07 July 2023 (Fri), 19:00 World famous Bolshoi Ballet and Opera theatre (established 1776) - Small Stage - Opera Giacomo Puccini "Tosca" Opera in three acts
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Schedule for Giacomo Puccini "Tosca" Opera in three acts 2022
Composer: Giacomo Puccini Director: Stefano Poda
Orchestra: Bolshoi Theatre Symphony Orchestra Opera company: Bolshoi Opera
Opera in 3 acts
Performed in Italian
Premiere of this production: 21 April 2021, Bolshoi Theatre
Tosca is an opera in three acts by Giacomo Puccini to an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa. It premiered at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome on 14 January 1900.
Libretto by Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica based on Victorien Sardou’s play of the same name
Music Director: Daniele Callegari Director, Scenographer, Lighting Designer: Stefano Poda
Synopsis
Act I Cesare Angelotti,
an escaped political prisoner, runs into the church of Sant’Andrea
della Valle to hide in the Attavanti family chapel. At the sound
of the Angelus, the Sacristan enters to pray.
He is interrupted by Mario Cavaradossi, who has come to work
on his portrait of Mary Magdalene — inspired by the Marchesa
Attavanti, Angelotti’s sister. Mario contrasts the beauty of the blond
Marchesa with that of the woman he loves, the raven-haired singer
Floria Tosca (“Recondita armonia”).
Angelotti ventures out and
is recognized by Mario, who gives him food and hurries him back into
the chapel as Tosca is heard calling outside. She jealously questions
Mario, then prays and reminds him of their rendezvous that evening (“Non
la sospiri la nostra casetta”). Recognizing the Marchesa’s
likeness in the painting, she explodes with renewed suspicions, but
he reassures her (“Qual’occhio al mondo”). When she has left,
Mario summons Angelotti as a cannon signals that the police have
discovered the escape; the two flee to Mario’s villa.
Napoleon’s
army is supposed to have suffered defeat, and the Sacristan returns
with choirboys who are about to sing a Te Deum. Their excitement
is silenced by the entrance of Baron Scarpia, chief of the secret
police, in search of Angelotti. When Tosca comes back looking for
Mario, she encounters Scarpia, who shows her the Attavanti crest
on a fan he has just found. Thinking Mario faithless, Tosca
tearfully vows vengeance and leaves as the church resounds with the
Te Deum. Scarpia has the diva trailed, scheming to get her in his
power (“Va, Tosca!”).
Act
II In the Farnese Palace, Scarpia anticipates the pleasure
of bending Tosca to his will (“Ha piu forte
sapore”). The spy Spoletta arrives, not having found Angelotti;
to placate the baron, he brings in Mario, who
is interrogated while Tosca is heard singing at a royal gala
downstairs. She enters as her lover is being taken
to an adjoining room for torture. Unnerved by Scarpia’s
questioning and Mario’s screams, she reveals Angelotti’s hiding
place.
Mario is carried in; realizing what has happened,
he rages at Tosca, but the gendarme Sciarrone rushes
in to announce that Napoleon has won the Battle of Marengo,
a defeat for Scarpia’s side. Mario shouts his defiance
(“Vittoria!”).
Tosca yields to Scarpia in exchange for
her lover’s life. Fighting him off, she protest her fate to God, having
dedicated her life to art and love (“Vissi d’arte”).
Spoletta
interrupts: faced with capture, Angelotti has killed himself. Tosca, forced
to decide, agrees to Scarpia’s proposition. The baron pretends
to order a mock execution for the prisoner, after which
he is to be free. Spoletta leaves.
Scarpia prepares
a document of safe-conduct for the lovers. When he embraces her,
Tosca stabs him with a knife, wrenches the document from his fingers and,
placing candles at his head and a crucifix on his chest slips
quietly out.
Act III The voice of a shepherd
is heard as church bells toll the dawn. Mario is led to the
roof of Castel Sant’Angelo prison to await execution; he bribes
the jailer to convey a farewell note to Tosca. Writing it,
overcome with memories of love, he gives way to despair
(“E lucevan le stele”).
Suddenly Tosca runs in,
filled with the story of her recent adventure. Mario caresses the hands
that committed the murder for his sake (“O dolci mani”), and the two
hail the future.
As the firing squad appears, the diva coaches Mario
on how to fake his death convincingly; the soldiers fire and depart.
Tosca urges Mario to hurry, but when he fails to move, she
discovers that Scarpia’s treachery has transcended the grave: the bullets were
real.
Spoletta rushes in to arrest Tosca. She climbs the
battlements and, crying that she will meet Scarpia before God, leaps to her
death.
Schedule for Giacomo Puccini "Tosca" Opera in three acts 2022

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