At Versailles, conductor Leonardo García-Alarcón, stage director Jean-Yves Ruf, and the ensemble Cappella Mediterranea revived Francesco Sacrati’s La Finta Pazza, the Italian opera first performed in Paris under the patronage of Cardinal Mazarin. Their production casts new light on what Sacrati brought to the nascent art of opera—above all, a form of theatre in which music mirrored gesture and emotion with unprecedented freedom. Here we discover one of the earliest “mad scenes” in operatic history, written for the character of Deidamia, and a mastery of contrast perfectly suited to the Venetian taste for grand spectacle.
A Work that Crossed the Alps
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