Italian Opera in Late Eighteenth-Century London: Volume 2: The Pantheon Opera and its Aftermath 1789-1795
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Product details:
- Edition number and title :Volume 2: The Pantheon Opera and its Aftermath 1789-1795
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 1 February 2001
- ISBN 9780198167167
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages912 pages
- Size 242x164x54 mm
- Weight 1465 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 16 pp black and white plates, 15 music examples 0
Categories
Short description:
Following on from the volume on The King's Theatre, Haymarket, 1778-1791 (published by OUP in 1995), this interdisciplinary study of opera and ballet now turns to London's Pantheon Opera during the period 1789-95. The Pantheon Opera, founded in 1790, aimed to give London a kind of court opera that would feature opera seria and ballet d'action. It tried to hire Mozart to compete with Haydn, but its high aspirations led only to a quick bankruptcy. A recent major archival discovery has permitted startlingly full analysis of the company's repertoire, costumes, staging practices, and finances.
MoreLong description:
Following on from the volume on the King's Theatre, Haymarket (published by OUP in 1995), this interdisciplinary study of opera and ballet now turns to London's Pantheon Opera during the period 1789-98. The discovery of six cartons of previously unknown manuscripts in the possession of the Duke of Bedford makes possible the rewriting of a hitherto dark and little understood chapter in the history of opera in London. The King's Theatre, Haymarket, burnt down in 1789. To replace it, the fifth Duke of Bedford and the Marquis of Salisbury secretly backed a new opera company, to be housed in the Pantheon, an elegant exhibition hall hastily converted to house the venture.
Part 1 of this book tells a tale of intrigue, blackmail, bankruptcy, arson, and high-society infighting against a background of exalted artistic aspirations and genuine love of opera. The Pantheon tried to engage Mozart to compete against Haydn, and hired some of the most notable singers and dancers in Europe. Mismanagement led to huge losses, and the theatre burnt in highly suspicious circumstances in 1792. The backers tried to impose an artistic vision and financial controls on the management of the rebuilt King's Theatre, Haymarket, when opera returned there in 1793, but by 1795 their failure was evident.
The second part of the book is a detailed analysis of the opera and ballet repertoire, personnel, management, costumes, staging practices, and finances of the company, based on the Bedford archive and a wealth of hitherto unused sources. What emerges is the fullest operational analysis ever published of any pre-nineteenth-century English theatre or opera company.
a fascinating read, constantly throwing up vivid insights into London life of the time, often with a dry wit ... What has given this book the edge over others on the subject is the discovery by the authors of what they term a massive cache of opera manuscripts in the Bedford Estates Office (London) in 1985.
Table of Contents:
A Note on Names, Titles, Quotation Policy, and Currency
Abbreviations and Works Frequently Cited
Part 1: The Pantheon and the History of Opera in London, 1789-1795
The Establishment of the Pantheon Opera
The Pantheon Experiment, 1790-91
The Fire and the Little Haymarket Season, 1791-92
The Return to the King's Theatre, Haymarket. 1792-1795
Epilogue
Part 2: The Pantheon Enterprise: Architecture, Production, Repertoire, and Finances
Introduction
The Architecture of the Pantheon Opera-House
Departmental Organization, Treasurer, House Servants, and Tradesmen
The Production Process
The Opera
The Ballet
Finances
Part 3: Appendices
I. Personnel and Tradesmen
II. Selected Contracts
III. The Pantheon Scene Inventory
IV. The Wardrobe Book
V. Versions of La locanda
VI. Subscribers
VII. Chancery and Exchequer Lawsuits Concerning the Opera
VIII. A Short Catalogue of the Bedford Opera Papers
Index