Tag: Giacomo Puccini

  • La Bohème A Christmas Eve Tragedy

    La Bohème A Christmas Eve Tragedy

    Giacomo Puccini’s opera “La bohème” opens in an artist’s garret on Christmas Eve. After Mimi and Rodolfo meet cute (she knocks on his door looking for a match for her candle), they join their friends on the boisterous streets of Paris for a good old-fashioned Latin Quarter Christmas. This effectively knocks out the first two acts.

    By Act III, their love is on the rocks. On a snowy night, Rodolfo confides to the painter Marcello that Mimi is slowly dying of consumption (tuberculosis). He loves her still, but he doesn’t have the money to take care of her, so he is feigning jealousy in an attempt to drive her into the arms of another. Mimi overhears, and apparently agrees to the split, but then the lovers decide it’s too horrible to part in winter. We know it’s just an excuse, though, so that they can stay together until spring.

    In Act IV, we have no idea what month it is, but it’s sometime later. Mimi shows up at the garret, and she is not well. The circle of bohemians offer comfort, each in their own way. Earrings are sold for a muff, and an overcoat is hocked for medicine. Left to themselves, Mimi and Rodolfo relive their past happiness, but the reunion is agonizingly brief. Their friends return, only just in time for everyone to dissolve into tears.

    Merry Christmas.


    On Puccini’s birthday, here’s a recording of André Kostelanetz (also born on this date) conducting a purely orchestral suite of highlights from “La bohème”:

    Mimi’s hands are cold, so Rodolfo goes to work. The old smoothie.

  • Gianni Schicchi From Opera Hero to Hellbound?

    Gianni Schicchi From Opera Hero to Hellbound?

    Here’s Gianni Schicchi as you’ve never seen him before.

    (Under)worlds away from Giacomo Puccini’s quick-witted, charming scapegrace, the Schicchi of Dante’s “Inferno” is condemned to hell for the very reason we cheer him in the opera – for impersonating Buoso Donati, in whose guise he alters Donati’s will, much to his own advantage.

    Of course, Dante’s wife happened to be a descendant of Donati, so you might say he had something of an axe to grind. Also, the celebrated poet being of noble ancestry, he would have had been predisposed to finding the peasant Schicchi’s behavior reprehensible.

    What would Lauretta think of her “babbino caro” now?


    Schicchi exhibiting some downright vampiric tendencies in William-Adolphe Bouguereau’s “Dante and Virgil,” 1850

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