The Teatro di San Carlo is an opera house in Naples, Italy designed by the architects Giovanni Antonio Medrano and Angelo Carasale for the Bourbon monarch Carlo IV of Naples. Charles wanted to endow Naples with a new and larger theatre to replace the old and dilapidated Teatro San Bartolomeo of 1621.
The theatre was inaugurated on the 4 November 1737—the king’s name day—with a performance of Domenico Sarro’s Achille in Sciro, an opera based on the play by the famous poet and dramatist who went by the name of Metastasio. Sarro also conducted the orchestra in two ballets as intermezzi, created by Grossatesta. At the time, it was the largest opera house in the world, seating 3,300.
The new theatre was much admired for its architecture, its gold decorations, and the sumptuous blue upholstery (blue and gold being the official colours of the Bourbons).
Similarly the most prominent singers performed at the San Carlo, and many of them consolidated their fame in Naples, from Lucrezia Anguiari, called “La Cochetta”, to the renowned castrati Caffarelli (Gaetano Majorano), Farinelli (Carlo Broschi), and Gizziello (Gioacchino Conti—the three of them coming from the conservatories of Naples—to Gian Battista Velluti, the last castrato.
In 1845 there was additional refurbishment and, by 1854, the theatre’s interior appearance changed to the now-traditional red and gold. Apart from the creation of the orchestra pit suggested by Verdi in 1872, the installation of electricity in 1890, the subsequent abolition of the central chandelier and the construction of the new foyer and a new wing for dressing rooms, the theatre underwent no substantial changes until the bombing of the Second World War in 1943. However, the theatre was quickly repaired by the occupying Allied forces, and it re-opened within six months on 16 December 1943.
Regular singers of the period included Manuel Garcia and his daughter Maria Malibran, Giuditta Pasta, Isabella Colbran, Giovanni Battista Rubini, Domenico Donzelli and the two great French rivals Adolphe Nourrit and Gilbert Duprez—the inventor of the C from the chest.
After the composition of Zelmira, Rossini left Naples with Colbran who had previously been the lover of the theatre’s impresario, Domenico Barbaja. The couple were married shortly thereafter.
To replace Rossini, Barbaja signed up another rising star of Italian opera: Gaetano Donizetti. As artistic director of the royal opera houses, Donizetti remained in Naples from 1822 until 1838, composing sixteen operas for the theatre, among which Maria Stuarda (1834), Roberto Devereux (1837), Poliuto (1838) and the famous Lucia di Lammermoor (1835), written for soprano Tacchinardi-Persiani and for tenor Duprez.
Vincenzo Bellini, Sicilian by birth, also staged his first work, Bianca e Gernando, at the San Carlo.
Giuseppe Verdi was also associated with the theatre. In 1841, his Oberto Conte di San Bonifacio was performed there and in 1845 he wrote his first opera for the theatre, Alzira; a second, Luisa Miller, followed in 1849. His third should have been Gustavo III but it was forbidden at the last minute by the censor; it was later performed in Rome with the changed title of Un ballo in maschera. By the end of the nineteenth century and into the twentieth century, Giacomo Puccini and other composers of verismo operas, such as Mascagni, Leoncavallo, Giordano, and Cilea, staged their works there.
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