Almahide Explained

Almahide is a pasticcio opera arranged by John Jacob Heidegger. Musically the work was based on Ariosti’s Amor tra nemici (1708), but most of the arias were replaced by the work of other composers, including six arias from Giovanni Bononcini‘s Turno Aricino.[1]

It is generally described as the first opera in London sung entirely in Italian, by Italian singers,[2] [3] although there were intermezzi in English between the acts of the main opera.[4]

Action

Almahide has been brought up as a man in preparation for killing her father's enemy Almiro; instead she has fallen in love with him. Almiro loves Celinda, who is herself loved by the king, Almanzor, but she loves the disguised Almahide. After scenes of jealousy and threats of violence, tensions are happily resolved with two marriages.[1]

Libretto

The libretto was by Silvio Stampiglia and Pietro Antonio Bernardon, who adapted Dryden’s Almanzor and Almahide. In the preface Heidegger explained that he had written the entire work in Italian to avoid having the cast singing in two languages (as they had done in recent productions of Camilla and Thomyris), and that he had translated the libretto back from Italian to English to allow audience understanding.[5]

Production history

Almahide was first performed at Queen's Theatre, Haymarket on 10 January 1710.[1] [6] The first production was popular and had a run of fourteen nights.[7] [8] The cast was composed of Italian singers; three castrati - Nicolini (Almiro), Valentini (Almanzor), and Giuseppe Cassani (Gemir), as well as two women - Margherita de L'Epine (Almahide), and Isabella Girardeau (Celinda).[1] [5]

In February 1710, Walsh, Randall and Hare published Songs in the new Opera, Call’d Almahide, including the overture and 43 arias.[5]

The production was revived the following year with four performances in April and one in May, with Margharita de l’Epine in the title role.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Baldwin . Olive . Wilson . Thelma . Almahide . oxfordmusiconline.com . 2002 . Grove Music Online . 10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O009081 . 978-1-56159-263-0 . 10 December 2019.
  2. Book: Lavina Lee. Handel's World. 2007. The Rosen Publishing Group. 978-1-4042-0726-4. 36.
  3. Burden . Michael . Opera, Excess, and the Discourse of Luxury in Eighteenth-Century England . Revue de la Société d'études anglo-américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles . 2014 . 71 . 232–248 . 10.4000/1718.409 . 8 December 2019. free .
  4. Book: Burney . Charles . A general history of music, from the earliest ages to the present period (1789) . 1935 . Harcourt, Brace and Company . New York . 664 . 11 December 2019.
  5. Web site: Almahide . operabaroque.fr . OperaBaroque . 11 December 2019.
  6. Book: Barrie Jones. The Hutchinson Concise Dictionary of Music. 2014-06-03. Routledge. 978-1-135-95018-7. 16–.
  7. Book: The Harmonicon. 1823. W. Pinnock. 47.
  8. Book: George E. Dorris. Paolo Rolli and the Italian Circle in London, 1715–1744. 2014-07-24. De Gruyter. 978-3-11-156078-6. 300.