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Tweet! Still need Tosca tickets? Take the leap! Sign up for our e-news (http://is.gd/4WoDG) by 11am tomorrow & learn how to save 20% on tickets.

November 16, 2009 at 11:09 am Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

November 16, 2009

Don’t Miss Scandalous Savings on Tosca Tickets

by Florentine Opera

Take the leap – if you still need your tickets to Tosca this weekend and you sign up for our E-news by tomorrow at  11:00 am, you’ll find out how to save 20% on tickets in an email sent tomorrow!

GO HERE to sign up for e-news (and watch your inbox tomorrow around 12:00 noon for your code to save 20% on your online purchase).

GO HERE to learn more about the production.

(NOTE: If you already receive our email updates, keep an eye on your inbox tomorrow for the savings code).

Tweet! Feeling festive? Join us tonight @ 6pm at Bayshore Mall for "Brilliant Night, Dazzling Lights" in TownSquare. More at: http://is.gd/4UjxI

November 13, 2009 at 10:31 am Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

Tweet! In case you were worried, luckily today is our artists' day off...so no TOSCA rehearsal on Friday the 13th. Probably good for all involved.

November 13, 2009 at 10:25 am Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

Tweet! Steve Spice of the @shepherdexpress explores the history of Tosca, and drops some hints about our upcoming production: http://is.gd/4TCat

November 12, 2009 at 2:36 pm Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

Tweet! Thanks for the welcome, @WoodlandPattern - Hi, neighbor! (Are we all humming the Mr. Rogers Neighborhood theme song yet? :)

November 10, 2009 at 5:04 pm Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

Tweet! Wondering how we're settling into Riverwest and how preparations for Tosca next wknd are going in our new Opera Center?: http://is.gd/4RNzQ

November 10, 2009 at 9:20 am Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

Tweet! Looking for a place to find the latest on great specials/steals around Milwaukee? Check out the new @TCDeals, brought to you by @TCDigest.

November 9, 2009 at 3:38 pm Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

Tweet! Do you know what next week is? RT @operaamerica: http://bit.ly/3C3eHK

November 9, 2009 at 2:56 pm Comments (0) Retweet this Follow the Florentine Opera on Twitter

November 9, 2009

Notes from the Maestro: Puccini’s Tosca

by Maestro Joseph Rescigno

Picture 5by Maestro Joseph Rescigno

Joseph Rescigno returns to the Florentine Opera Company to conduct Tosca, November 20, 21 and 22, 2009.
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Tosca and Tabarro are probably Puccini’s most veristic operas. That is, his most violent and gritty. In La Bohème, Madama Butterfly, and Suor Angelica, his writing tends to be more Impressionistic and the stories a bit more sentimental. In Manon Lescaut and Fanciulla del West, the orchestration is denser and the stories, while certainly dramatic, are less savage. Gianni Schicchi, Turandot, and La Rondine are atypical of most of his output—a comedy, a Chinese pageant based on a commedia del arte play, and an operetta somewhat in the Viennese manner.

For good reason, we remember the brass in Tosca. But the exquisite tone painting of an awakening Rome that opens Act III is as delicate and gentle as any romantic French canvas. Indeed, once again, we can see that Puccini was born [1858-1924] within a few years of both Richard Strauss [1864-1949] and Claude Debussy [1862-1918]. Yet, he is never an imitator—any more than he is an imitator of Giuseppe Verdi and Vincenzo Bellini, firmly rooted as he is in that heritage. He sounds like Puccini and nobody else.

In fact, in Tosca, Puccini gives us considerable breadth: In Act I alone, we have Angelotti fleeing for his life from the secret police, a love scene with some foreshadowing of Floria Tosca’s fatal jealousy, the alter boys horsing around, and a nearly full picture of the villain Scarpia.

With Scarpia, this opera includes the dilemma encountered in more than one play or film: that the villain can end up seeming the most engaging, or at least most interesting. And he is interesting, with music to match. Baron Scarpia is an astute, if evil, manipulator – completely at ease with his power. Scarpia’s persona can seem almost elegant while he wreaks havoc in the lives of others.

Floria Tosca herself seems to be something of a break from the classic, self-sacrificing Puccini heroine. This is true only up to a point, though. It is a mistake to portray her as a street-fighter. She is a delicate and elegant lady, driven to extremes by outside forces. While we think of Puccini heroines as fighting fatal diseases and the despair of abandonment by thoughtless and feckless lovers, Floria Tosca is an innocent with the forces of a police state arrayed against her.

The greatest challenge in doing Tosca for me, then, is to balance the violent, driving music (beginning of Act I and much of the music while Scarpia is onstage) so that it has propulsion without excessive weight. To balance the violence of Scarpia, Puccini gives us the flirtatious sweetness of the Act I love duet and the poetic calm of the opening pages of Act III. It is tempting to lapse into sentimentality with these breaks in the tension and that, too, is a mistake.

The first Tosca in my memory is from the late Fifties at the Metropolitan Opera, with Maria Callas in the title role and Dimitri Mitropoulos conducting. What I remember is a performance of considerable energy and drive. My favorite recording—and perhaps the greatest opera recording I know of is, also, with Maria Callas joined by Giuseppe di Stefano and Tito Gobbi, with Victor de Sabata conducting. All three singers are in their prime on this recording and, again, the work has tremendous drive.

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