L'Egisto (opera)

Summary

L'Egisto (Aegisthus) is a 1643 opera in a prologue and three acts by Francesco Cavalli. It was designated as a favola dramatica musicale. The Italian libretto was by Giovanni Faustini, his second text for Cavalli.[1]

Francesco Cavalli

Performance history edit

It was first performed in Venice at the Teatro San Cassiano in 1643. Highly successful in its day, it was subsequently performed throughout Italy.

Based on a suggestion by Henry Prunières in 1913, it was long believed Cavalli's L'Egisto was performed under the auspices of Cardinal Mazarin in Paris in February 1646, but that work is now thought to have been the Roman opera L'Egisto, ovvero Chi soffre, speri by Virgilio Mazzocchi and Marco Marazzoli.[2]

Cavalli's opera is rarely performed in modern times. The US premiere was given by The Santa Fe Opera on 1 August 1974,[3] and it was performed in Stockholm in 1977.[4] Its UK premiere was given by Scottish Opera at the Theatre Royal, Glasgow on 13 January 1982. The production was toured in 1982 and 1984.[5] All of these productions used a modern edition by the conductor Raymond Leppard.[5] Jane Glover, a specialist in 17th-century Venetian opera, gives the following description of Leppard's edition:

Leppard has awarded himself a fairly broad editorial licence: that is, he treats the surviving material rather like a lump of modeller's clay, and moulds it skilfully into alluring shapes to please modern audiencees. In so doing he departs considerably from original practice; but the results, in terms of music-theatre, are spectacularly successful.

The changes that Leppard makes fall into four main categories: restructuring, transposition, rescoring and (frankly) recomposition.[4]

The opera was performed by the early music group Le Poème Harmonique, conducted by Vincent Dumestre, at the Opéra-Comique in Paris beginning on 1 February 2012. The orchestra included a continuo group of two harpsichords, three theorbos and a lirone, and a small orchestra of strings plus two flutes.[6]

A new edition prepared and directed by Marcio da Silva was performed by HGO at The Cockpit Theatre, London in June 2021.[7][8]

Roles edit

Role Voice type
Lidio alto
Egisto tenor
Ipparco baritone
Apollo alto
Clori soprano
Climene soprano
Dema alto
Voluptia soprano
Belezza soprano
Amore soprano
Semele soprano
Didone contralto
Fedra soprano
Hero soprano
Cinea tenor
L'Aurora soprano
La Notte contralto
Venere soprano

Synopsis edit

The Egisto of this opera is not the Aegisthus of the Odyssey. This Egisto is a descendant of the sun-god Apollo, and for that reason is treated as an enemy by the goddess Venus. Over a year before the action begins he loved Clori and she returned his love. While spending time together on the seashore on the island of Delos, they were captured by pirates and sold separately into captivity. Climene, a young woman on the island of Zakynthos, was captured roughly at the same time by the same pirates on the very day of her marriage to Lidio. She was sold to the same cruel master as Egisto. A year later, they have managed to escape and Egisto has escorted Climene back to Zakynthos, where the main action takes place. They both set out to find their original lovers. What they do not know is that the pirates brought Clori to Zakynthos, where she fell in love with Lidio. Climene's brother, Ipparco, also fell in love with her.

The division into acts reflects the passage of the day from dawn through night to dawn again, to parallel Egisto's heritage as a descendant of the Sun.

Time: Legendary
Place: The island of Zakynthos

Act 1 edit

Set during the morning of the day after Egisto and Climene have landed on the island, the situation of the two mis-matched couples is established. Lidio and Clori are lovers while Egisto and Climene are friends.

Act 2 edit

In the afternoon, Egisto and Climene are trying to get back to their former lovers, only to be rejected by them.

Act 3 edit

When the night falls, we see the machinations of the gods behind the sufferings of the characters on earth. Lidio is captured by Ipparco, and Egisto goes mad. The story is however brought to a happy conclusion.

Recording edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Rosand 1992.
  2. ^ Nestola 2007.
  3. ^ Brown 2001, p. 158.
  4. ^ a b Glover 1982, p. 24.
  5. ^ a b "Egisto". Opera Scotland. Retrieved 26 February 2021.
  6. ^ Blanmont 2012, p. 702.
  7. ^ Hugill, Robert (2021-06-14). "17th century revival: HGO makes modern drama of Cavalli's early masterpiece, L'Egisto". planethugill.com. Retrieved 2021-06-14.
  8. ^ Shapiro, Yehuda (2021-06-09). "L'Egisto". The Stage.
  9. ^ David Vickers, "Three Baroque Premieres", Gramophone, September 2023, pp. 84-85.
  10. ^ ASIN B0BT89NKV8.
  11. ^ According to the recording booklet, the performance was recorded on 17 and 22 March 2021. The product web page states it was recorded on 22 and 23 March 2022.

Sources

  • Blanmont, Nicolas (2012). "Opera around the world. France. Paris", Opera, vol. 63, no. 6 (June 2012), pp. 702–703.
  • Brown, Jennifer Williams (2001). "Francesco Cavalli: L'Egisto". In Amanda Holden (ed.). The new Penguin opera guide. Penguin USA. pp. 158–159. ISBN 978-0-14-051475-9.
  • Glover, Jane (1982). "Cavalli and 'L'Egisto'", Opera, vol. 33, no.1 (January 1982), pp. 19–26.
  • Nestola, Barbara (2007). "L'Egisto fantasma di Cavalli: nuova luce sulla rappresentazione parigina dell Egisto ovvero Chi soffre speri di Mazzocchi e Marazzoli (1646)", Ricercare, vol. 19, no. 1/2 (2007), pp. 125–126. JSTOR 41701476.
  • Rosand, Ellen (1992). "Egisto (ii) ('Aegisthus')". In Stanley Sadie; Christina Bashford (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Opera. Vol. 2. p. 22. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O901429. ISBN 978-0-333-73432-2.
  • Libretto of the opera

External links edit