Arena Sferisterio 17 August 2023 - Lucia di Lammermoor | GoComGo.com

Lucia di Lammermoor

Arena Sferisterio, Macerata, Italy
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Thursday 17 August 2023
9 PM
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Important Info
Type: Opera
City: Macerata, Italy
Starts at: 21:00

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Festival

Macerata Opera Festival (Sferisterio Festival) 2023

Carmen by Georges Bizet, Lucia di Lammermoor by Gaetano Donizetti and La traviata by Giuseppe Verdi are the three operatic titles chosen by the superintendent Flavio Cavalli and the artistic director Paolo Pinamonti for the 2023 festival. For five weekends, from 20 July to 19 August, the Sferisterio will once again host these masterpieces together with a series of symphonic and dance events.

Overview

Lucia di Lammermoor by Donizetti (12, 14, 17 and 19 August), this is an important co-production with the Chorégies d'Orange, a French town famous for its imposing Roman where a festival very similar to the Macerata one takes place every summer (especially for the monumental place where the shows are held).

In the cast, internationally renowned bel canto singers such as Ruth Iniesta (Lucia), Dmitry Korchak (Edgardo) and Davide Luciano (Enrico), led by Francesco Ivan Ciampa (whom the audience will remember for reading Macbeth in 2019), with a performance by Jean-Louis Grinda evocative of the quintessentially romantic Scottish setting of this melodrama.

Co-production with the Chorégies d'Orangeco-production with the Chorégies d'Orange

History
Premiere of this production: 26 September 1835, Teatro di San Carlo, Naples

Lucia di Lammermoor is a dramma tragico (tragic opera) in three acts by Gaetano Donizetti. Salvadore Cammarano wrote the Italian-language libretto loosely based upon Sir Walter Scott's historical novel The Bride of Lammermoor.

Synopsis

Time: Early 18th century
Place: Scotland

Act 1

Scene 1: The gardens of Ravenswood Castle

Normanno, captain of the castle guard, and other retainers are searching for an intruder. He tells Enrico that he believes that the man is Edgardo of Ravenswood, and that he comes to the castle to meet Enrico's sister, Lucia. It is confirmed that Edgardo is indeed the intruder. Enrico reaffirms his hatred for the Ravenswood family and his determination to end the relationship.

Scene 2: By a fountain at the entrance to the park, beside the castle

Lucia waits for Edgardo. In her famous aria "Regnava nel silenzio", Lucia tells her maid Alisa that she has seen the ghost of a girl killed on the very same spot by a jealous Ravenswood ancestor. Alisa tells Lucia that the apparition is a warning and that she must give up her love for Edgardo. Edgardo enters; for political reasons, he must leave immediately for France. He hopes to make his peace with Enrico and marry Lucia. Lucia tells him this is impossible, and instead they take a sworn vow of marriage and exchange rings. Edgardo leaves.

Act 2

Scene 1: Lord Ashton's apartments

Preparations have been made for the imminent wedding of Lucia to Arturo. Enrico worries about whether Lucia will really submit to the wedding. He shows his sister a forged letter seemingly proving that Edgardo has forgotten her and taken a new lover. Enrico leaves Lucia to further persuasion, this time by Raimondo, Lucia's chaplain and tutor, that she should renounce her vow to Edgardo, for the good of the family, and marry Arturo.

Scene 2: A hall in the castle

Arturo arrives for the marriage. Lucia acts strangely, but Enrico explains that this is due to the death of her mother. Arturo signs the marriage contract, followed reluctantly by Lucia. At that point Edgardo suddenly appears in the hall. Raimondo prevents a fight, but he shows Edgardo Lucia's signature on the marriage contract. Edgardo curses her, demanding that they return their rings to each other. He tramples his ring on the ground, before being forced out of the castle.

Act 3

Scene 1: Wolfcrag

Enrico visits Edgardo to challenge him to a duel. He tells him that Lucia is already enjoying her bridal bed. Edgardo agrees to fight him. They will meet later by the graveyard of the Ravenswoods, near the Wolf's Crag.

Scene 2: A Hall

Raimondo interrupts the marriage celebrations to tell the guests that Lucia has gone mad and killed her bridegroom Arturo. Lucia enters. In the aria "Il dolce suono" she imagines being with Edgardo, soon to be happily married. Enrico enters and at first threatens Lucia but later softens when he realizes her condition. Lucia collapses. Raimondo blames Normanno for precipitating the whole tragedy.

Scene 3: The graveyard of the Ravenswood family

Edgardo is resolved to kill himself on Enrico's sword. He learns that Lucia is dying and then Raimondo comes to tell him that she has already died. Edgardo stabs himself with a dagger, hoping to be reunited with Lucia in heaven.

Venue Info

Arena Sferisterio - Macerata
Location   Piazza Nazario Sauro

The Sferisterio is an open-air stadium or sphaeristerium in Macerata, Italy.

An ancient Italian national sport or pallone col bracciale was the most popular sport in Italy for almost five centuries. This game dated back to the 15th century. The people of Macerata decided that they needed somewhere large to play and watch it; a place that could also be used for public spectacles such as circuses and even bullfights. One hundred citizens raised the money themselves and got Ireneo Aleandri to design and build it. The design involved the destruction and rebuilding of some of the historic city walls next to the Porta Mercato gate.

The strait side of the arena is a wall 18 meters high and 88 meters long, along which is a line of arches separated by 56 columns carrying a double row of boxes, and a stone gallery, all in Neoclassical style.

Over the years the popularity of pallone decreased and that of football replaced it. In 1919 the surface was leveled to allow for this, and also for tennis courts. The arena had been used for the occasional theatrical event from 1871, but from about 1914 opera began to be put on there.

Present-day use

In 1921, as the first presentation of what would become the Sferisterio Opera Festival, Pieralberto Conti staged Verdi's Aida paid for by the soprano, Francisca Solari. This was followed by all parts of the arena, both front- and back-stage, being renovated and electricity introduced.

Today it holds an audience of over 3,000. The stage is 14.5 meters deep and 40 meters wide, with 10-meter wings on each side. It is rather an unusual shape for musical performances (musicians at each end of the pit cannot hear each other) but the acoustics are surprisingly good (at least near the middle).

The present-day opera festival, beginning in the late 1980s and under the auspices of the Macerata Opera, takes place in this location

Important Info
Type: Opera
City: Macerata, Italy
Starts at: 21:00
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