ecopolis

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La Tosca di Giacomo Puccini

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Giacomo Puccini
( Lucca, 22 december 1858; Bruxelles 29 november 1924) – Tosca is an Opera in three act. The Libretto was written by Victorien Sardou, Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa based on the play La Tosca by Victorien Sardou. First performance: Rome, Teatro Costanzi, 14th January 1900.

Characters:
Floria Tosca (soprano), singer
Mario Cavaradossi (tenor), painter
Baron Scarpia (baritone), police chief
Cesare Angelotti (bass), patriot
Spoletta (tenor), police officer
a Sacristan (baritone)

Giacomo Puccini set the first act of his opera Tosca in Sant’Andrea della Valle (in the Barberini Chapel) in Rome. The drama unfolds as soon as one enters the church. Mattia Preti’s enormous paintings (1650-51), spreading the story of St. Andrew’s martyrdom across the curving apse, have an almost unbearable impact. The three frescoes, St. Andrew Raised on the Cross, St. Andrew’s Crucifixion, and St. Andrew’s Burial, are both uplifting and tragic. Above the apse, Domenichino’s frescoes (1624-27), less dramatic but much more beautiful, also depict episodes from the life of the saint, including the famous St. Andrew Brings Peter to Jesus and Jesus’ Call to the Fishermen Andrew and Peter.

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THE PLOT – Rome, June 1800

Act One – Inside the church of Sant’Andrea della Valle

One of the leaders of the Roman Republic, Cesare Angelotti, has succeeded in escaping from the prison of Castel Sant’Angelo and has taken refuge in the church. He is looking for the key to the Attavanti Chapel, which his sister has hidden there for him. When he finds it he hides inside the chapel.
At that moment the Sacristan enters, bringing breakfast and painting materials for the painter Cavaradossi, who takes up work again on a painting of Mary Magdalene whose features are based on the face of an unknown woman who attends the church.
Cavaradossi does not want to eat and so the sacristan hides the basket of food for himself and moves off.
Now that they are alone, Angelotti comes out of his hiding place in the chapel to see his old friend Cavaradossi.
At that moment we hear Floria Tosca calling her beloved Mario; Angelotti takes the basket of food and goes back into hiding.
Tosca is a very jealous woman and is suspicious as she enters the church, for she has heard voices but can see no one. Mario tries to calm her down and in the end they agree to meet that evening after her concert and to spend the night together in the painter’s house outside the city.
As she is leaving, Tosca looks at Cavaradossi’s painting and clearly recognises the features of the marquise Attavanti. Again her jealousy is fired, but once again Mario manages to reassure her.
When the singer has left, Angelotti steps out and continues his talk with Mario. The escaped prisoner leaves the empty basket and takes the woman’s clothes that his sister has prepared for his flight, but then a cannon shot is heard announcing that his escape has been detected. The two men hurry out of the church, heading for Mario’s house.
The sacristan returns with the choir and altar boys to prepare the Te Deum giving thanks for the victory that the Austrian general Mélas seems to be winning over Napoleon at Marengo. The police chief Scarpia and police officer Spoletta, who are trying to find Angelotti, enter and search the church.
Scarpia finds a fan in the chapel and is surprised to discover that the face of Mary Magdalene is a portrait of Marquise Attavanti. Meanwhile the sacristan is disappointed to find that the basket is now empty.
Scarpia considers these very clear clues and when Tosca reappears he shows her the fan with the Attavanti crest on it, deliberately playing on her jealousy. He points out to the singer that the woman portrayed in the painting is undoubtedly the marquise.
Tosca sets off for Mario’s house, certain that she will surprise him with her rival; Scarpia has Spoletta follow her secretly.
The faithful file into the church and the Te Deum begins, while Scarpia thinks of his next victory: he will arrest the two conspirators and win Tosca.

ACT TWO – Scarpia’s room in the Palazzo Farnese

Scarpia is having his dinner, anxiously awaiting news from Spoletta. On the floor below in the building Mélas’s victory is being celebrated and Tosca is singing in the presence of Maria Carolina, Queen of Naples.
Spoletta arrives. He has lost Angelotti but has arrested Cavaradossi, charged with suspicious behaviour.
The painter is interrogated but does not betray his friend.
Tosca arrives and Mario is led into an adjacent room so that she can hear his screams as he is being tortured.
Mario resists but Tosca, shaken by his desperate cries, agrees to speak and reveals that Angelotti is hiding in the well in Cavaradossi’s house.
A policeman is sent to find him and Mario curses Tosca’s frailty. Meanwhile they learn that Napoleon has turned the tables in the battle of Marengo and has defeated General Mélas. Mario exults and is led away. Scarpia tells Tosca that he will free Mario if she gives herself to him. Tosca refuses scornfully and Scarpia insists. When she learns that Angelotti has been discovered and has taken his own life, she decides to accept the police chief’s proposal: Mario will undergo a mock execution before a firing squad with blanks loaded in their rifles and will then be free to leave with a pass that Scarpia will draw up and sign.
Scarpia gloats over a victory that he has been preparing: Tosca is about to be his. He approaches her but as he embraces her, Tosca plunges a knife into his breast and takes the pass which Scarpia still has in his hand. With one last scornful look at the now lifeless body of the odious police chief she leaves.


Pavarotti – E lucevan le stelle

ACT THREE – Battlements of Castel Sant’Angelo

It is dawn. We hear the song of a shepherd and the sound of the bells as Mario writes a farewell letter to Tosca, reminding her of his true love.
Tosca rushes in, explains the mock execution that Scarpia has arranged and tells her lover that she has killed him.
She gives him all the details and warns him that he must be very credible when he falls before the firing squad.
Tosca watches the execution hidden in a pillbox and is impressed by the realism of Mario’s fall. When at last the firing squad moves away she goes up to Mario and discovers that he is really dead. In that very moment she hears excited cries as Scarpia’s body is found and, while Spoletta is trying to capture her, she leaps to her death from the battlements of the castle.

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

January 15th, 2008 at 9:17 am

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Happy Birthday Elvis!

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Elvis Presley I Got Stung

Written by Aaron Schroeder and David Hill. Elvis recorded it June 11, 1958 at RCA’s Nashville studios.
It was the last song Elvis would record until March 20, 1960. The single had a 16 week stay on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart, peaking at #8. It was #1 in England for 3 weeks. It was a million seller and was the A-side to One Night. It is available on 50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can’t Be Wrong – Elvis Gold Records Vol 2; The King of Rock n’ Roll-The Complete 50s Masters; and 2nd to None, which is where this version is from. An alternate version is available on Today, Tomorrow and Forever.

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

January 8th, 2008 at 1:51 pm

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1807-2007. Garibaldi. The myth and the bicentenary of his birth

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The myth of Garibaldi and the bicentenary of his birth

In the bicentenary of the birth of Giuseppe Garibaldi, Genoa is commemorating Italy’s famous hero with a series of exhibitions and other initiatives.
For this unique occasion, the Palazzo Ducale, the Gallery of Modern Art (Nervi), the Wolfsoniana, the Museum of the Risorgimento and the Accademia Ligustica will be exhibiting a spectacular assembly of works, ranging from great nineteenth-century historical and genre paintings to Michelangelesque paintings in a symbolist vein, and from sculptures to propaganda iconography to reconstruct the myth of Garibaldi and the appeal of his epic story.

The works on display give an idea of the themes and images that ran through political culture in both the nineteenth and the twentieth centuries and demonstrate how firmly the myth of Garibaldi was rooted in the common people.

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From Lega to Guttuso, Palazzo Ducale, Appartamento del Doge

Bringing together works by various generations of artists who were alive and active during the second half of the nineteenth century – included are artists who belonged to the Macchiaioli movement from Tuscany, Lombard Romantics and also Verists from
Naples and Sicily – the exhibition aims to illustrate the Garibaldi myth in its various manifestations, looking back over the development of historical painting and so-called genre painting in relation to the popular epos of Garibaldi. The exhibition is divided
into twelve sections; it opens with the crucial period Garibaldi spent in Rome between 1848 and 1849, his flight to Venice and the death of Anita, going on to look at his later legendary exploits, and ending with his period of solitude on Caprera and his final
victorious expedition in aid of the French Republic.

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From Rodin to D’Annunzio: a Monument to the Thousand at Quarto, Galleria d’Arte Moderna

Works by Italian and European artists who were active in the period between the end of the nineteenth century and the first world war (including masters such as Auguste Rodin, Antoine Bourdelle, Ivan Mestrovic, Franz von Stück, Gaetano Previati and Leonardo Bistolfi) bear witness to the return to a Michelangelesque classicism that is interpreted in a symbolist vein which points towards the tastes of the younger generations.
The exhibition gives an idea of how, in the context of European symbolism, the characteristics and artistic legacy of Michelangelo were adopted to celebrate the myth of Garibaldi. The visitor to the exhibition is offered a compelling reconstruction of this
symbolism in the form of its leading figures. In particular, it gave inspiration to the sculptor Eugenio Baroni (Taranto 1880 – Genoa 1935) in his design for the monument celebrating Giuseppe Garibaldi and the departure of the Thousand from the rocks
of Quarto.
In addition to Baroni’s work, the exhibition also shows paintings, sculptures and graphic works by famous figures active in the figurative field at the turn of the century such as Giulio Aristide Sartorio, Adolfo De Carolis, Antonio Rizzi, Angelo Zanelli,
Adolfo Wildt, Hans Stolte Lerche, Libero Andreotti, Galileo Chini, Mario Rutelli, Domenico Rambelli, Plinio Nomellini, Hendrik Christian Andersen, EdoardoDe Albertis, Pietro Dodero, Giovanni Prini, and G.B. Salvatore Bassano.

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Posters and Propaganda, Wolfsoniana

The exhibition puts on display a significant collection of posters, postcards, graphic material and memorabilia from public and private collections. More than twenty posters, some particularly large in size, illustrate how both the various themes surrounding Garibaldi and the man himself have been used for media and propaganda purposes: from Risorgimento hero to icon of early fascist
movimentism, from romantic and national-popular hero to point of reference for the Democratic Popular Front at the 1948 elections. Among the authors of the posters the following should be mentioned: Mario Borgoni, Leonetto
Cappiello, Aurelio Craffonara, Plinio Nomellini and Filippo Romoli.

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Garibaldi’s Genoa, Museo del Risorgimento

Paintings, relics, scarves, flags, arms, original writings and newspapers serve here to show the role that Genoa played in the origin and development of the myth of Garibaldi both in the city itself and in the world at large. They once again reflect how
word of his exploits spread, as they captivated the interest of journalists of the day, for whom Garibaldi embodied a mythical image from the unrest in Uruguay onwards.
Genoa is the city Garibaldi left from and came back to after his journeys overseas, the place where he made preparations for the departure of the Thousand in 1860; and it is also the city which constructed and consolidated his image as a man who
was driven by a great passion for freedom, who had the capacity to involve and sway people and who was able to fight for strong ideals. Rounding out the image of the myth of Garibaldi are works from private and public collections (including those of Francesco Paolo Tronca and of the Spadolini Foundation).

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The preparatory sketch for the equestrian statue of Garibaldi will be positioned so that the visitor examining it will at the same time also be able to look out on to the statue itself, which since 1893 has dominated the most prestigious square in the city. Archive material and vedute – paintings and engravings – illustrate the genesis of the monument and the evolution of the surrounding setting from the Piazza di San Domenico of medieval times to today’s Largo Pertini.

“Garibaldi. Il mito”
17 nov 2007 – 2 mar 2008

Palazzo Ducale
Genova

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

November 17th, 2007 at 10:05 am

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