La donna è mobile

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"La donna è mobile" ("Woman is fickle") is the cynical Duke of Mantua's canzone from Giuseppe Verdi's opera Rigoletto (1851). Its reprise in the last act is chilling, as Rigoletto realizes from the sound of the Duke's lively voice coming from within the tavern (offstage), that the body in the sack is not that of the Duke after all.

The canzone is famous as a showcase for tenors. It has been recorded by Enrico Caruso, Plácido Domingo, Luciano Pavarotti and hundreds of others. The song can be found on many record labels, including ASV, Naxos, Nimbus Records, Parlophone, and Victor.

Contents

[edit] The Music

The almost comical-sounding theme of La donna è mobile is introduced immediately, and runs thus (transposed from the original key of B major):

The theme is repeated several times in the approximately two minutes it takes to perform the canzone, but with the important -- and obvious -- omission of the last measure. This has the effect of driving the music forward as it creates the impression of being incomplete and unresolved, which it is, having left off not on the tonic or dominant but on the submediant. Once the Duke has finished singing, however, the theme is once again repeated; but this time including the last, and conclusive, measure and finally resolving to the dominant.

[edit] Lyrics

Original Italian
English Translation

La donna è mobile
Qual piuma al vento,
Muta d'accento — e di pensiero.
Sempre un amabile,
Leggiadro viso,
In pianto o in riso, — è menzognero.


È sempre misero
Chi a lei s'affida,
Chi le confida — mal cauto il core!
Pur mai non sentesi
Felice appieno
Chi su quel seno — non liba amore!

Woman is flighty
Like a feather in the wind,
She changes her voice — and her mind.
Always sweet,
Pretty face,
In tears or in laughter, — she is always lying.


Always miserable
Is he who trusts her,
He who confides in her — his unwary heart!
Yet one never feels
Fully happy
Who on that bosom — does not drink love!

[edit] Media

[edit] In popular culture

  • In the 2004 movie The Punisher, a fight scene between Thomas Jane (the Punisher) and "The Russian" occurs while the song plays and his apartment neighbors sing and dance to the song.
  • In the video game Grand Theft Auto III this song can be heard on the Double Cleff FM radio station.
  • In the Disney animated feature Aristocats, the elderly lawyer, Georges, dances at the beginning while humming the song's tune.
  • In the 1999 remake of "My Favorite Martian," Martin the Martian sings the song while in a hot tub.
  • West Ham United F.C.: one of the supporters' songs praising striker Paulo di Canio was set to the song's tune.
  • Aston Villa F.C.: one of the supporters' songs praising Villa striker Gabriel Agbonlahor is set to the song's tune.
  • The Hall Song of Chancellor Hall, University of the West Indies, Mona Campus in Jamaica, is set to the song's tune.
  • Elaine sings the song in an episode of Seinfeld entitled "The Maestro".
  • In an episode of "Figure it Out — Family Style" (1998–1999), a contestant with the secret "Self Taught Opera Soloist," sings the song as his featured song upon the panel figuring his secret out, while his father helped him out.
  • In "Queer as Folk", Season 3, Ted gets a job as a singing waiter and is embarrassed when his friends show up at the restaurant as he is singing this song.
  • In an episode of Dark Angel, a tall prisoner sings this song in the yard to distract the guards while Max escapes.
  • In the film Hannibal Brooks, Oliver Reed (Brooks) distracts German soldiers by drunkenly singing 'Der Schnapps ist gut, mein Herr' to this melody, in order to make his escape.
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