Almerindo Spadetta Explained

Almerindo Spadetta
Birth Place:Naples, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
Death Date:April 1894
Death Place:San Giovanni a Teduccio, Italy

Almerindo Spadetta (April 1894) was a prolific opera librettist active in Naples. He worked as a stage manager at the Teatro San Carlo, Teatro Nuovo, and Teatro del Fondo in Naples for over 40 years and wrote numerous libretti (mostly in the opera buffa genre) for composers associated with those theatres. His most enduring work was the libretto for Nicola De Giosa's Don Checco, one of the last great successes in the history of Neapolitan opera buffa.[1]

Spadetta was a lawyer by training and apparently spent some of his career in Malta, but little else has been written about his life.[2] [3] According to his obituary in the Gazzetta Musicale di Milano, he spent his last years in San Giovanni a Teduccio, a small town in the suburbs of Naples. He died there in 1894, long-forgotten and in dire poverty.[4]

Libretti

Spadetta's libretti include:

Notes and References

  1. Lanza, Andrea (2001). "De Giosa, Nicola" . Grove Music Online. Retrieved 27 June 2017 (subscription required for full access).
  2. Annamaria Sapienza, Annamaria (1998). La parodia dell'opera lirica a Napoli nell'Ottocento, pp. 95–96. Guida Editori.
  3. Brincat, Joseph M. (2003). Malta: Una storia linguistica, p. 272. Le mani.
  4. "Acuto" (pseudonym of Federico Polidoro) (29 April 1894). "Napoli", p. 268. Gazzetta Musicale di Milano