Pietro il grande

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Operas by Gaetano Donizetti

Il Pigmalione (1816)
Enrico di Borgogna (1818)
Pietro il grande (1819)
Zoraida di Granata(1822)
La zingara (1822)
Alfredo il grande (1823)
L'ajo nell'imbarazzo (1824)
Emilia di Liverpool (1824)
Alahor in Granata (1826)
Elvida (1826)
Gabriella di Vergy (1826)
Olivo e Pasquale (1827)
Otto mesi in due ore (1827)
L'esule di Roma (1828)
Alina, regina di Golconda (1828)
Gianni di Calais (1828)
Il castello di Kenilworth (1829)
Il diluvio universale (1830)
Imelda de' Lambertazzi (1830)
Anna Bolena (1830)
Le convenienze ed
inconvenienze teatrali (1831)
Gianni di Parigi (1831)
Francesca di Foix (1831)
Fausta (1832)
Ugo, conte di Parigi (1832)
L'elisir d'amore (1832)
Sancia di Castiglia (1832)
Parisina (1833)
Torquato Tasso (1833)
Lucrezia Borgia (1833)
Rosmonda d'Inghilterra (1834)
Gemma di Vergy (1834)
Marino Faliero (1835)
Maria Stuarda (1835)
Lucia di Lammermoor (1835)
Belisario (1836)
Il campanello (1836)
Betly, o La capanna svizzera (1836)
L'assedio di Calais (1836)
Roberto Devereux (1837)
Maria de Rudenz (1838)
Poliuto (1838)
Pia de' Tolomei (1838)
Le duc d'Albe (1839)
La fille du régiment (1840)
La favorita (1840)
Adelia (1841)
Rita (1841)
Maria Padilla (1841)
Linda di Chamounix (1842)
Caterina Cornaro (1844)
Don Pasquale (1843)
Maria di Rohan (1843)
Dom Sébastien (1843)

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Pietro il Grande zar di tutte le Russie or Il falegname di Livonia also known as Pietro, il grande, tsar delle Russie is a comic melodrama (opera buffa) in two acts (1819) by Gaetano Donizetti to the libretto by Gherardo Bevilacqua-Aldobrandini.

Pietro il Grande or Il falegname di Livonia was premiered at the opening of the 1819-1820 Carnival season at the Teatro San Samuele in Venice. The premiere took place on December 26, 1819. It was the fourth of Donizetti’s operas to be performed during his life, and the first to achieve any kind of performance history. It had about seven stagings until 1827, when its last known performance in the 19th century took place. It was neglected until 2003 when it was given a performance in St Petersburg, thanks to the artistic director of the St Petersburg Chamber Opera, one Yuri Alexandrov, who spent three years in search of the score for the opera, which, so it appeared, had been lost forever. The painstaking work yielded results - the score was restored fragment by fragment. The Russian premiere took place on May 27, 2003, at the St Petersburg Chamber Opera, with staging by Yuri Alexandrov and the Russian and Italian versions of the libretto by Yuri Dimitrin.

Contents

[edit] Roles

Role Voice type Premiere Cast, December 26, 1819
(Conductor: - )
Pietro il Grande (Peter the Great) bass Pio Botticelli
Caterina (Catherine I of Russia, his wife) soprano Adelaide Raffi
Madama Fritz, innkeeper mezzo-soprano Caterina Amati
Annetta Mazepa, innkeeper soprano Angela Bertozzi
Carlo Scavronski, carpenter of Livonia tenor Giovanni Battista Verger
Ser Cuccupis, magistrate bass Luigi Martinelli
Firman Trombest, in the role of the usurer bass Giuseppe Guglielmini
Hondediski, muscovite captain baritone Gaetano Rambaldi
Mayors, couriers, followers of the Czar

[edit] Synopsis

Ekaterina I, Empress and Autocrat of all the Russias, originally named Marta Skavronska
Ekaterina I, Empress and Autocrat of all the Russias, originally named Marta Skavronska

The action takes place in some unnamed town in Livonia (now Latvia and Estonia), which was that time under Russian rule. Carlo, a carpenter is in love with the orphan Annetta. Carlo claims to be of noble origin and shows that he has a bit of a temper when the tsar and his wife, Catherine, arrive, both travelling incognito. They are looking for the tsarina’s lost brother, and have reason to suspect that it might be Carlo. The tsar asks the hotelier, Madame Fritz, about this carpenter, when Carlo enters. Carlo, who doesn’t know who the stranger is, is rather insolent to him, and an argument ensues, with Peter threatening Carlo with dire consequences. The town magistrate, Ser Cuccupis, also gets into an argument with Peter. This magistrate has pretensions of grandeur. He goes so far as to threaten him with his friend, the tsar. Peter decides to pull rank on the magistrate, and tells him that he is Menshikov, a high officer of the tsar. The magistrate has Carlo imprisoned. The latter is about to be convicted when Madame Fritz runs in with some documents proving that he is Catherine’s brother. Carlo is not told this until Act II, at which time he introduces his girl (Annetta) to the imperial couple. He warns them that the tsar must never see her since she is the daughter of the traitor hetman Ivan Mazepa. When told that Mazepa is dead, the false Menshikov pardons the girl. The captain of the troops tells the magistrate that Menshikov is actually the tsar. The magistrate sees an opportunity to advance himself, but since the tsar has already recognized him for what he is, he fires him from his position of authority and orders him to pay a fine. Peter, Catherine, Carlo and Annetta leave happily for St Petersburg.

[edit] The first lines

CORO: Al bosco! Alla bottiglia! A caccia!
CAPITANO: Al Dio d'amor!
TUTTI: Già spunta il roseo dì.

[edit] Selected recordings

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  • Donizetti: Pietro il Grande / Berdondini, Priante, et al CD
Live, Martina Franca, 2004 performance on Dynamic CDS 473-1/2 [2CDs]
Rosa Sorice, soprano (Annetta);
Rosa Anna Peraino, soprano (Madama Fritz);
Eufemia Tafuro, mezzo-soprano (Caterina);
Alessandro Codeluppi, tenor (Carlo);
Giulio Mastrototaro, baritone (Ser Cuccupis);
Vito Priante, baritone (Pietro il Grande);
Claudio Sgura baritone (Firman-Trombesi);
Vittorio Bari tenor (Hondeski).
Orchestra Internazionale d’Italia; Coro da Camera di Bratislava. Marco Berdondini, conductor.
  • The Act 2 sextet is included in A Hundred Years of Italian Opera, 1810-1820,( Opera Rara ORCH103).

[edit] External links