Lo straniero explained

Lo straniero
Genre Header:Opera
Composer:Ildebrando Pizzetti
Librettist:Ildebrando Pizzetti
Language:Italian
Premiere Location:Teatro dell'Opera di Roma, Rome

Lo straniero (The Stranger) is an opera (dramma lirico) in two acts composed by Ildebrando Pizzetti, who also wrote the libretto. An original story with characters from the Old Testament, it is the third work in Pizzetti's trilogy on the themes of redemption and the virtue of love. Although it did not receive its premiere until 1930, Pizzetti had begun the project several years earlier. He began the libretto in 1922 and completed it in 1923. The composition of the music was completed in 1925. The other two works in the trilogy are Dèbora e Jaéle which premiered in 1922 and Fra Gherardo which premiered in 1928.[1]

Performance history

Lo straniero premiered on 29 April, 1930, at the Teatro dell'Opera di Roma. It was subsequently revived there in 1938 and 1955. It was also performed in 1942 at the Teatro Regio di Parma and the Teatro San Carlo in Naples.

Roles

!Role!Voice type!Premiere cast, 29 April 1930
Conductor: Gino Marinuzzi
Maria Maria Zamboni
Lo straniero Renato Zanelli
Falco tenor Luigi Nardi
Rosso tenor Guido Vaccari
Scedeùr
Old man baritone Amerigo Neri
King Hanóch Giacomo Vaghi
Pietra bass Duilio Baronti
Esaù bass Adolfo Pacini

External links

Notes and References

  1. Gelli, Piero (ed.) (2005). "Straniero, Lo" . Dizionario dell'opera, p. 1219. Baldini Castoldi Dalai (republished on operamanager.it). Retrieved 17 February 2016 .