Medea (Pacini) Explained

Medea
Composer:Giovanni Pacini
Librettist:Benedetto Castiglia
Language:Italian
Premiere Location:Teatro Carolino, Palermo

Medea is an opera in three acts composed by Giovanni Pacini to a libretto by Benedetto Castiglia. It premiered on 28 November 1843 at the in Palermo, conducted by the composer with Geltrude Bortolotti in the title role. The libretto is based on the plays Medea by Euripides and Médée by Pierre Corneille.

Performance history

Following its premiere on 28 November 1843 at the Teatro Carolino on Palermo, Pacini revised the work for its performance at the in Vicenza in 1845. It was further revised for its first performance at La Fenice in Venice on 9 March 1850. The final and definitive version premiered at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples on 26 February 1853. For two decades Pacini's Medea enjoyed considerable popularity in Italy, Russia and South America. It then fell into obscurity, eclipsed by Bellini's Norma which has a similar story and Cherubini's Médée.

However, it has had some modern revivals, most notably the 1993 performance at the in Savona conducted by Richard Bonynge with Jolanta Omilian in the title role (a live recording was released on the Agora label), and the 2006 semi-staged production at the ancient theatre of Taormina conducted by Tyrone Paterson with Simona Baldolini in the title role.

Roles

!Role!Voice type[1] !Premiere cast[2]
28 November 1843
Medea, a sorceress and Giasone's wife Geltrude Bortolotti
Cassandra, a priestess soprano Giovanna Austin
Licisca, Medea's servant soprano Adelaide Orlandi
Giasone, former leader of the Argonauts Giovanni Battista Pancani
Creonte, King of Corinth Luigi Valli
Calcante, a priest bass Secondo Torre
Choirs and walkers-on: Glauca.[3] Girls. Women. Boys. People. Curetes. Priests. Archons. Matrons. Soldiers

Synopsis

Setting: Corinth in Ancient GreeceThe heroic warrior Giasone plans to abandon his wife Medea to marry Glauca the daughter of Creonte, the king of Corinth. In revenge Medea murders their two children and then commits suicide.

Notable arias and duets

References

Notes

Sources

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Pessina (2007)
  2. According to the original libretto
  3. According to Pessina, soprano.