Max Maretzek Italian Opera Company
The Max Maretzek Italian Opera Company (sometimes referred to as the Italian Opera Company, the Italian Grand Opera Company, or Academy of Music Opera Company) was a touring American opera company that performed throughout the United States from 1849 to 1878.[1] The first major opera company in Manhattan and one of the first important companies in the United States, it had a long association with the Academy of Music in New York City where it presented an annual season of opera from 1854 until the company's demise in 1878.[1] There the company performed the United States premieres of Rigoletto, Il trovatore, and La traviata among other works.
The company also presented an annual season of opera at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia from 1857 to 1873, in addition to touring throughout the United States and to Cuba and Mexico. Musicologist George Whitney Martin described the company as the only opera company in the United States to perform with a full opera orchestra during the Civil War era and as "possibly the country's strongest" opera company in its day.[2]
History
The Max Maretzek Italian Opera Company was founded in 1849 by impresario Max Maretzek, a Czech violinist and composer who had previously served as the chorus master and an assistant conductor at the Royal Opera House in London from 1844 to 1848, and had come to America in 1848 to become the music director of the Astor Opera House in New York City.[3] Dissatisfied with the singers at Astor, Maretzek went to Europe to create a second company of singers, initially to provide one season of operatic entertainment in 1849–1850 for performances in Boston and at the Astor Opera House. Maretzek described his hand picked group of European artists as vastly superior to the resident artists that were currently engaged at the Astor Opera House, and it was this group that ultimately became the Max Maretzek Italian Opera Company.[4][5] The group of singers was led by soprano Teresa Parodi, whom Maretzek selected in hopes of rivaling P. T. Barnum's prima donna, soprano Jenny Lind.[6]
After the
In 1851 Maretzek lost Parodi to his rival, Max Strakosch (brother of
On October 2, 1854 the Max Maretzek Italian Opera Company performed Bellini's
In 1855 Maretzek's company toured to The Boston Theatre to perform a season of opera which included the Boston premiere of Rigoletto on June 8, 1855. The company also performed that work for its San Francisco premiere in 1860.[19] The company returned to the Boston Theatre in 1863–1864 to perform another season of opera which included the Boston premieres of Verdi's I due Foscari and Gounod's Faust.[20] On September 24, 1856 the company performed the United States premiere of Meyerbeer's L'étoile du nord at the New York Academy of Music.[21] In 1868 Maretzek's company merged with rival touring company, the Max Strakosch Italian Opera Company.[22]
Other notable artists who performed with the company include Alessandro Amodio, Luigi Arditi, Cesare Badiali, Carl Bergmann, Pauline Colson, Marietta Gazzaniga, Isabella Hinckley, Clara Louise Kellogg, Salvatore Patti , Giorgio Ronconi, Lorenzo Salvi,[23] Giorgio Stigelli, and Minnie Hauk.[24]
References
- ^ a b Schonberg 1969, p. 222
- ^ a b Martin 2011, p. 81
- ^ Preston 2001, p. 149.
- ^ Brodsky Lawrence 1995, p. 4.
- ^ Preston 2001, p. 152.
- ^ a b Martin 2011, p. 146
- ^ "Max Maretzek". Werner's Magazine. Vol. 19. Music Teachers National Association. 1897. p. 561.
- ^ Brodsky Lawrence 1995, p. 3.
- ^ Mathews 1897, p. 612–613.
- ^ Brodsky Lawrence 1995, p. 314.
- ^ Martin 2011, p. 184.
- ^ Newman 2010, p. 75.
- ^ Wilson 1968, pp. 118–125.
- ^ Preston 2001, pp. 195–208.
- ^ Preston 2001, p. 167.
- ^ Martin 2011, p. 350.
- ^ Thompson & Slonimsky 1956, p. 6.
- ^ "The Philadelphia Academy of Music". The New York Times. March 26, 1857.
- ^ Martin 2011, pp. 202–206.
- ^ Bacon & Herndon 1896, p. 156.
- ^ Brodsky Lawrence 1995, p. 695.
- ^ George Lascelles (1956). "Opera in 19th Century America". Opera. Vol. 7. p. 343.
- ^ Newman 2010, p. 35.
- ISBN 9780807150849.
Sources
- Bacon, Edwin M.; Herndon, Richard, eds. (1896). "Marshall, Wyzeman". Men of Progress: One Thousand Biographical Sketches and Portraits of Leaders in Business and Professional Life in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. New England Magazine. p. 156 – via Internet Archive.
Boston Theatre Max Maretzek.
- ISBN 9780226470115.
- Mathews, W. S. B. (1897). Music: A Monthly Magazine, Devoted to the Art, Science, Technic and Literature of Music. Vol. 12. pp. 612–613.
- Martin, George Whitney (2011). Verdi in America: Oberto Through Rigoletto. University Rochester Press. ISBN 9781580463881.
- Newman, Nancy (2010). Good Music for a Free People: The Germania Musical Society in Nineteenth-century America. University Rochester Press. ISBN 9781580463454.
- Preston, Katherine K. (2001). Opera on the Road: Traveling Opera Troupes in the United States, 1825–60. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 9780252070020.
- Schonberg, Harold C. (November 23, 1969). "Even the Prima Donna Blushed'" (PDF). The New York Times.
- Thompson, Oscar; Slonimsky, Nicolas (1956). The International Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians. Dodd, Mead & Co.
- Wilson, Arthur Herman (1968). A History of the Philadelphia Theatre, 1835 to 1855. Greenwood Press.