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Giuseppe Giacosa (1847–1906)

Author of Puccini : Tosca [sound recording]

84+ Works 1,322 Members 10 Reviews

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Series

Works by Giuseppe Giacosa

Puccini : Tosca [sound recording] (1900) — libretto — 276 copies, 2 reviews
Black Dog Opera Library : Puccini : La bohème (1996) — Librettist — 114 copies, 1 review
La bohème [vocal score] (1985) — Librettist — 69 copies
Puccini : Madama Butterfly [libretto] (1904) — Librettist — 58 copies, 1 review
Puccini : Tosca [libretto] (1986) — Librettist — 51 copies, 1 review
Puccini : La bohème [libretto] (1983) — Librettist — 50 copies, 1 review
Puccini : Tosca [score : full] (1992) — Librettist — 44 copies
Puccini : Madama Butterfly [score: vocal] (1986) — Librettist — 43 copies
English National Opera Guide : Puccini : La bohème (1982) — libretto — 42 copies
English National Opera Guide : Puccini : Tosca (1982) — libretto — 36 copies
Puccini : Madama Butterfly [score : full] (2000) — Librettist — 33 copies
Black Dog Opera Library : Puccini : Tosca (1998) — Librettist — 33 copies
Puccini : La bohème [libretto] (2011) — Author — 26 copies, 1 review
Puccini : La Bohème [libretto : Italian/English] (1986) — Librettist — 25 copies
Dover Opera Guide and Libretto Series : La bohème (1962) — Librettist — 21 copies
Tosca [vocal score] (1986) — Librettist — 19 copies
Puccini : Madama Butterfly [libretto : Italian/English] (1986) — Librettist — 18 copies
Come le foglie (2010) 14 copies, 1 review
Novelle e paesi valdostani (2019) 13 copies
Madama Butterfly [libretto] (1983) — Librettist — 13 copies
Puccini : Tosca [libretto : Italian/English] (1986) — Librettist — 11 copies
Tristi amori (1999) 10 copies
Scritti scelti (1960) 9 copies
Masterworks of Opera : Madam Butterfly (1979) — Librettist — 8 copies
Teatro (2009) 7 copies
Impressioni d'America (1994) 6 copies
Madama Butterfly [programme, libretto] — Librettist — 3 copies
Overture Opera Guides : Puccini : La bohème (2010) — Librettist — 2 copies
Puccini : La Bohème [libretto] — Librettist — 1 copy
Acquazzoni In Montagna (2010) 1 copy, 1 review
Puccini : Tosca [libretto] (1956) — Librettist — 1 copy
Madam Butterfly: Opera in Three Acts Libretto (1907) — Lyricist — 1 copy
Puccini : Madama Butterfly [libretto and program] (2014) — Librettist — 1 copy
Tristi Amori 1 copy
COMMEDIE 1 copy
New York 1 copy

Associated Works

Puccini : Madama Butterfly [sound recordings] (1904) — Librettist — 255 copies, 1 review
The Penguin Book of Italian Short Stories (1969) — Contributor — 26 copies
Madama Butterfly [video recording : 1995] (1997) — Librettist — 19 copies
Madama Butterfly [video recording : 1975] (2005) — Librettist — 14 copies
Madama Butterfly [video recording : 1986] (1986) — Librettist — 6 copies
Madama Butterfly [video recording : 2003] (2005) — Librettist — 2 copies

Tagged

19th century (36) 20th century (9) Callas (12) CD (81) CDs (10) classical (13) classical music (41) enregistrement (28) fiction (8) full score (20) Italian (22) Italian literature (13) Italian opera (14) Italy (49) libretti (15) libretto (85) music (234) opera (341) Opera CD (10) Operas (33) Performing Arts (9) Puccini (87) recording (9) scores (10) theatre (27) Tosca (20) verismo (9) vocal music (13) vocal score (14) vocal scores (14)

Common Knowledge

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Discussions

Private Passions in BBC Radio 3 Listeners (March 2015)

Reviews

18 reviews
I read this G. Schirmer’s opera librettos booklet in preparation for the opera itself. It turned out to have been a very good move. Act II has crazy fun busy staging and a huge cast. Knowing the opera freed me somewhat from reading the teleprompter during the show and absorbed more of the opera itself. Without plans to watch the opera though, this booklet is unlikely to be a riveting read, with a story well known to most. BUT, I will say there are some great lines that are simply charming show more and poetic to describe otherwise dull or even sad events.

A very brief plot summary: Four dear friends, a poet (Rodolfo), a painter (Marcello), a philosopher (Colline), a musician (Schaunard), share their lives and often pool their money to help each other while they all struggle with their ‘careers’ in the Latin Quarters of Paris in 1830. Enter Mimi, who falls in love with the Rodolfo. But it was also revealed early that Mimi is sick – but how sick? (dum, dum, dummm). Also enter Musetta, a singer, who is the sometimes girlfriend/lover, of Marcello; the two provided the comic relief as they fight with each other constantly but is utterly in love with each other as well. As Mimi’s illness revealed itself to be much more that a cough (officially, consumption), Rodolfo breaks up with Mimi as he is too poor to provide for her, not even to keep her warm. As Mimi’s life approaches the end, she goes to find Rodolfo and to die beside him; everyone gathered to do what they can for her in her last moments.

Side note #1: La Boheme = The Bohemians. Back then in Paris, many of these so called Bohemians are in fact born bourgeois, but chose to live the life of the arts.

Side note #2: I won’t acknowledge that Rent, the Musical, is loosely based off La Boheme. La Boheme is charmingly, humorously endearing while Rent (though good) is drug filled grunge. Let’s keep them separated. :P

Some quotes:
The irony in Roldolfo’s burning of his own drama/manuscript to keep him and Marcello warm:
“Rodolfo: My genius is burning, aflame with inspiration!
Marcello: To burn my new painting?
Rodolfo: No, who could endure the aroma!
But my drama,
Its passionate ardor will warm us both!
Marcello (with comic terror): You don’t mean to read it? How awful!
Rodolfo: No, the paper will crumble to ashes,
The Muse will return to Olympus,
A masterpiece goes to perdition!
The loss is prodigious!
…..
What words of wisdom!
Right to the point!
Amid these bluish flickering flames
A passionate love-scene goes up in smoke!
It pops and crackles!
There! Those were kisses!”

The landlord, Benoit, describes the kind of ladies that he likes, catching up on some side action, away from the Missus:
“I was a timid boy,
Now I am getting even! You know
I’ve a certain weakness.
For certain ladies…
You see…
Not that I like them portly
Or downright tubby,
Or even chubby,
A blooming full-moon. ----- (Reviewer’s note: This made me laugh.)
But skinny, lean and skinny,
No, sir, no!
When they are skinny,
They are malicious,
And sometimes even vicious.
I don’t care for their kisses,
Least of all for – my Misses!...”

Rodolfo and Mimi declare their love for the first time (actually the first night they met!):
Rodolfo:
“O adorable angel,
O gentle vision,
Surrounded by the moonlight’s silver glow,
In your sweet person
I realize my fondest dreams of long ago!
Never have I know before
So divine a rapture!
Radiant with Happiness
My heart is glowing,
Now at last I have found you,
My one and only love!”
Mimi:
“Ah! I’ve never known before,
A love so tender and glowing!
Oh, how its soothing power
Overcomes my heart with gladness,
How sweet to be in love!”

Rodolfo laments his own inadequacies in helping Mimi heal from her sickness and fears she is getting worse:
“I love Mimi, my love for her is stronger
Than ever!
But I will lose her,
But I will lose her,
Mimi is dreadfully ailing.
Day by day she is failing.
I fear the spark of life has lost its power!”
“And my room is a den of poverty,
No fire is going,
Fiercely the wind is blowing,
Ice-cold, relentless!
She is always so cheerful,
Bu remorse overcomes me.
I have aided the fearful ill
Which destroys her!”
“Mimi is like a flower,
Lacking water and sunshine,
But you can’t revive a blossom
By love alone, by love alone.”
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this is a very nice introduction and overview of the popular Puccini opera. a 1964 production featuring Renata Scotto is on two CDs and the full libretto is annotated for each track by the author. a history of the opera and its inauspicious premier is included with a biography of Puccini.
This is an excellent translation of the libretto of a deservedly popular opera. Unlike many translations, this one is not at all stiff and formal; on the contrary, it flows, much like the opera itself. The Dover edition is a particulary nice size and weight, making it convenient to carry to the opera or to read while listening to a recording of it.
As early as May 1889 Puccini told his publisher, Giulio Ricordi, that he wanted to make an opera out of a melodrama which the highly regarded French playwright Victorien Sardou had written as a sensational acting vehicle for Sarah Bernhardt. Her gift for mime, incidentally, accounts for the long wordless scene in the opera's second act, after the villainous police chief has been murdered. Set in Rome in 1800 during the struggle between the repressive royalist regime and the republican show more revolutionaries, the play was called La Tosca.

The opera was a success at the box office, but the critics generally turned thumbs down on it, finding its sadism and scenes of attempted rape and physical and mental torture repulsive. The same criticism surfaced in England after the opera's first performance at Covent Garden in July, which was attended by Puccini himself, but the general reaction was highly enthusiastic.
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Associated Authors

Luigi Illica Librettist, libretto
Nicholas John Contributor, Series Editor
Victorien Sardou original play
David Foil Author, Text
Marco Praga Librettist
Domenico Oliva Librettist
Guelfo Civinini Librettist
Giuseppe Adami Librettist
Luigi llica Lyricist
Carlo Bergonzi Tenor vocals [Lieutenant B.F.Pinkerton], Contributor
R. H. Elkin Translator
David Nice Discography
William Ashbrook Contributor
Edward Greenfield Contributor
Joanna Richardson Contributor
Giuseppe Morresi Bass vocals [Yamadori]
Rolando Panerai Baritone vocals [Sharpless]
Renata Scotto Soprano vocals [Cio-Cio-San (Madame Butterfly )]
Mario Rinaudo Bass vocals [Il Commissario Imperiale]
Paolo Montarsolo Bass vocals [Il Bonzo]
Anna Di Stasio Mezzo-soprano vocals [Suzuki]
Piero De Palma Tenor vocals [Goro]
Silvana Padoan Soprano vocals [Kate Pinkerton]
John Barbirolli Conductor
Gianni Lazzari Chorus Master
Julian Smith Contributor
Martin Hoyle Contributor
John Luther Long Author of short story
William Grist Translator
Percy Pinkerton Translator
Henri Murger original novel
Bernard Williams Contributor
Edmund Tracey Translator
Bernard Keeffe Contributor
Stuart Woolfe Contributor
Rosmarie König Contributor
Daniel Kramer Foreword
Thomas Beecham Conductor
William Weaver Translator
Philip Reed Editorial consultant
Thomas Martin Translator
Ruth Martin Translator
John Gutman Translator
Nicola Rescigno conductor
Jan Kiepura Performer
Mario Del Monaco Cavaradossi
Alberto Erede conductor
Franco Bonisolli Cavaradossi
Riccardo Martin Performer
Georges Prêtre Conductor
Renato Cioni Cavaradossi
Leo Nucci Scarpia
Pasquale Amato Performer
Antonio Scotti Performer
Tito Gobbi Scarpia
Samuel Ramey Scarpia
Beniamino Gigli Cavaradossi
Plácido Domingo Cavaradossi
Enrico Caruso Performer
Luciano Pavarotti Cavaradossi
Roberto Alagna Cavaradossi
Erich Leinsdorf conductor
Franco Corelli Cavaradossi
Jussi Björling Cavaradossi
Emma Eames Performer
Maria Jeritza Performer
Lorin Maazel conductor
George Solti conductor
Lotte Lehman Performer
H. Mehnert Translator and editor
Gwyneth Jones Introduction
Ellen H. Bleiler Translator
Mariko Mori Contributor
Alex Rigola Contributor
Narcís Oller Translator

Statistics

Works
84
Also by
10
Members
1,322
Popularity
#19,442
Rating
4.0
Reviews
10
ISBNs
157
Languages
7

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