opera of Verdi New York Da Capo Press Inc ISBN 978 0 306 80072 6 Parker Roger 2007 The New Grove Guide to Verdi and His Operas Oxford amp New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 531314 7 Pistone Daniele 1995 Nineteenth Century Italian Opera From Rossini to Puccini Portland Oregon Amadeus Press ISBN 978 0 931340 82 6 Rattalino Pierro 2006 Memoriale di Pura Siccome La storia di Violetta la traviata raccontata dalla sorella nubile di Alfredo Zecchini Editore ISBN 978 88 87203 05 9 Toye Francis 1931 Giuseppe Verdi His Life and Works New York Knopf Walker Frank The Man Verdi 1982 New York Knopf 1962 Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 87132 5 Warrack John and West Ewan The Oxford Dictionary of Opera New York Oxford University Press 1992 ISBN 978 0 19 869164 8 Werfel Franz and Stefan Paul 1973 Verdi The Man and His Letters New York Vienna House ISBN 978 0 8443 0088 7External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to La traviata La traviata Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Digitised miniature score for solo piano published by Ricordi in Milan in 1855 from National Library of Scotland Vocal score at Indiana University School of Music public domain vocal score scanned from an 1899 edition Orchestra score at Indiana University School of Music public domain orchestra score scanned from an old edition Libretto Portal Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title La traviata amp oldid 1126094591, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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