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Elena (Cavalli)

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1659 libretto

Elena[1][2] is a 1659 dramma per musica in a prologue and three acts by Francesco Cavalli. It is set to a libretto initiated by Giovanni Faustini (who died in 1651) and completed by Nicolò Minato, and it was first performed in Venice at the Teatro San Cassiano (the dedication is 26 December 1659). Elena was revived in 1661 in Palermo but then not heard again until 2013, at the Aix-en-Provence Festival.[3][4]

Just like many other operas by Cavalli, Elena includes a ballo, or an Italian dance which incorporates singers, choristers, and instrumentalists. However, it soon began to be replaced by something analogous to the intermedio, sometimes incorporating a chorus.[5]

Roles

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Character Voice Type
Discordia disguised as peace Soprano
Venus Soprano
Peace Soprano
Wealth Silent role
Truth Soprano
Love Silent role
Pallas Soprano
Abundance Silent role
Two Furies Silent role
Tyndareus Bass
Helena Soprano
Menelaus Soprano
Tesedo Tenor
Peritoo Alto
Hippolyta Soprano
Eurite Alto
Erginda Soprano
Diomedes Tenor
Eurypylus Tenor
Iro Tenor
Creon Tenor
Menesteo Soprano
Antilochus Tenor
Castore Soprano
Pollux Soprano
Neptune Bass
Choirs of Cerulean Deities Soprano, Contralto, Tenor
Argonauti e Schiavi Tenor, Bass

Plot

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The Greek prince Menelaus (nephew of the king of Crete Atreus) and Theseus, king of Athens, are in love with Helen, a woman of rare beauty, famous for the fire of Troy. Menelaus, to get closer to Helen, dresses as a woman to come and serve her by pretending to be an Amazon. One day Peritous, seeing him in women's clothes fighting with Elena and therefore believing him to be a woman, falls in love with her. Theseus kidnaps Helen, since he had sworn not to marry except with a daughter of Jupiter - and Helen was reputed to have been fathered by Jupiter in the guise of a swan. To kidnap Helen, he abandons Hippolyta, a prisoner received as a gift from Hercules and in love with Theseus, who when she goes to look for him discovers that he has kidnapped Helen and is therefore disdained and torn in her love for her. Helen will be freed by her brothers, Castor and Pollux; Hippolyta's affection strikes Theseus, who decides to marry her; Menelaus, having discovered himself, marries Helen.[6]

Recordings

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References

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  1. ^ Allacci, Leone; Cendoni, Giovanni; Zeno, Apostolo (1755). Drammaturgia di Lione Allacci: accresciuta e continuata fino all'anno MDCCLV (in Italian). Presso G. Pasquali.
  2. ^ operaramblings (2018-03-16). "Cavalli's Elena". operaramblings. Retrieved 2023-12-27.
  3. ^ "ELENA Opera di Francesco CAVALLI". 2021-09-12. Archived from the original on 2021-09-12. Retrieved 2023-12-27.
  4. ^ "Cavalli's Elena". www.medici.tv. Retrieved 2023-12-27.
  5. ^ Alm, Irene; Heller, Wendy; Harris-Warrick, Rebecca (2003). "Winged Feet and Mute Eloquence: Dance in Seventeenth-Century Venetian Opera". Cambridge Opera Journal. 15 (3): 216–280. doi:10.1017/S0954586703001733. ISSN 0954-5867. JSTOR 3878252.
  6. ^ "Digitale Bibliothek - Münchener Digitalisierungszentrum". daten.digitale-sammlungen.de. Retrieved 2023-12-27.
  7. ^ review