Elvida is a melodramma or opera in one act by Gaetano Donizetti. Giovanni Schmidt wrote the Italian libretto. The opera was written as a pièce d'occasion for the birthday of Queen Maria of the Two Sicilies. The choice of subject matter was no doubt intended as an elegant acknowledgement of the Queen's Spanish ancestry. Donizetti received little financial reward for the work and, as a result, put the minimum of effort into its composition.
Elvida was first performed on 6 July 1826 at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples, but it "made little impression on the audience"Osborne 1994, pp. 162—63 After three performances, the piece lay forgotten until its performances and recordings in 2004.
| Elvida, a Castilian noblewoman | soprano | Henriette Méric-Lalande |
| Alfonso, a Castilian prince | tenor | Giovanni Battista Rubini |
| Amur, a Moorish chieftain | bass | Luigi Lablache |
| Zeidar, Amur's son | contralto | Brigida Lorenzani |
| Chorus: Spaniards, Moors, and soldiers | ||
Amur wants to have Elvida put to death, rather than allow her to be saved by Alfonso’s troops. However, Amur’s son, Zeidar, has fallen in love with their beautiful captive and begs his father to give her up to the approaching Spanish, if only to save the town from destruction. Zeidar pleads with Elvida to marry him, but she contemptuously rejects both his advances and his father’s threats. The Moors murdered her father, and Elvida longs for retribution. She is led away to a hidden dungeon.
The Castilian army is now at the gates of the town, Amur recognizes that further resistance is hopeless, but knowing that Moorish reinforcements are close at hand, he is determined to make his escape through a secret passage, taking Zeidar with him.
Amur curses his son for his betrayal, and at that moment word arrives that the Moorish reinforcements have been routed. In a magnanimous gesture Alfonso grants Zeidar his freedom and agrees to spare Amur’s life. There is general rejoicing as Alfonso announces his marriage to Elvida will take place on the following morning.
| 2004 | Massimiliano Fichera, Maria Pia Moriyon, Cristina Pastorello, Daniele Gaspari | Franco Piva, Orcestra e Coro Città di Adria (Recording of a performance in the Teatro di Adria, October) | CD: Bongiovanni Cat: 2370-3 |
| 2004 | Pietro Spagnoli, Jennifer Larmore, Annick Massis, Bruce Ford | Antonello Allemandi, London Philharmonic Orchestra and Geoffrey Mitchell Choir | CD: Opera Rara Cat: OR 29 |
Notes
Cited sources
Other sources
|
|