Le lazzarone

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File:Mirobolant.JPG
Costume design for Mirobolante in the original production

Le lazzarone, ou Le bien vient en dormant (The Lad from Naples, or Good comes from Sleeping) is an opéra in two acts with music by Fromental Halévy to a libretto by Henri Saint-Georges. It was premiered on 29 March 1844 at the Paris Opéra.[1]

At the instruction of Léon Pillet, the director of the Opéra, the opera was written as a vehicle for his mistress Rosine Stoltz (who had recently borne him a child). After some severe critical reactions, the opera was not successful and has not been revived.

Performance history

The inappropriate casting of a far-from-splendid 31-year-old portraying a Neapolitan teenager was not appreciated by the Parisian critics. A review in the Revue et gazette musicale sardonically regretted the Opéra's 'dearth of tenors', and noted that the composer was 'forced to do without a timbre of voice so essential to an opera.' Hector Berlioz wrote that 'the orchestration is too grandiose, too pompous, too loud and even too slow for this kind of story.' At the premiere, Stoltz particularly annoyed her rival Julie Dorus-Gras by conspicuously eating macaroni onstage during the latter's aria.[2]

The opera also marked the Paris debut of Lola Montez as an 'Andalusian dancer'. This however proved a disaster; Montez, losing a shoe during one routine, flung it into the boxes. Théophile Gautier wrote 'Mlle. Montez [...] has small feet and shapely legs. Her use of these is quite another matter'.[3]

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere cast, 29 March 1844[4]
(Conductor: )
Mirobolante, a poetical improviser baritone Paul Barroilhet
Josué Corvo, a rich Neapolitan bass Nicolas Levasseur
Beppo soprano Rosine Stoltz
Baptista, a flower-seller soprano Julie Dorus-Gras
Chorus: Pilgrims, people of Naples, musicians.

Synopsis

Place: Naples
Time:

The lazy Beppo is enamoured of the flower seller Baptista. Mirobolante and Corvo, discovering Baptista's birth certificate, find that she is unaware that she is an heiress to a fortune. They woo her assiduously; Beppo, feeling he has no chance against such wealthy suitors, goes to sleep. Baptista however wakes him and says she much prefers him to the other two. Mirobolante and Corvo try to prevent their marriage by asserting that Baptista is a minor; her birth certificate however shows that she is 21 that very day.[5]

References

Notes

  1. Libretto, p. iii.
  2. Jordan (1994), p. 122
  3. Walker (1988), p. 394
  4. Libretto, p.2
  5. Jordan (1994), p. 121

Sources