Guido et Ginevra

{{Short description|Opera by Jacques Fromental Halévy}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2019}}

{{Infobox opera

| name = Guido et Ginevra

| type = Grand opera

| composer = Fromental Halévy

| image = FromentalHalévy -cropped.jpg

| image_upright =

| caption = The composer in 1825

| translated_name =

| librettist = Eugène Scribe

| language = French

| based_on =

| premiere_date = {{Start date|1838|03|05|df=y}}

| premiere_location = Salle Peletier, Paris

}}

Guido et Ginevra, ou La Peste de Florence (French: Guido and Ginevra, or the Plague at Florence) is a grand opera in five acts by Fromental Halévy to a libretto by Eugène Scribe. It was premiered on 5 March 1838 by the Paris Opera at the Salle Le Peletier.

Performance history

Guido et Ginevra was only a moderate success for Halévy, not nearly as applauded as his previous grand opera La Juive (1835) or as La reine de Chypre which followed it (1841). However, after its premiere it was soon played in all the major European centres. When the opera was revived in Paris in 1840 it was cut to four acts. It was translated into Italian and performed in three acts by the Théâtre-Italien at the Salle Ventadour beginning on 17 February 1870.Loewenberg 1978, column795; Chouquet 1873, [https://books.google.com/books?id=HfssAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA400 p. 400]; see also {{OCLC|459206797}}. It was performed in German in Mannheim beginning on 3 April 1879, and Hamburg, on 20 March 1882.Loewenberg 1978, column795. No recent productions are known.

The opera contains touches of the composer's innovative orchestration, with a mélophone in Act II, and with Ginevra's tomb scene set to dark woodwind and brass instruments using diminished seventh harmonies.

Roles

class="wikitable"

!Role

!Voice type

!Premiere Cast,{{Almanacco|dmy=5 March 1838|match=Guido et Ginevra}} 5 March 1838
(Conductor: )

Cosme de Médicis

|bass

|Nicolas Levasseur

Manfredi, Duke of Ferrara

|bass

|Nicolas-Prosper Dérivis

Guido, a young sculptor

|tenor

|Gilbert Duprez

Forte-Braccio, condottiere

|tenor

|Jean-Étienne-Auguste Massol

Lorenzo, steward to Médicis

|bass

|Molinier

Téobaldo, sacristan of Florence Cathedral

|bass

|Ferdinand Prévost

Ginevra, daughter of Médicis

|soprano

|Julie Aimée Dorus-Gras

Ricciarda, a singer

|mezzo-soprano

|Rosine Stoltz

Léonore, chambermaid of Ginevra

|soprano

|Mme Morin

Antonietta, young peasant

|soprano

|Maria Flécheux

Synopsis

Scribe drew the elements of his plot from the history of Florence by Louis-Charles Delécluze

=Act 1=

The Medici court

Ginevra is to be married to the Duke of Ferrara.

=Act 2=

During the ceremony, a poisoned veil she has been given causes her to faint away in a deathlike trance; the sculptor Guido mourns her. It is assumed that she has the plague.

=Act 3=

The Medici vault

Buried in the Medici vault she awakes.

=Act 4=

Guido offers her shelter.

=Act 5=

The village of Camaldoli

Ginevra is reunited with her father, who agrees to her marriage with Guido. A procession of thanksgiving ends the opera.

References

Notes

{{reflist}}

Sources

  • Chouquet, Gustave (1873). Histoire de la musique dramatique en France (in French), pp. 309–425. Paris: Didot. View at Google Books.
  • Hallman, Diana (2003). "The Grand Operas of Fromental Halévy", in The Cambridge Companion to Grand Opera, ed. David Charlton.
  • Loewenberg, Alfred (1978). Annals of Opera 1597–1940 (third edition, revised). Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman and Littlefield. {{ISBN|978-0-87471-851-5}}.
  • Macdonald, Hugh (2001). Guido et Ginevra, article in Grove Music Online.

{{Fromental Halévy}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Guido Et Ginvera}}

Category:Operas

Category:Grand operas

Category:1838 operas

Category:Operas set in Florence

Category:Operas by Fromental Halévy

Category:French-language operas

Category:Opera world premieres at the Paris Opera

Category:Libretti by Eugène Scribe