La villanella rapita

La villanella rapita (The Abducted Country Girl) is an opera giocosa in two acts by Francesco Bianchi. The libretto was by Giovanni Bertati.

La villanella rapita
Opera giocosa by Francesco Bianchi
The composer in 1805
LibrettistGiovanni Bertati
LanguageItalian
Premiere
1783 (1783)

Performance history

The opera was first performed at the Teatro San Moisè in Venice in the autumn of 1783.[1] It was then given at the Eszterháza Theater in Süttör on 29 August 1784. It was also produced at the Little Theatre in the Haymarket in London under Vincenzo Federici on 27 February 1790.[2]

A pasticcio with the same title, with some music by Bianchi as well as Paisiello, Guglielmi, Giacomo Gotifredo Ferrari, Sarti and Soler was performed at Théâtre Feydeau in Paris on 5 June 1789.

Mozart additions

Mozart contributed a vocal quartet, "Dite almeno in che mancai?", K. 479, and a vocal terzet, "Mandina amabile", K. 480, for a performance at the Burgtheater in Vienna on 1785. (The former work was first heard in public on 5 November, and the latter on 28 November.) The singers involved were Vincenzo Calvesi (Count), Celeste Coltellini (Mandina), Stefano Mandini (Pippo), and Francesco Bussani (Biaggio), the last named in K. 479 only.

Roles

Roles, voice types
Role Voice type
Biaggio bass
Ninetta, Biaggio's daughter soprano
Giannina, Biaggio's daughter soprano
Mandina, Biaggio's daughter, about to be married to Pippo soprano
Pippo, Mandina's bridegroom baritone
The count tenor
Paulino, the count's friend tenor

Synopsis

The count takes a liking to a young bride, Mandina, at her pre-wedding banquet, lures her away from her bridegroom, Pippo, and then abducts her in a drugged state back to his palace. Mandina, after a little experience of upper-class luxuries, eventually establishes her innocence and marries Pippo after all.

References

  1. McClymonds, Marita P. (1992), "Villanella rapita, La" in The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, vol, 4, p. 1009
  2. Casaglia, Gherardo (2005)."Villanella rapita". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
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