The Salle Ventadour (), a former Parisian theatre in the rue Neuve-Ventadour, now the rue Méhul (2nd arrondissement of Paris), was built between 1826 and 1829 for the Opéra-Comique, to designs by Jacques-Marie Huvé, a prominent architect. The original theatre had a capacity of 1,106, but was subsequently taken over by the Théâtre-Italien and expanded to a capacity of 1,295 in 1841, thereafter becoming perhaps most noteworthy as the theatre in which the majority of the operas of the Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi were first performed in France. When the Théâtre-Italien company went out of business in 1878, the theatre was converted to offices.
Harriet Smithson, the Irish actress who had married the French composer Hector Berlioz on 3 October 1833,Cairns (1999), p. 11. appeared with the Théâtre Nautique, opening on 22 November 1834 in a one-act pantomime put together by the resident choreographer Louis Henry. He called the concoction La derniére heure d'un condamné, and it used music by Cesare Pugni. The scenario took advantage of her talent for mad scenes: she had previously performed Ophelia in an English-language production of Shakespeare's Hamlet at the Théâtre de l'Odéon to great acclaim in 1827. The new piece was a pantomime, since Smithson's French was far from perfect (and remained so for the rest of her life).Cairns (1969), pp. 619–620; Barzun (1969) 1: 264; 2: 29. Unfortunately, this new performance was not as favorably received. Jules Janin, writing in the Journal des débats described it as consisting of "the two or three dozen contortions that are known as the art of mime" and complained that "they have cut Miss Smithson's tongue out".Cairns (1999), pp. 36–40. Berlioz anonymously wrote a positive review that appeared in the Gazette musicale but spent half of its time describing her previous appearance as Ophelia and the important influence it had had on the French style of acting. Not all the reviews were entirely negative: the English-language Galignani's Messenger praised Smithson, saying that the "single feature worth naming of this piece is the performance of Madame Berlioz, as the wife of the condamné, in which the agony and despair of such a situation is depicted with the fidelity and painful truth only within the reach of a perfect artiste." But apparently her performances were not enough to rescue the enterprise, and the Théâtre Nautique closed in 1835.
Besides opera, the Salle Ventadour was also sometimes used for concerts. Giaocchino Rossini's Stabat Mater received its premiere there on 7 January 1842.Rossini, Gioacchino; Tomlleri, Luciano, editor (1957). Stabat Mater per due soprani, tenore, basso, coro ed orchestra. Mainz: Eulenberg. . Richard Wagner conducted three concerts devoted to his own music, including extracts from The Flying Dutchman, Tannhäuser, Tristan und Isolde, and Lohengrin, on 25 January, and 1 and 8 February 1860.Wagner, Richard (1860). Concert de Richard Wagner 25. Dans l'impossibilité de faire entendre en entier ses opéras Le , l'auteur se permet d'offrir au public quelques lignes d'explication qui lui feront mieux comprendre le sens des morceaux détachés qu'il lui soumet aujourd'hui. Paris: Aubusson et Kugelmann. . Verdi conducted the Paris premiere of his Requiem on 30 May 1876.
The Théâtre-Italien shared the theater briefly, from 26 June to 4 July 1853, with the Opéra-Comique,Wild and Charlton (2005), p. 85. and from 16 March 1868 to 5 May 1868 the theater was shared with a new company directed by Léon Carvalho, which was an extension of his Théâtre Lyrique on the Place du Châtelet. The name Théâtre de la Renaissance was revived for the use of Carvalho's venture, in order to distinguish it from the Théâtre-Italien. Carvalho had overextended himself, however, and soon went bankrupt.Walsh 1981, pp. 235–238. The Théâtre-Italien also shared the theater with the Paris Opéra from 19 January to December 1874 (in the period after the Opéra's Salle Le Peletier burned down on 28 October 1873 and before the opening of the Opéra's new Palais Garnier on 5 January 1875).Langham Smith, Richard. "Paris. 5. 1870–1902." in Sadie (1992) 3: 874. Companies sharing the theatre usually performed on alternate nights.Apthorp, William F. (1892). "Paris theatres and concerts. II. The Opéra, the Opéra-Comique, and the Conservatoire." Scribner's Magazine 11: 350–365.
At the instigation of the French tenor Victor Capoul the first professional public performance of the opera Les amants de Vérone with text and music by the was mounted at the Salle Ventadour on 12 October 1878. The libretto follows Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet more closely than that of the opera by Gounod, but the marquis d'Ivry's opera suffered in comparison. Capoul sang Romeo, and the Belgian soprano Marie Heilbronn sang Juliet. The same singers later appeared in a production at Covent Garden which was performed three times beginning on 24 May 1879. The text was considered "coarse", and the music received a lukewarm response.Forbes, Elizabeth. "Ivry, Paul Xavier Désiré, Marquis d' Yrvid," in Sadie (1992) 2: 862–863.
After the Théâtre-Italien company went out of business in 1878, the Salle Ventadour was sold on 20 January 1879 and transformed into offices. The building has been primarily occupied by the Banque de France since 1893. Gustave Chouquet, writing in the 1900 edition of George Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, described the renovated building as follows: "its pediment, still decorated with statues of the Muses, now bears the words 'Banque d'escompte de Paris,' a truly exasperating sight".
A short visit by the Théâtre-Italien
Théâtre de la Renaissance
The Théâtre-Italien settles in
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