Lo sposo deluso

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Lo sposo deluso, ossia La rivalità di tre donne per un solo amante (Den lurade brudgummen eller Tre kvinnors rivalitet om en älskare) (K. 430/424) är en ofullbordad opera buffa i två akter med musik av Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart och libretto av en okänd författare.

Historia

Mozart arbetade sannolikt på operan under andra halvåret 1783. Endast en ouvertyr som övergår i en kvartett, två arior i skissformat och en fullbordad terzett fullbordades. Det finns inga referenser till verket i Mozarts brev och inga bevis för att Lorenzo Da Ponte skulle ha varit författaren. Den 15 november 1797, sex år efter Mozarts död, arrangerade Mozarts änka Constanze så att ouvertyren och öppningskvartetten framfördes i Prag vid en konsert. De sångare för vilka Mozart skrev operan skulle senare medverka vid premiären av Figaros bröllop 1786.[1]

Personer

  • Bocconio Papparelli (bas)
  • Eugenia (sopran)
  • Don Asdrubale (tenor)
  • Bettina (sopran)
  • Pulcherio (tenor)
  • Gervasio (bas)
  • Metilde (sopran)

Handling

Den rike men dumme Bocconio Papparelli vill gifta sig med den vackra men stolta Eugenia. Hon har tidigare älskats av den bråkige officeren Don Asdrubale, men som nu älskas av Bocconios brorsdotter Bettina.

Källor

Noter

  1. ^ The New Penguin Opera Guide. London: Penguin Books. 1997. sid. 608. ISBN 0-140-51475-9 

Tryckta källor

  • Törnblom, Folke H. (1991). Mozart. Köchel 1-626. Bokförlaget Legenda. ISBN 91-582-1641-3 


Media som används på denna webbplats

Wolfgang-amadeus-mozart 1.jpg

This posthumous portrait of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was painted by Barbara Kraft at the request of Joseph Sonnleithner in 1819, long after Mozart died. Sonnleithner, who was making a "collection of portraits in oils of well-known composers" (Deutsch) wrote to Mozart's still-living sister Maria Anna ("Nannerl"), asking her to lend a picture to Kraft (a well-known artist working in Salzburg). Here is part of Nannerl's reply:

... [her friend ] Councillor von Drossdick ... sent the artist to me to see all 3 [of my] pictures [of Mozart], the one that was painted when he came back from the Italian journey is the oldest, he was then just 16 years old, but as he had just got up from a serious illness, the picture looks sickly and very yellow; the picture in the family portrait when he was 22 years old is very good, and the miniature, when he was 26 years old, is the most recent I have, I therefore shewed this one to the painter first; it seemed to me from her silence that is would not be very easy to enlarge it, I therefore had to shew her the family portrait and the other one, too. ... she wants to take her copy from the family portrait and introduce only those features from the small picture which make him look somewhat older than in the big picture."

Deutsch identifies the three pictures as:

  1. "Perhaps" the portrait by Knoller, Milan 1773. [1]
  2. The family portrait by della Croce.
  3. A lost small version of the famous portrait by Joseph Lange.
For present purposes, this implies that Kraft painted this with some basis to go on (and not completely out of her head, as the painter of this ridiculous picture did). Also, it tells us that Nannerl thought that the della Croce picture was "very good".
Mozart Lange.png
Detail of the unfinished portrait of Mozart by Joseph Lange.