Dorilla in Tempe

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LanguageItalian
Premiere
9 November 1726 (1726-11-09)
Dorilla in Tempe
Opera by Antonio Vivaldi
LibrettistAntonio Maria Lucchini
LanguageItalian
Premiere
9 November 1726 (1726-11-09)

Dorilla in Tempe is a melodramma eroico pastorale or opera in three acts by composer Antonio Vivaldi with an Italian libretto by Antonio Maria Lucchini. The opera premiered at the Teatro San Angelo in Venice on 9 November 1726. Vivaldi later revised the opera numerous times for several different performances throughout the second half of his career.

Dorilla in Tempe was well received at its premiere and became one of Vivaldi's personal favorites. The opera was the first work by Vivaldi to include in its cast the mezzo-soprano Anna Girò, who went on to form a lifelong friendship and professional partnership with the composer. The opera was also noted for its visual aspects, boasting some of the most elaborate sets (by Antonio Mauro) in the history of opera up to that point and for its beautiful choreography by Giovanni Galletto.

In 1728 the opera was revived at the small Teatro San Margherita in Venice with an almost identical text, and again in Prague at the Sporck Theatre in the spring of 1732, this time with substantial alterations to the libretto. During Carnival 1734 the opera was revived at the Teatro San Angelo, this time as a pasticcio using recent music by other composers, including Hasse, Giacomelli and Leo.

Music

The only surviving score of Dorilla in Tempe, located in Turin, is from this 1734 pastiche production. The score includes not only the many insertions into the opera but also a number of the deletions from earlier productions. Unusually for Vivaldi's operatic scores, the sinfonia is clearly linked with the main opera: it follows the title-page instead of preceding it, and the music of its final movement – a C major version of the opening of the Spring concerto – reappears in the opera's opening chorus, appropriately in praise of spring. The opera displays a pastoral nature, particularly in its choral and ballet music, that is at times mixed with heroic elements, as in the elaborate celebrations at the end of Act 2, where a hunt is enacted to the inevitable horn accompaniment.

1734 Pasticcio Arias

Aria Composer Original opera Original aria
Mi lusinga il dolce affetto

(Elmiro)

Hasse Catone in Utica (1731)
Non ha più pace il cor amante

(Elmiro, sc.7, act III)

Hasse Cajo Fabricio (1732) Non ha più pace l'amor geloso

(Pirro's aria, sc.4, act II),

originally sung by Caffarelli.[1]

Saprò ben con petto forte

(Elmiro)

Hasse Issipile Non è ver benché si dica
Rete, lacci o strali adopra

(Filindo's aria, sc.9, act I)

Giacomelli Alessandro Severo (1732) Forte lume esposto al vento

(Albina's aria, sc.16, act II),

originally sung by Marianino Nicolini.[2]

Non vuo' che un infedele

(Filindo's aria, sc.9, act II)

Giacomelli Alessandro Severo (1732) Non vuo' che un infedele

(Albina's aria, sc.5, act I),

originally sung by Marianino Nicolini.[2]

Se penar per un bel volto

(Nomio's aria, sc.7, act II)

Giacomelli Semiramide riconosciuta (1730) Bel piacer saria d'un core

(Mirteo's aria, sc.7, act I),

originally sung by Anna Bagnolesi.[3]

Se ostinata a me resisti

(Admeto's aria, sc.5, act II)

Sarro Valdemaro (1726) Se si perde il buon nocchiero

(Sivardo's aria, sc.2, act I),

originally sung by Antonio Barbieri.[4]

Vorrei da lacci scogliere

(Elmiro)

Leo Demetrio (1732)

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere Cast,[5]
9 November 1726
Cast,

Teatro Sporck, Prague

Spring 1732[6]

Cast,

Teatro Sant'Angelo, Venice Carnival 1734[7]

Dorilla,

daughter of Admeto, in love with Elmiro

soprano Angela Capuano, "la Capuanina" Anna Cosini Anna Caterina Della Parte
Admeto,

King of Thessaly

bass Lorenzo Moretti Giovanni Micheli Massimiliano Miller
Nomio,

the god Apollo disguised as a shepherd, in love with Dorilla

contralto castrato (1726)

contralto (1732/34)

Filippo Finazzi Giacinta Constantini Angela Zanucchi
Elmiro,

a shepherd, in love with Dorilla

soprano en travesti (1726)

tenor (1732)

Maria Maddalena Pieri Antonio Denzi Francesco Bilanzoni
Eudamia,

a nymph, in love with Elmiro

mezzo-soprano Anna Girò Cecilia Ramis Marta Arriggoni
Filindo,

in love with Eudamia

contralto castrato (1726/34)

contralto (1732)

Domenico Giuseppe Galletti Margherita Flora Mariniano Nicolini

Synopsis

Recordings

References

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