The Marriage of Figaro
Le nozze di Figaro, ossia la folle giornata (The Marriage of Figaro, or The Day of Madness) is an opera buffa with music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and an Italian libretto by Lorenzo Da Ponte. The opera premiered at the Burgtheater, Vienna on 1 May 1786. It was well received and nearly every scene received an encore, which made the performance so long that the Emperor did not like this and wanted it to stop.[1]
The Marriage of Figaro | |
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by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart | |
Genre | Opera buffa in 4 acts |
Native title | Le nozze di Figaro |
Librettist | Lorenzo Da Ponte |
Language | Italian |
Based on | The Marriage of Figaro by Pierre Beaumarchais |
Premiere | Burgtheater Vienna 1 May 1786 |
The opera is based on the 1784 French play, La folle journée, ou le Mariage de Figaro by Pierre Beaumarchais. The play was very controversial in its day (and even banned briefly in France), but the play's questionable material was removed and Da Ponte's libretto passed the Viennese censors.
Cast
- Count Almaviva
- Countess Almaviva (soprano), the Count's wife
- Figaro, Count Almaviva's servant and Susanna's betrothed
- Susanna (soprano), the Countess' maid and Figaro's betrothed
- Cherubino, a page boy
Story
The opera is set in the palace and gardens of Count Almaviva in Seville, Spain. Figaro, Count Almaviva's servant, is on the eve of marrying Susanna, the Countess' maid.
Almaviva has long lusted after Susanna. He plans to revive an old aristocratic right permitting a nobleman to deflower a peasant on her wedding night. Figaro is furious.
With Susanna and his friends, he thwarts the Count's intentions. Almaviva is forced to beg his wife's forgiveness.
The Marriage Of Figaro Media
References
- ↑ Roberts, Ashley (2018-02-15). "The opera that received encores for almost every scene | Opera Grand Rapids". Opera Grand Rapids. Retrieved 2018-02-26.