- Conchita (opera)
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Operas by Riccardo Zandonai Conchita (1911)
Francesca da Rimini (1914)
I cavalieri di Ekebù (1925)
La farsa amorosa (1933)Conchita is an opera in four acts and six scenes by composer Riccardo Zandonai. The work uses an Italian language libretto by Maurizio Vaucaire and Carlo Zangarini which is based on Pierre Louÿs's 1898 novel La femme et le pantin. The work premièred in Milan at the Teatro dal Verme on 14 October 1911 with soprano Tarquinia Tarquini, who later married Zandonai in 1917, in the title role.[1] Her portrayal was lauded by critics and she went on to perform Conchita at the Royal Opera, London (1912), the Cort Theatre in San Francisco (1912), the Philarmonic Auditorium in Hollywood (1912), the Heilig Theatre in Portland (1912), the Metropolitan Opera House in Philadelphia (1912), the Chicago Grand Opera Company (1913), the Metropolitan Opera in New York City (1913), and the Teatro di San Carlo in Naples (1913).[2]
Roles
Role Voice type Premiere Cast, 14 October 1911[3]
(Conductor: Ettore Panizza)Conchita soprano Tarquinia Tarquini Mateo tenor Piero Schiavazzi Rufina mezzo-soprano Ida Zinolfi Dolores soprano Elvira Lucca-Cannetti A merchant tenor Giuseppe Sala A guide tenor Giuseppe Sala Garcia bass Enrico Vannuccini Sereno bass Enrico Vannuccini Inspector bass Enrico Vannuccini Tonio bass Aurelio Viale A bull fighter baritone Anna soprano Pepita mezzo-soprano Enrichetta mezzo-soprano Estella mezzo-soprano Mother of Conchita mezzo-soprano 1rst Englishman baritone 2nd Englishman baritone 1rst spectator tenor 2nd spectator tenor 3rd spectator baritone Overseer mezzo-soprano A woman mezzo-soprano A girl soprano A young man tenor Synopsis
The story takes place in Sevilla.
Conchita Pérez, a poor cigar maker, is wooed by Matteo, but she resists his advances. Matteo pays her mother some money to relieve their poverty. Offended, Conchita escapes and becomes a somewhat famous flamenco dancer. Matteo tracks her down and continues his advances as she resists them. To prove his love, she organizes a meeting with a fake lover in front of Matteo who becomes very irate by this She finally has proof of his love for her, which she now can correspond.
References
- ^ Waterhouse, John CG (1992), 'Zandonai, Riccardo' in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, ed. Stanley Sadie (London) ISBN 0-333-73432-7
- ^ Tarquinia Tarquini at www.amadeusonline.net
- ^ Conchita at www.amadeusonline.net
Categories:- Operas by Riccardo Zandonai
- Italian-language operas
- Operas set in Iberia
- 1911 operas
- Operas
- Operas based on novels
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