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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Roles  





2 Instrumentation  





3 Synopsis  



3.1  Prologue  





3.2  Act 1  





3.3  Act 2  





3.4  Epilogue  







4 Recordings  





5 References  





6 External links  














Belfagor






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Belfagor
OperabyOttorino Respighi
Set design by Cesare Fratino for the Prologue in the first
LibrettistClaudio Guastalla
LanguageItalian
Based onBelfagor
byErcole Luigi Morselli
Premiere
26 April 1923 (1923-04-26)
La Scala, Milan

Belfagor (premiere 26 April 1923) is an Italian-language opera by the composer Ottorino Respighi to a librettobyClaudio Guastalla (1880–1948) based on the comedy BelfagorofErcole Luigi Morselli (1882–1921), itself loosely based on the novella Belfagor arcidiavolobyNiccolò Machiavelli. It was premiered in 1923 at La Scala in Milan, under the baton of Antonio Guarnieri, since Toscanini was unavailable. The cast featured Irish soprano Margaret Burke Sheridan as Candida, baritone Mariano Stabile as her lover Baldo, and tenor Francesco Merli as the titular Belfagor, an arcidiavolo (Archdemon) who tries to marry a human maiden while in disguise as a nobleman, using gifts of money to her father.[1]

The première obtained a "full and warm" approval, with several curtain calls for the composer,[2] but the opinion of the critics was divided, ranging from the enthusiasm of Marinetti, enchanted by the futuristic aspects of the opera, and of the music critic S. A. Lucani, to those who judged the opera and libretto absolutely not enjoyable.[3] Gaetano Cesari [it] wrote that this work looked like an attempt, not fully accomplished, to merge in a comic opera "the fabolous and the clownish, the miraculous and the sentimental" and that the comic expressivity was damaged by the absence of "assertiveness of the melodic plan and its capacity to develop rapidly".[4]

Roles[edit]

Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 26 April 1923[5]
Candida soprano Margaret Sheridan
Baldo tenor Francesco Merli
Belfagor baritone Mariano Stabile
Mirocleto (father) bass Gaetano Azzolini [it]
Olympia (mother) mezzo-soprano Anna Gramegna
Fidelia (sister) soprano Thea Vitulli
Maddalena (sister) soprano Cesira Ferrari [it]
an old man baritone
a boy soprano
Menica mezzo-soprano Ida Mannarini
Don Biagio bass Giovanni Azzimonti
Majordomo baritone
1st companion baritone
2nd companion baritone
Chorus (SATTB)

Instrumentation[edit]

Belfagor is scored for the following instruments:[6]

piccolo, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, English horn, E-flat clarinet, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, double bassoon, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, bass tuba, timpani, triangle, ratchet, drum, bass drum, cymbals, tam-tam, xylophone, handbells, bells, celesta, harp, strings.

Synopsis[edit]

Prologue[edit]

Belfagor appears in a small village. He explains to the apothecary Mirocleto, who has three daughters of marriageable age, to be on a mission from the underworld. Belfagor has the task to discover if marriage is truly a hell for mankind, as many people arriving in the afterworld say. To accomplish his task Belfagor, who has a lot of money at his disposal, has to find a wife and spend ten years with her.

Act 1[edit]

Belfagor turns up at Mirocleto's home, disguised as the handsome and immensely rich Ipsilonne. Fidelia and Maddalena are bewitched by Ipsilonne, but he chooses the third daughter, Candida, who instead shows disregard for him. Mirocleto and his wife, Olimpia, attracted by the money, consent to give Candida to Ipsilonne, but the girl is in despair, since she is in love with the sailor Baldo.

Act 2[edit]

One month later, in a luxurious castle of Ipsilonne. Candida has been forced to marry Ipsilonne, but the marriage has not yet been consummated. Finally Candida, with the aid of Baldo, manages to flee, after making Ipsilonne believe that she would spend the night with him.

Epilogue[edit]

Candida and Baldo find refuge thanks to the provost. Belfagor appears again in the village, this time disguised as a vagabond. Belfagor makes the doubt creep in Baldo, letting him believe that Candida lost her virginity with Ipsilonne, who this way achieved his aim of having fun with a young maiden before disappearing. Candida tries vainly to convince Baldo that the vagabond is a liar. Baldo gives in to her pleas only when Candida, in despair, asks the Madonna for a miracle, and the bells start playing by themselves.

Recordings[edit]

1989: Lamberto Gardelli, Hungarian Radio and Television Chorus. Hungarian State Orchestra, CD Hungaroton HCD 12850-51[7]

Candida: Sylvia Sass
Baldo: Giorgio Lamberti
Belfagor: Lajos Miller

Mirocleto: László Polgár
Olimpia: Klára Takács
Fidelia: Magda Kalmár
Maddalena: Mária Zempléni

References[edit]

  1. ^ Hungarian Book Review, vol. 32; Magyar Könyvkiadók és Könyvterjesztők Egyesülése [Association of Hungarian Publishers and Distributors] 1990 "Belfagor was Respighi's second opera; it tied him to the operatic stage for good. It was premiered in 1923 at La Scala in Milan, conducted by Antonio Guarneri, with an illustrious cast: the leading parts were sung by Mariano Stabile, Margaret Sheridan and Francesco Merli. The premiere was fairly successful,"
  • ^ "Belfagor di Respighi. La prima rappresentazione alla Scala". La Stampa (in Italian). Turin. 27 April 1923. p. 3. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  • ^ Zidarich, Walter. "Belfagor di Claudio Guastalla e Ottorino Respighi: le vane comica e nazionalistica nel melodramma italiano del primo '900" (PDF) (in Italian). Université Paris 3 – Département d'études italiennes et roumaines. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  • ^ Cesari, Gaetano (27 April 1923). "(review)". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). Milan.[full citation needed]
  • ^ Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Belfagor, 26 April 1923". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  • ^ "Ottorino Respighi. Catalogo delle composizioni suddiviso per generi musicali: Opere liriche". l'Orchestra Virtuale del Flaminio (in Italian). Retrieved 2 January 2015.
  • ^ "Ottorino Respighi – Belfagor – Lamberto Gardelli (1989)". operaclass. Retrieved 6 January 2015.
  • External links[edit]


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