La pastorella nobile explained

La pastorella nobile (The Noble Shepherdess) is an commedia per musica [1] in two acts by Pietro Alessandro Guglielmi. The Italian libretto was by Francesco Saverio Zini.

Performance history

La pastorella nobile was first performed at the Teatro del Fondo in Naples on 15 or 19 April 1788 with Irene Tomeoni, the creator of the title role of La bella pescatrice as the shepherdess Eurilla.

It was one of Guglielmi's most successful opera. Productions followed in Italy and elsewhere, including London, Paris, Madrid, Dresden and Prague, sometimes under the title L'erede di Belprato. In Germany it was given as Die Schöne auf dem Lande, Die adelische Schäferin and Das adelige Landmädchen.

In Vienna it was the most popular opera at the beginning of the 1790s. Adriana Ferrarese and Francesco Benucci, the first Fiodiligi and Guglielmo in Così fan tutte sang the roles of Donna Florida and Don Polibio, in a version that apparently enhanced the importance of Donna Florida, probably through a revision by Lorenzo Da Ponte, Mozart's librettist and Ferrarese's lover. However the later arrival on the scene of Tomeoni (to sing Eurilla) led to the restoration of the original version.[2]

Roles

CastVoice typePremiere, 15 or 19 April 1788
Eurilla, a shepherdesssopranoIrene Tomeoni
Marchese Astolfotenor
Don Polibio, the mayorbass
Don Calloandro, Don Polibio's sonbaritone
Donna Florida, Astolfo's fiancée soprano
Don Astianatte. Donna Florida's brothertenor

Synopsis

Eurilla, the shepherdess is pursued by Marchese Astolpho. who is to marry Donna Florida, while Eurilla is attracted to Don Calloandro, the son of Don Polibio, the mayor.

References

Notes

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Though the Amadeus Alamanc refers to the opera as a dramma giocoso.
  2. Rice, John A, La Folia in late eighteenth and early nineteenth century Vienna