Rossini’s
La Cenerentola is an opera that might never have been written without
the involvement of local police.
The
year 1816 saw Rossini juggling several assignments in a particularly hectic
period of his burgeoning musical career. Projects included a revival of L’Italiana
in Algeri in January; the premiere of Il barbieri di Siviglia in
February; a new cantata in April; and two more new operas in September and
December. It’s a shame railroads were not yet available, as Rossini was living
the commuter life, making frequent jaunts from Naples (where he was Director of
Royal Theaters) to Rome and back again.
A
big opportunity brought the composer to Rome: the impresario Pietro Cartoni offered
him a contract to create a new opera for the Teatro Valle on December 26 to
open the Carnival season. The terms included the generous fee of 500 scudi,
or about $30,000.
As
time passed, however, things got complicated. Rossini was expected to report to
Rome in October to meet with Cartoni and begin work in earnest. But delays
resulting from his over-crowded schedule pushed the start-up date to December
3; this caused the new opera to be moved from the first production of the
season to the second. Even December 3 proved impossible as it conflicted with
the premiere of Rossini’s Otello on December 4.
A
second snag involved a complete rejection of the original subject and
librettist chosen. The new opera was originally to be called Laurina alla
corte, with a libretto by Gaetano Rossi. At first, Rossini appeared pleased
with the drafts he received from Rossi, expressing praise for its
theatricality. But as October turned to November, Rossini seemed to lose
interest in the whole project, ignoring Cartoni and going incommunicado.
That’s
when the cops got involved.
Cartoni,
after what must have been several sleepless nights, requested that the Chief of
the Naples Police Force compel the wayward genius to comply with the contract
he’d signed or face the consequences. Resigned to his legal obligations,
Rossini finally showed up in Rome to begin work. But more problems were to
come!
The
draft of Laurina alla corte, the proposed libretto for Rome, ran afoul
of the censors. After fruitless attempts to avoid censorship without
drastically altering the story, the opera was abandoned. Another snag: Rossi
was no longer available, committed to another project. Cartoni now had a
composer, but no subject and no librettist, with the Carnival clock
tick-tocking ominously.
This
is when all parties agreed on the subject of the familiar fairy-tale Cinderella
at literally the last possible moment. You may wonder how this opera was
composed – and rehearsed! – in such a brief window of time.
The
answer is: Rossini and his new librettist Jacopo Ferretti, um, “borrowed” the
libretto of a recent Cinderella opera called Agatina, o La Virtù premiata
by Stefano Pavesi, staged at La Scala only two years earlier! Fortunately for
posterity, the concept of intellectual property was not yet in existence.
The
downside of Rossini’s procrastination is described in Herbert Weinstock’s
biography of the composer. With the music having been completed at such a late
date, there was insufficient time for the artists – oh, pity the artists – to
learn their roles. Ferretti wrote of the first performance that “all those
taking part in the performance on that fatal first night had rapid pulses and
the sweat of death dripping from their pallid foreheads.”
It
must have been a horrendous performance; it was greeted with catcalls from the
audience. Rossini predicted that once everyone learned their parts his Cinderella
would be fought over by prima donnas and performed all over Europe.
He
wasn’t wrong.
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