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Edmonton Opera Education Program Study Guide Giuseppe Verdi’s FALSTAFF Sponsored by 1 Table of Contents SECTION ONE: Opera Background Opera Etiquette……………………………………………………………...….3 What is Opera? …………………………………………….………………..…4 Operatic Voice …………………………………………………………….......5 A Short History of Opera ……………..……………………………………….6 Verdi’s Role the development of Opera ………………………………………7 Opera Activity: Opera is everywhere….………....…………………………...8 SECTION TWO: FALSTAFF Cast ………………………………………………………………….……..…10 Synopsis. ……………………………………………………………..…….....11 Historical Background…..……………………………………………………13 Biographies ……………………………………………………………….….14 Adapting Shakespeare into Opera………………………………….…………19 Did you know? …………………………………………………………….....20 Discussion Questions ……………………………………………………...….21 Adolf Schrödter's "Falstaff und sein Page" 2 Opera Etiquette ALWAYS BE EARLY! Once a performance begins, no one will be allowed into the theatre until intermission. We suggest you arrive half an hour early to pick up your tickets (if you don’t already have them), and prepare to enter the auditorium fifteen minutes prior to showtime. USE THE RESTROOM. Once in the theatre it is courteous to remain seated and involved in the production until intermission. Please do not leave the theatre unless there is an emergency. PLEASE BE COURTEOUS to everyone in the audience and on stage. Theatre is live performance, so any talking, cell-phone use (including texting) or noise making takes away from everyone’s experience at the opera. APPLAUSE WELCOME! Opera is spectacle. Your presence in the audience is essential to complete the whole experience. Enjoy the performance and respond to what you see. Unlike television or film, every live performance is unique. Only you and the performers and musicians will share the experience you have in the theatre. Your warmth and good humour are important to them, so when you like something, tell them with your applause. NO FOOD, DRINKS, OR GUM IN THE THEATRE. This rule is strictly enforced. NO CAMERAS OR TAPE RECORDERS: the artists’ images and performances belong to them and we ask you to respect that by refraining from recording their work in any way. 3 What is Opera? The word opera is the plural form of the Latin word opus, which translates quite literally as work. The use of the plural form reflects the many art forms that combine to create an operatic performance. Today we use the word opera to refer to a theatrically based musical art form in which the drama is sung (without microphones!), rather than spoken, and is accompanied by a full symphony orchestra. Opera was born out of the belief that drama can be better expressed by music and text than by text alone. One of the unique things about opera is how it combines so many different art forms (music, drama, and visual arts) to create an artistic spectacle. Of course, many art forms mean that there are many people involved in the creation and production of an opera: Composer: Composes the music Librettist: Chooses a story, writes or adapts the words Conductor: Directs the musicians Director: Blocks or stages the entire production Principal Singers: Have the leading roles Comprimario Singers: Supporting roles Chorus: Sing as a group Supernumeraries: Act but do not sing Repetiteur: Accompanies the singers during rehearsal – plays the whole orchestra score on the piano Costume Designer: Designs the costumes for each character Wardrobe/Costume Staff: build, fit, clean and repair costumes Wig and Make-up Staff: Make wigs and prepare make-up Make-up Artists: Apply make-up for principal singers Dressers: Help singers put on costumes Set Designer: Designs the scenery for each scene Lighting Designer: Designs lighting effects Prop Builders: Build the props for entire opera Stage Manager: “Calls the show” -- cues all scenery changes, lighting and actors so that everything happens at the right time. Stagehands: Move scenery; run lighting & sound cues Critic: Writes a critique of performance for newspaper, radio, or TV Front of House Staff: Work in the performance venue Administrative Staff: Choose which shows to produce; Find funding (!); sell tickets; hire artists; take care of the business side of opera. Audience: Enjoys/appreciates opera from a seat in the hall 4 The Operatic Voice Being an opera singer is hard work! Singers need strong physical technique that allows the singer to sustain long phrases through the control of both the inhalation and exhalation of breath. Likewise, the voice (regardless of its size) must maintain a resonance in both the head (mouth, sinuses) and chest cavities. The Italian word “squillo” (squeal) is used to describe the brilliant tone required to be heard above symphony orchestra that accompanies the singers. Opera singers are usually not mic’d, so they must project their voice throughout a whole theatre using only their muscles and technique! Finally, all voices are defined by both the actual voice “type” and the selection of repertoire for which the voice is ideally suited. The range, pitch, and tone of a singer’s voice will determine what kind of role they will play in the opera. The following voice types can be found in most operas: Female • Soprano – The highest pitched female voice (usually plays the lead) • Mezzo-Soprano – Lower than the soprano and higher than contralto. Usually plays either a pant/trouser role (the character of a young boy) or a complex character with energy and awareness of life, or an evil character. • Contralto – the lowest pitched female voice (usually plays a maid, mother, or grandmother). Male • Tenor – the highest pitched male voice (usually the lead) • Baritone – the male who sings the medium notes (often a middle-aged, fatherly figure) • Bass – the lowest pitched male singing voice (sometimes a villain or a comic character) What voice type do you think Falstaff will have? Why? 5 A Short History of Opera Opera as an art form began with the inclusion of incidental music performed during the tragedies and comedies popular during ancient Greek times. The tradition of including music as an integral part of theatrical activities expanded in Roman times and continued throughout the Middle Ages. Traditional view holds that the first completely sung musical drama (or opera) developed as a result of discussions held in Florence in the 1570s by an informal academy known as the Florentine Camerata, which led to the musical setting of Rinuccini’s drama, Dafne, by composer Jacopo Peri in 1597. The work of such early Italian masters as Giulio Caccini and Claudio Monteverdi led to the development of a through-composed musical entertainment (where the singers never speak but always sing), comprised first of recitative sections (speech-singing, in which the singer sings the words but imitates the free rhythms of speech), which revealed the plot of the drama. Recitatives were followed by arias (Italian for “air,” meaning a main song that reveals both the emotion of the characters, and the qualities of the soloists’ voices). The function of the chorus in these early works was to comment on the action, just as the Greek chorus did thousands of years before. Opera has flourished throughout the world as a vehicle for the expression of the full range of human emotions. Italian composers like Giuseppe Verdi and later Giacomo Puccini dominated the field until 1924, when Puccini passed away. The Austrian composer Wolgang Amadeus Mozart also wrote operas in Italian and championed the singspiel (“sing play”, where spoken dialogue is used instead of recitative), which combined the spoken word with music, a form also used by Ludwig Van Beethoven in his only opera, Fidelio. Bizet, Offenbach, Gounod, and Meyerbeer led the adaptation by the French which ranged from the lighter opera comique to the grand, full-scale tragedie lyrique (which had ties to the court and concentrated on themes of courtly love and knightly behaviour). German composers von Weber, Strauss, and Wagner developed diverse forms such as singspiel and through-composed spectacles unified through the use of the leitmotif (musical motifs that appear throughout the work and are tied to a specific idea or character). Lighter forms of opera in England, Vienna, and Spain helped to establish opera as a form of entertainment, and opera continues to enjoy great popularity throughout the world. With the beginning of the 20th century, composers in America diverged from European traditions in order to focus on their own roots while exploring and developing the vast body of the country’s folk music and legends. Composers such as Aaron Copland, Douglas Moore, and Carlisle Floyd have all crafted operas that have been presented throughout the world to great success. Today, composers like John Adams and Philip Glass are credited with the infusion of new life into the art form, which continues to evolve even though it is now nearly 500 years old. 6 Verdi’s Role in the Development of Opera Giuseppi Verdi has been called “the father of opera” by many opera experts, and his influence on the art form is certainly undeniable: • It is easy to see Verdi’s prominence in the world of opera by considering how many of his 37 operas are considered mandatory repertoire on major operatic stages around the world: Nabucco, Aida, La Traviata, Rigoletto, Il Trovatore, Otello, Macbeth. • His work demonstrates a shift from the comedies of Rossini and Donizetti to grand, spectacular and immensely emotional opera – and a sense of emotional intimacy, which helped pave the way for the verismo operas (like Puccini’s La Bohème) that followed at the turn of the 20th century. • Verdi and Richard Wagner are called the “twin colossi of nineteenth-century opera” (Opera 101 page 35), and though the pair wrote very different work, they both believed fundamentally that opera was a ‘music-drama’ which encompassed all artistic elements into a single homogenous spectacle – and these included through-composed music (where the singing is continuous and there is no speech) that had no full-stops for arias. Although arias survived the Verdi/Wagner era, these composers’ philosophies have, in essence, become the working definition of opera. • Verdi’s development of his characters and their struggles and triumphs resulted in some of the most stirring and beautiful music known in Europe at the time – he embraced grand themes without sacrificing a personal quality for the characters representing them. • Verdi is credited with some of the best Shakespeare adaptations in the operatic canon: Otello, Macbeth, and Falstaff. • Verdi’s last opera – Falstaff – was written when he was 79, and some some say it is his best work – although its humorous subject matter has perhaps kept it from the acclaim granted to some of his more serious works. 7 Activity: Opera is Everywhere! We don’t called it the greatest and grandest of art forms for nothing… the stories, characters and music from opera can be found in every corner of Western culture, from books and plays to hip-hop and cartoons. For students new to opera, a great starting point may be discovering all the places where they may have inadvertently already listened to Opera. Here’s how it works: Pick one of the most famous operas you know (or, if you know none, choose one from this list) …. Aida (Verdi 1871) Barber of Seville (Rossini 1816) Carmen (Bizet 1875) Don Giovanni (Mozart 1787) La Bohème (Puccini 1896) La Traviata (Verdi 1853) Madama Butterfly (Puccini 1904) The Magic Flute (Mozart 1791) Marriage of Figaro (Mozart 1786) Rigoletto (Verdi 1851) Tosca (Puccini 1900) Turandot (Puccini 1926) …..and go exploring! See where the themes, characters, and music appear in our culture today! Great places to start looking are musicals (Rent, for example, is based directly on La Boheme), cartoons (Bugs Bunny was a big opera fan), and movie scores, but the sky is the limit – you’ll be surprised where you find opera these days! It’s important to note that websites like Wikipedia, the Internet Movie Database, and “Opera goes to the Movies” are a great help, but they make it even more important to compare the context in which an opera was written to the contexts in which it ends up being used. Some Questions to ask: What changes when opera is introduced in new places? What stays the same? Even the important question of genre: is it still opera if it’s used in a soap commercial? And if not, what does it become? This is one way to get students thinking of opera as a vibrant and current art form, and helps break down the stereotype of opera being old and boring! 8 Section 2: Falstaff 9 Falstaff April 19, 22 and 24, 2008 Music by Giuseppe Verdi Libretto in Italian by Arrigo Boito. An adaptation of William Shakespeare’s The Merry Wives of Windsor and Henry IV. Premiere: Teatro alla Scala, Milan, February 9, 1893 Conductor Director James Meena Brian Deedrick The Cast (in order of vocal appearance) Dr. Caius Sir John Falstaff Bardolfo Pistola Mrs. Alice Ford Mrs. Meg Page Dame Quickly Nanetta Fenton Ford Keith Klassen John Fanning Michel Corbeil Taras Kulish Christiane Riel Norine Burgess Lyne McMurtry Nikki Einfeld Colin Ainsworth John Avey All artists subject to change. with the Edmonton Opera Chorus and the The Edmonton Symphony Orchestra Chorus Director Repetiteur Lighting designed by Scenery designed by Scenery constructed by Costumes designed by Costumes constructed by Stage Manager Assistant Stage Managers Peter Dala Peter Dala Bretta Gerecke Peter Dean Beck Edmonton Opera Suzanne Moss for Malabar Costumes Malabar Ha Neul Kim Jacquie Dawkins and Lauren Thomas 10 Synopsis Characters: Sir John Falstaff (pronounced as in English) – Baritone Alice Ford (Ah-lee-cheh Fohrd) – Noblewoman of Windsor – Soprano Ford (Fohrd) – A wealthy burghar of Windsor, husband of Alice – Baritone Nannetta (Nahn-neht-tah) – their daughter – Soprano Fenton (Pronounced as in English) – A young gentleman in love with Nannetta- Tenor Meg Page (Pronounced as in English) – Noblewoman of Windsor – Mezzo-Soprano Dame Quickly (Pronounced as in English – Noblewoman of Windsor – Contralto Dottore Caius (Doht-toh-reh Kah-yoos) – physician – Tenor Bardolfo (Bar-dohl-foh) – Henchman to Falstaff – Tenor Pistola (Pee-stoh-lah) – Henchman to Falstaff – Bass Act One Inside the Garter Inn, Dr. Caius accuses the aging, fat rogue Sir John Falstaff of housebreaking, and the knight’s two henchmen, Bardolfo and Pistola, of pick-pocketing. Calmly ordering another drink, Falstaff refuses to make amends, and Bardolfo and Pistola deny everything. His charges unsatisfied, Caius storms out of the inn. Falstaff, after examining his bill and grumbling at his spendthrift lackeys, discloses another scheme for financial gain, for he must support his expanding and magnificent paunch. He plans, he says, to seduce Alice Ford and Meg Page, wives of prosperous Windsor citizens. Citing newly found principles of honour, Bardolfo and Pistola refuse to deliver Sir John’s love letters to the two women. Falstaff gives the letters to a page and discharges the two ruffians from his service, but not before giving them an extended lecture on the bankruptcy of honour itself. In a garden, Alice and Meg show each other Falstaff’s “wicked letters” and discover that they are identical. Together with Dame Quickly and Alice’s daughter Nannetta they denounce Falstaff and vow to trick him. As they leave, Ford, Caius, Fenton, Bardolfo, and Pistola enter, burning with rage: the two discharged thieves have just told the gullible Ford of Falstaff’s intentions. As the wives re-enter to concoct their plan, Nannetta and Fenton, deeply in love, try to steal an amorous moment for themselves. The ladies determine that Quickly will visit Sir John at the Garter Inn and arrange a tryst with Alice. Ignorant of this, the men devise their own scheme: under an assumed name, Ford will go to see Falstaff and engage him in a plot of revenge. Feigning penitence, Bardolfo and Pistola rejoin Falstaff’s service and introduce Dame Quickly, who through extravagant flattery arranges a rendezvous between Falstaff and Alice – to happen 11 that very afternoon. When Quickly departs, Sir John congratulates himself on his continuing irresistibility to women. Within moments, a second visitor approaches. This is “Signor Fontana,” actually Ford in disguise, who comes with a lucrative offer. Claiming to be Alice’s unrequited lover, he asks Falstaff, surely a more “seasoned” lover, to seduce Ford’s wife as a prelude to his own advances. When Falstaff tells “Fontana” that he will be meeting and hopefully seducing Alice that very afternoon, Ford is shattered and thunderstruck. When Falstaff leaves the room, he contemplates the nightmares of cuckoldry and vows to avenge the insult. Falstaff returns and the two leave the inn. In a room in Ford’s house, Dame Quickly tells the women of her visit with Falstaff. Alice assures a tearful Nannetta that she will not have to marry Dr. Caius (as her father wishes), and prepares the room for Falstaff’s visit and the ensuing mischief. Soon Falstaff arrives, but his aggressive wooing is interrupted when Quickly runs in, warning of Meg’s approach, whereupon Falstaff is forced to hide behind a screen. Meg reports that Ford is on his way home with a band of men, all swearing vengeance on Falstaff! Ford enters and searches frantically for Falstaff, even to the point of overturning and emptying the laundry basket. As Ford leaves to search elsewhere, the women stuff the trembling Falstaff into the laundry basket as a means of escape and Nannetta and Fenton slip behind the screen to steal a few kisses. Ford and the men return, and hearing kisses, are convinced that Falstaff and Alice are behind the screen. They slowly converge only to find Fenton and Nannetta, enraging Ford all the more. The wives call for the servants, who dump the basket into the Thames, and when Ford returns, Alice shows him the spectacle of Falstaff floundering in the river. Act 2 The drenched Falstaff sits in a square outside the Garter Inn, drinking a glass of warm wine that changes his spirits from desolation to exhilaration. Suddenly Quickly enters again, saying that Alice wants to meet him again, this time at midnight in Windsor forest, where for mystery’s sake he must wear the horns of the ghostly “Black Hunter,” 1 as Quickly and the aroused Falstaff leave to talk further, Alice tells the tale of the Black Hunter and prepares the rest of the characters for the coming evening’s masquerade. Ford privately promises Caius that he can marry Nannetta that evening and reminds him to wear the proper disguise. Quickly overhears this and begins to devise a plan to save Nannetta from a loveless marriage. In the nocturnal setting of Windsor Forest, Fenton sings a sonnet equating music with kisses. Falstaff soon enters, with antlers tied onto his head. Fearful of the eerie surroundings, he counts the midnight hours apprehensively. Alice appears, and Falstaff begins his seduction at once. All of a sudden Meg is heard crying for help, and Falstaff hears what he imagines are fairy voices, and stretches himself out on the ground for protection. Nannetta enters, disguised as the Queen of the Fairies. With her fairy retinue and disguised townspeople, she torments the prostrate Falstaff with denunciations and pinching. Under this barrage, Falstaff repents. He soon 1 This refers to the legend of Herne the Hunter, the man who saved King Richard II’s life, and was revived from the dead by a ritual involving tying antlers to his head. He was also associated with the idea of a “wild hunt.” His ghost was thought to haunt Windsor Forest, particularly the Oak Tree from which he was eventually hanged. See Merry Wives of Windsor 4.4 for Shakespeare’s account of Herne. 12 discovers that his tormentors are human, not supernatural, and eventually accepts his punishment in good humour. Ford announces the wedding procession of his daughter and Caius and agrees to marry another similarly disguised couple. After the marriage ceremony he learns that, quite against his will and thanks to Quickly’s intervention, he has married Nannetta to Fenton and Caius to a veiled Bardolfo. Ford admits that he, too, has been duped and blesses his daughter’s marriage. Falstaff announces that everything in the world is a jest, and all agree that who laughs last, laughs best. Courtesy of Baltimore Opera Falstaff in the laundry basket 13 Historical Context Arrigo Boito had to convince Verdi to leave his retirement in 1889 to write Falstaff – although it seems that the outline of the libretto did most of the convincing. Falstaff was a departure from Verdi’s other work in a variety of ways: it was only his second comedy, it took him 2 years to write it (Aida took only 4 months) and he asked Boito for very few revisions to the libretto. The world was undergoing a great deal of change at this time, some examples being the invention of the diesel engine, the rise of the temperance movement, and increasing popularity of verismo (realistic, or ‘truth’) opera. Verdi’s ability to write such a departure from his earlier work, so late in his life, is a true testament to his artistic genius. The opera premiered at La Scala in 1893, and some critics believe that Falstaff’s “Va, Va, Vecchio John” is also a farewell to opera from Verdi. Some Notable Events of the 1890’s: • H.G. Wells created modern science fiction with his novel The War of the Worlds in 1898. • Nikola Tesla presents one of the world’s first radios in 1893. • In July of 1890, Vincent Van Gogh shoots himself and dies. . Van Gogh’s Starry Night (from junior.britannica.com) • In December of 1891 the Canadian Pacific Railway is extended to Edmonton. • In 1896, Gold is discovered in the Yukon Territory, sparking the beginning of the Klondike Gold Rush. Research Question: What was happening in Edmonton at the time that Falstaff was first performed? 14 BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION Giuseppe Verdi COMPOSER (1813-1901) Born in 1813 in the Italian village of Le Roncole near Busseto, Giuseppe Verdi spent his early years studying the organ. By the age of seven, he had become an organist at San Michele Arcangelo. It was there that the young Verdi was an altar boy and, according to myth, his mother saved him from the French in 1814. In 1823, Verdi moved to Busseto and attended the music school run by Antonio Provesi. By the age of 13, he was an assistant conductor of the Busseto orchestra. After finishing the school, Verdi applied for admission to the Milan Conservatory. He was rejected for admission, although one of the examiners suggested that he "forget about the Conservatory and choose a maestro in the city." Verdi studied composition in Milan with Vincenzo Lavigna, a composer and the maestro at La Scala. Verdi bounced back and forth between Milan and Busseto until he was named maestro of the Busseto Philharmonic in March 1836. By May 1836, he had married childhood sweetheart, Margherita Barezzi, his greatest benefactor's daughter. He returned to Milan several years later, this time with a young family. Verdi's first opera, Oberto, was brought to the stage at La Scala in November 1839 and ran for multiple performances. The noted Ricordi firm published Oberto and, based upon his initial operatic effort, Verdi won a contract for three additional operas. He began work on his next opera, Un Giorno di Regno, but was interrupted when, one by one, his family fell ill. Over the course of a few weeks, Verdi lost his son, his daughter, and his beloved wife to illness. Unfortunately, Un Giorno was a complete failure. 15 Verdi vowed never to compose another comedy and developed a fatalistic belief in inescapable destiny. Even so, the director at La Scala kept faith with Verdi, who later declared that with his next work, Nabucco, "my musical career really began." At dress rehearsals for Nabucco, in the La Scala Theater, carpenters making repairs to the house gradually stopped hammering and, seating themselves on scaffolding and ladders, listened with rapt attention to what the composer considered a lackluster chorus rendering of "Va, pensiero." At the close of the number, the workers pounded the woodwork with cries of "Bravo, bravo, viva il maestro!" The opening of Nabucco was a triumph. Verdi was famous, commanding a higher fee than any other composer of his time. I Lombardi followed Nabucco and won an unprecedented victory over Austrian censors. Verdi's triumph in retaining the libretto and melodic themes the censors had hoped to ban as "religious" in nature forged the composer's lifelong reputation as an ideological hero of the Italian people. This would be the first of his many battles with censors for artistic freedom. Over the next seven years, the composer penned ten additional operas of varied success, gradually making the transition between two distinct eras of Verdi composition. Initially captive of the "bel canto" style and heir to Donizetti's artistic throne, Verdi continually experimented to produce his own operatic genre in which melodic drama and identifiable musical essence of character took center stage as an equal to vocal purity and elegance. It was an inspired stroke of boldness about which Verdi commented in explaining the innovative core of his work Il Trovatore, "I think (if I'm not mistaken) that I have done well; but at any rate I have done it in the way that I felt it." In saying so, he defined his own creative hallmark. Although a musical genius, Verdi composed spontaneously from the heart. A brilliantly schooled musician, he placed emotional sensibility above intellect in all that he wrote. In the process, he created the remarkable marriage of dramatic characterization and vocal power, an indelible artistic signature. 16 The creation of an operatic tour de force based upon his ingenious artistic formulation assured Verdi's immortality, beginning in 1851 with Rigoletto, followed soon after by Il Trovatore, La Traviata, and ultimately in 1871, Aida. Even without the masterpieces that followed - Simon Boccanegra, Un Ballo in Maschera, La Forza del Destino, and Don Carlos or his great Requiem Mass - the Maestro could have afforded to rest on his musical achievements and stand unchallenged as the premier operatic composer of any age. In fact, with the success of Aida, Verdi seemed to have abandoned composing altogether, producing no new works for fifteen years. Fortunately for posterity, an electrifying libretto, Otello, created by poet Arrigo Boito, brought the composer out of his self-imposed retirement. The opening of Otello in February of 1887 attracted an international audience to Milan for a dramatic event which ended only after the citizenry had showered Verdi with gifts and applause throughout twenty curtain calls and towed his carriage to the hotel. Public festivities continued until dawn. In 1893, with the premiere of Falstaff, Verdi and his adoring audience repeated the entire sequence of events at La Scala - all in honor of a comedy he had vowed as a young man never to write. The maestro finally retreated to his country home in Sant' Agata with his second wife, singer Giuseppina Strepponi. Giuseppina Strepponi. They spent several peaceful years in retirement until her death in 1897. His wife's death left Verdi in a state of unbearable grief. He immediately fled Sant' Agata for the Grand Hotel in Milan and, after four unhappy years, Verdi died in 1901, the victim of a massive stroke. Verdi's death left all Italy in mourning. He still is revered throughout the music world as the greatest of operatic composers and, more particularly, in Italy as a patriotic hero and champion of human rights. 17 Arrigo Boito LIBRETTIST (1842-1918) The son of a painter of miniatures and a Polish countess, Boito was brought up in Venice after his father deserted his wife and two sons. Between the ages of five and ten he received his first musical instruction. He began his studies at the Milan Conservatory in 1853. Boito traveled abroad on a grant and, in 1862 he met Rossini and Verdi in Paris. There, Boito wrote the text for Verdi’s Inno delle nazioni, performed at Her Majesty’s Theatre, London, in 1862. Boito was already at work on an opera about Faust subject entitled Mefistofele, and he was also planning another opera, Nerone, which he would never complete. The première of Mefistofele in 1868 was a historic fiasco, lasting until well past midnight with the opposing factions in the audience vociferously sustaining their positions; the only part to be well received was the prologue. During the next few years Boito devoted himself to writing articles, including many on opera and to supplying Italian translations of German lieder. Before the end of 1879, Boito submitted a complete libretto on the subject of Shakespeare’s Otello, and Verdi was impressed with its quality. The triumphant first performance of Otello on in 1887 set the seal upon Boito’s friendship with Verdi, a relationship he regarded as the climax of his artistic life. They then collaborated on Falstaff. Boito was present when Verdi died in 1901. -Courtesy of Grove Music Online 18 The Adaptation Process William Shakespeare PLAYWRIGHT (1564-1616) There are approximately 270 operas based on Shakespeare’s plays. Verdi wrote three operas that were adaptations of plays by Shakespeare: Macbeth, Otello, and Falstaff. He had hoped to write an adaptation of Lear, but died without succeeding in this venture. His Shakespeare operas are generally given primary status over other efforts, and this is perhaps due to the attention he gives to rendering the characters and preserving (even expanding) the intensity of their emotions through his music. In Falstaff, the source plays are necessarily simplified into a smaller plot, which leaves room for the musical development of characters’ emotions and thoughts. The primary source for this opera is The Merry Wives of Windsor, which is generally agreed to have been written after both Henry IV Part 1 and Henry IV Part 2 (Shakespeare’s other Falstaff plays). The action itself seems to take place in the period following Henry IV Part 2, where Falstaff is abandoned by Prince Hal, and before his death (which is mentioned in Henry V). A number of characters are cut from the plays, including Justice Shallow and his stupid nephew, Sir Hugh Evans, Nym and even Mr. Page, which leaves Mrs. Page as a freelance intriguer, while Nannetta becomes part of the Ford family. The Merry Wives of Windsor plot is supplemented with a romantic subplot developed in the laundry-basket episode, and culminates with intrigue and disguise in the forest scenes. The elements from Henry IV are used primarily to develop the character of Sir John, like his speech on honour from 5.1 of Henry IV Part One, which becomes the aria “L’onori! Ladri”in act one of Verdi’s work. 19 Did you know? • Nabucco’s “Va Pensiero” theme is the unofficial Italian anthem and was actually used in the resistance movement that preceded the 1859 unification of Italy! Giuseppe Garibaldi, one of the architects of Italian Unification • When Verdi died, Italians lined the streets for his funeral procession to mourn the death of a national hero. • Rehearsals for the premiere of Falstaff lasted 5 weeks and Verdi retained the right to pull the production after dress rehearsal if he was unsatisfied! Edmonton Opera will rehearse as a full cast for only 2 weeks before you see the dress rehearsal. 20 Discussion Questions 1. How would you describe the humour in Falstaff? How does it differ from some other comedic forms you know? 2. Falstaff is much more through-composed than Verdi’s other operas, but even without big arias, it boasts some beautiful and memorable music. Which parts were most musically striking for you? Why? 3. At the end of Falstaff, Dr. Caius finds himself married to Bardolph. How might this humour be staged differently today than in Shakespeare or Verdi’s time? How would you stage the mixed-up marriage sequence? 4. In Ford’s aria “La Fondo del mio cor la gelosia,” Verdi gives a nod to Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro (“Gia ognuno lo sa!”) in his scoring of the French Horn part. Compare the two. How does the instrumental music reflect/ respond to the text being sung? 5. Ford wants his daughter, Nannetta, to marry a man she does not love. This is a common theme in both Shakespeare and opera. Compare this plot in Falstaff with those in other works you know. How does it resolve in other works? By what means does the daughter succeed in getting her way? When does she fail? Are there writers / composers who are more or less sympathetic to young lovers than others? 6. Discuss the following statement: “In Falstaff, forgiveness is the catalyst that keeps the comedy moving forward, and prevents it from becoming tragic.” 21 What did you think of the opera? Edmonton Opera and our Education Sponsors are delighted to have you join us, and love hearing student feedback! Please send letters, drawings, and opera reviews to: Edmonton Opera 9720 102 Ave NW Edmonton, AB T5J 4B2 ATTN: Brianna Wells Audience Development Manager OR [email protected] Thanks for your support! 22 23