Signa (opera) explained

Signa is an opera originally conceived in four acts with music by the British composer Frederic H. Cowen[1] with a libretto by Gilbert Arthur à Beckett, with revisions by H.A. Rudall and Frederic Edward Weatherly after Ouida, with an Italian translation by Giannandrea Mazzucato, first performed in a reduced three-act version at the Teatro Dal Verme, Milan on 12 November 1893. It was later given in a two-act version at Covent Garden, London on 30 June 1894.

References

Notes and References

  1. Cowen, Frederic Hymen . 7 . 346.