Eleonora Abbagnato – Puccini

Guest Étoile: ELEONORA ABBAGNATO

“Between Light and Nowhere”
by Ermanno Sbezzo

Choreography/Lighting
Ermanno Sbezzo

Music by
Giacomo Puccini
Preludio from Le Villi
Intermezzo from Suor Angelica

Costumes by
Anna Biagiotti
Orchestra del Festival Puccini

“Manon Lescaut, La Bohème, Tosca, Madama Butterfly…”
by Julien Lestel

Choreography
Julien Lestel

Music by
Giacomo Puccini

Costumes by
Patrick Murru

Lighting by
Lo-Ammy Vaimatapako

Dancers of Ballet Juliel Lestel:
Mara Whittington, Roxane Katrun, Ines Pagotto, Eva Bégué, Ingrid Lebreton, Alexandra Cardinale,
Maxence Chippaux, LouisPlazer, Celian Mael Bruni, Allan Géreaud, Timothée Rouby.

Opera in three acts

Libretto by
Guelfo Civinini e Carlo Zangarini

Music by
Giacomo Puccini

First performance New York, Metropolitan Theatre, 10 December 1910

staging
of the puccini festival

Conductor
Daniel Oren

La fanciulla del West is an opera in three acts by Giacomo Puccini. It was first performed to great acclaim at the Metropolitan Theatre in New York on 10 December 1910. The opera is inspired by David Belasco’s play The Girl of the Golden West. Puccini’s music is modern, detailed and emphatic, thanks in part to the use of the wind machine, which was cutting-edge at the time and produced raw, powerful sounds.

Synopsis:

Act I: California, 1850. Minnie is a lively and energetic girl who runs the Polka, a tavern frequented by miners working nearby: everyone is in love with her and frequents the tavern to drink and play cards. Even Sheriff Jack Rance loves her and declares his love, but the girl does not reciprocate. A stranger arrives, Dick Johnson, whom Minnie realises she has met before; the two fall in love. Meanwhile, the miners leave and go in search of a gang of criminals led by Ramerrez, while Minnie and Dick remain alone, declaring their love for each other.

Act II: The miners and the sheriff warn Minnie that the stranger is actually the bandit Ramerrez, who has come to the saloon to steal the miners’ gold. Outraged, Minnie kicks Dick Johnson out, and he is shot by the sheriff. Minnie, moved to pity and at the same time in love, hides him in her cabin, but he is found by Jack Rance. The girl proposes a deal to the sheriff: a game of poker; if he wins, he will have both her and the bandit. Minnie cheats, so her man is saved.

Act III: Dick Johnson is determined to abandon his life as an outlaw and tries to cover his tracks, but unfortunately the miners find him and prepare to hang him. Minnie tries to persuade the miners to spare the life of her beloved, who is ready to die, by recalling the moments they shared in the tavern. The miners are moved and release him, so the two lovers leave to start a new life together.