Riccardo Primo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Operas by George Frideric Handel

Almira (1705)
Florindo (1708)
Rodrigo (1707)
Agrippina (1709)
Rinaldo (1711)
Il pastor fido (1712)
Teseo (1713)
Amadigi di Gaula (1715)
Acis and Galatea (1718)
Radamisto (1720)
Muzio Scevola (1721)
Floridante (1721)
Ottone (1723)
Flavio (1723)
Giulio Cesare (1724)
Tamerlano (1724)
Rodelinda (1725)
Scipione (1726)
Alessandro (1726)
Admeto (1727)
Riccardo Primo (1727)
Siroe (1728)
Tolomeo (1728)
Lotario (1729)
Partenope (1730)
Poro (1731)
Ezio (1732)
Sosarme (1732)
Orlando (1733)
Arianna in Creta (1734)
Oreste (1734)
Ariodante (1735)
Alcina (1735)
Atalanta (1736)
Arminio (1737)
Giustino (1737)
Berenice (1737)
Alessandro Severo (1738)
Faramondo (1738)
Serse (1738)
Giove in Argo (1739)
Imeneo (1740)
Deidamia (1741)
Semele (1744)

Riccardo Primo re d’Inghilterra (or 'Richard the First, King of England') is an opera in three acts by George Frideric Handel. The Italian-language libretto was by Paolo Antonio Rolli, after Francesco Briani's Isacio tiranno, set by Antonio Lotti in 1710.

It was written for the Royal Academy's opera season 1726-27. Handel subsequently re-used music from the opera in Scipione and Tolomeo.

Contents

[edit] Performance history

The opera was first given at the King's Theatre in London on 11 November 1727 and on 11 further occasions. It was also performed in Hamburg and Brunswick. It was rediscovered and performed by the Handel Opera Society in London on 8 July 1964.

The story concerns the marriage of Richard I to a Spanish princess on the island of Cyprus in 1191.

[edit] Roles

Premiere, November 11, 1727
Riccardo alto castrato Senesino
Costanza, daughter of the King of Navarre soprano Francesca Cuzzoni
Isacio, Governor of Cyprus bass Giuseppe Maria Boschi
Pulcheria, his daughter soprano Faustina Bordoni
Oronte, Prince of Syria alto castrato Antonio Baldi
Berardo, Costanza's cousin bass Giovanni Battista Palmerini
Corrado, Prince of Bohemia contralto Anna Vincenza Dotti

[edit] Sources

Riccardo Primo by Anthony Hicks, in 'The New Grove Dictionary of Opera', ed. Stanley Sadie (London, 1992) ISBN 0-333-73432-7

[edit] Recordings

There is an audio recording on compact disc under Christophe Rousset with Les Talens Lyriques, and Sara Mingardo (Riccardo), Sandrine Piau (Costanza), Olivier Lallouette (Berardo), Robert Scaltriti (Isacio), Claire Brua (Pulcheria), Pascal Bertin (Oronte). This was released by L'oiseau-lyre, number 452 201-2.


In other languages