Giuseppe de Begnis (1793-10 August 1849) was an Italian
operatic
bass
Bass or Basses may refer to:
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* Bass (fish), various saltwater and freshwater species
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* Bass (sound), describing low-frequency sound or one of several instruments in the bass range:
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singer.
[ Born in ]Lugo di Romagna
Lugo ( rgn, Lùgh) is a town and ''comune'' in the northern Italian region of Emilia-Romagna, in the province of Ravenna.
History
A settlement in where is now the city is mentioned for the first time in 782 AD, but the names Lucus appears only in ...
, he started his musical education when he was 7 years old, under Padre Bongiovanni, and sang soprano in the church. At age 15 he had serious problems with his voice and began studying acting under Mandini, a famous actor of the time. His father did not want Giuseppe to become a comedian and in due course the young man became a pupil of the composer Giovanni Morandi, the husband of the singer Rosa Morandi.
[Saintsbury 1827, p. 203]
In the autumn of 1816 he married the soprano Giuseppina Ronzi de Begnis in Bologna and they were together until 1825. His countenance was seriously affected by smallpox, but he was skilled at applying make-up and on stage he gave no evidence of facial disfigurement.
By 1815 he had established himself in a promising career which continued until the late 1820s in Italy, France and London and then in Northern Ireland from 1829 where he also ran an opera company. He continued to sing and manage opera companies in Scotland and from New York from 1838, where he lived until his death in 1849.[ He has been described as "an ideal interpreter of Rossini's comic operas".][
]
Operatic career
Beginnings, 1813 to 1817
De Begnis made his debut in Modena during the Carnival 1813 season as a primo buffo in Stefano Pavesi's ''Ser Marcantonio''.[Forbes, 1998, p. 377] He was greeted by generous applause and this proved to him that he was moving in the right direction. From there he went to Forli and Rimini, ending the first year of his professional career again in Modena. For the new carnival season he was in Siena for the inauguration of the newly built Teatro degli Accademici Rozzi. There he sang the most demanding role of Uberto in Ferdinando Paër's ''Agnese'' – an opera semi-seria that includes one of the earliest and most dramatic mad scenes. This was a challenge that did not intimidate the young de Begnis because he had studied and refined his acting; in fact, the audience responded with enthusiasm and he was praised "both as an actor and singer".[
This was followed by an equally successful Selim in ]Rossini
Gioachino Antonio Rossini (29 February 1792 – 13 November 1868) was an Italian composer who gained fame for his 39 operas, although he also wrote many songs, some chamber music and piano pieces, and some sacred music. He set new standards f ...
's '' Il Turco in Italia''. His familiarization with stage and public, as well as with colleagues and musicians, was a learning process that enabled him to aim higher. From Tuscany he moved on to Ferrara, Badia, and Trieste. At the Teatro Nuovo of the latter town he sang Don Placenzio in Luigi Caruso's ''Così si fa alle donne'', followed by Carlo Coccia's farsa per musica ''La Matilde''; Giuseppe Farinelli's ''Teresa e Claudio''; Pietro Carlo Guglielmi's ''Don Papirio''; and Filippo Celli's ''Don Timonella di Piacenza''.[
During the 1815–1816 carnival season, on 17 February 1816, he made his debut at La Scala in ]Simone Mayr
Johann(es) Simon Mayr (also spelled Majer, Mayer, Maier), also known in Italian as Giovanni Simone Mayr or Simone Mayr (14 June 1763 – 2 December 1845), was a German composer. His music reflects the transition from the Classical to the ...
's '' Ginevra di Scozia''.[ This was only a short engagement; but for most of the carnival season he was busy closer to home at Cesena where he impressed the audience with his performance in Valentino Fioravanti's dramma giocoso per musica ''Il bello piace a tutti''. He delivered his main aria in the old rondo style imitating the celebrated mezzo-soprano castrato Gaspare Pacchierotti; his falsetto stunned the public and an ovation followed. De Begnis went on to ]Vincenzo Pucitta
Vincenzo Pucitta (or Puccitta) (17 February 1778 – 20 December 1861) was a nineteenth-century Italian composer. Born in Civitavecchia, he wrote more than 20 operas during his career. One of his works, ''La Vestale'', after its premiere ...
's farsa giocosa per musica ''La burla fortunata ossia I due prigionieri'', and concluded the carnival season with the opera buffa ''La guerra aperta'' by Pietro Carlo Guglielmi. The latter he repeated in Mantova during spring, but before that, he appeared for the first time in Rossini's '' L'Italiana in Algeri'' as the bey of Algiers, Mustafà. The Rossini fever that was sweeping Italy had reached Udine, where in the summer de Begnis repeated his Mustafà, followed by ''L'inganno felice''.
Rossini's relationship with the de Begnis couple, 1817 to 1819
Between 1802 and 1804 Rossini lived in Lugo, his father's birthplace and Giuseppe de Begnis' birthplace. Both studied music in Lugo, Giuseppe being only one year younger than Gioachino. How much this coincidence influenced Giuseppe's career may never be known, but certainly Lugo di Romagna was, at the time, a small town where everyone knew each other. The Morandis were good friends of Giacchino Rossini, and it was probably at their suggestion that the composer offered Giuseppe a magnificent opportunity, creating the role of Dandini for him in '' La cenerentola''. This opera premiered in Rome on 25 January 1817 and ran for twenty consecutive performances; it was to remain in his repertory for the rest of his life.
That same year while in Verona, the de Begnis couple met a very young Donizetti. In the course of time his voice matured and his technique became more sophisticated and as early as 1821 he was described as baritone. In 1818, for the grand inauguration of the newly built Teatro Nuovo in Pesaro, Rossini wanted Isabella Colbran and Andrea Nozzari—who had appeared in the Naples premiere—for a new production of his '' Armida''. However budget constraints forced him to downsize and when an attempt to secure his friend Rosa Morandi for '' La gazza ladra'' failed, he engaged Giuseppina Ronzi de Begnis as Ninetta and, at a reduced fee, her husband Giuseppe de Begnis as the Mayor. This move left him with enough money to engage a first class tenor like Alberico Curioni for the role of Giannetto.[Osborne 2007, p. 55]
Paris, 1819 to 1822
In January 1819, Giuseppe and Giuseppina moved to Paris where they sang for the re-opening of the Théâtre Italien in the Parisian premiere of Ferdinando Paër's dramma semi-serio ''I Fuoriusciti di Firenze'' on 20 March. The opera received a good review in ''Le Moniteur Universel'', and the '' Journal de Paris'' praised Giuseppe for his Uberto and Giuseppina for her Isabella. In due course, by popular demand, Paër expanded Giuseppe's role by adding a scena and an aria expressly for him in Act 1.
In the meantime Rossini had been informed that the de Begnises had been secured for '' La gazza ladra''. The prospects were encouraging and on 5 May the couple sang in Pietro Alessandro Guglielmi
Pietro Alessandro Guglielmi (9 December 1728 – 19 November 1804) was an Italian opera composer of the classical period.
Biography
Guglielmi was born into the Guglielmi family of musicians in Massa. His father, Jacopo Guglielmi, was a compos ...
's ''La pastorella nobile
''La pastorella nobile'' (''The Noble Shepherdess'') is an ''commedia per musica'' in two acts by Pietro Alessandro Guglielmi. The Italian libretto was by Francesco Saverio Zini.
Performance history
''La pastorella nobile'' was first performed a ...
''. Positive reviews greeted them during the summer of the same year when they sang in Domenico Cimarosa's '' Il matrimonio segreto'' and Rossini's '' Il Turco in Italia''. On 3 April 1821 the couple was busy singing in Rossini's ''La Pietra del Paragone'': Giuseppe sang Marforio and Giuseppina sang Clarice. At the end of 1821 Giuseppe was in Bologna for the Carnival season and there he sang in Rossini's '' La gazza ladra'' at the Teatro Comunale di Bologna.
London and Edinburgh, 1822 to 1832
In April 1822 the de Begnises arrived in London, where their debut took place that summer in the well-tested ''Il Turco in Italia''. As would be expected, the public and critics were enchanted with Giuseppina, but Giuseppe was equally praised. ''The Times'' critic, Thomas M. Alsager, described his voice as "barytone, not powerful, but extremely pure and flexible".[Ferner 1994, pp. 188–189]
That same first London season, he sang in the London premiere of Rossini's '' Matilde di Shabran''.[
The de Begnises returned the following season in ''Il Turco in Italia'' and during the same year Giuseppe sang Fernando in ''La gazza ladra''. On 10 September 1823 he sang in Rossini's '']Otello
''Otello'' () is an opera in four acts by Giuseppe Verdi to an Italian libretto by Arrigo Boito, based on Shakespeare's play ''Othello''. It was Verdi's penultimate opera, first performed at the Teatro alla Scala, Milan, on 5 February 1887.
Th ...
''. Still in London in 1824, he appeared as Leporello in ''Don Giovanni
''Don Giovanni'' (; K. 527; Vienna (1788) title: , literally ''The Rake Punished, or Don Giovanni'') is an opera in two acts with music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart to an Italian libretto by Lorenzo Da Ponte. Its subject is a centuries-old Spanis ...
'' receiving good reviews;[ this role remained in his repertory and he sang the role in Scotland in 1832. A real war-horse for Giuseppe was his Don Febeo in ]Simone Mayr
Johann(es) Simon Mayr (also spelled Majer, Mayer, Maier), also known in Italian as Giovanni Simone Mayr or Simone Mayr (14 June 1763 – 2 December 1845), was a German composer. His music reflects the transition from the Classical to the ...
's ''Che originali'' renamed ''Il fanatico per la musica'' which he sang throughout his career. In 1825 he appeared in Mercadante's ''Elisa e Claudio'' at Faenza; that same year and in the following few years, Count Almaviva in '' Le nozze di Figaro'' and Alfonso in ''Così fan tutte
(''All Women Do It, or The School for Lovers''), K. 588, is an opera buffa in two acts by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. It was first performed on 26 January 1790 at the Burgtheater in Vienna, Austria. The libretto was written by Lorenzo Da Ponte w ...
'' were roles in which he was frequently heard. Similarly, in 1826, he made appearances as Don Magnifico in '' La cenerentola'', in 1827 it was as Mustapha in Giovanni Pacini
Giovanni Pacini (11 February 17966 December 1867) was an Italian composer, best known for his operas. Pacini was born in Catania, Sicily, the son of the buffo Luigi Pacini, who was to appear in the premieres of many of Giovanni's operas. The fami ...
's ''La Schiava in Bagdad'',[ with Caradori, Zuchelli and Curioni, as well as in '' Il Turco in Italia'' and '' La gazza ladra''.
In May/June 1827, he returned to Italy for a brief period to sing in ''Matilde di Shabran'' and then in Giuseppe Farinelli's ''Camilla'' and ''La Locandiera''. In 1827, his last season at the King's Theatre in London, he was seen again in Pacini's ''La schiava di Bagdad''.][ After this, he led a touring company to Scotland.]["Giuseppe de Begnis": Details of his life and operas performed in Edinburgh, late 1827 to 1832]
on operascotland.org
De Begnis began teaching acting at the Royal Academy of Music
The Royal Academy of Music (RAM) in London, England, is the oldest conservatoire in the UK, founded in 1822 by John Fane and Nicolas-Charles Bochsa. It received its royal charter in 1830 from King George IV with the support of the first Duke of ...
in London in 1828.
De Begnis as opera company artistic director, 1823 to 1832
Meanwhile, in 1823, he had become the artistic director of Italian opera seasons in Bath, a post he held until 1824. Then he held the same post in Edinburgh from 1827 to 1828. ''La cenerentola'' had a special place in his heart and in March 1831, when this opera returned at The King's Theatre in London, a great surprise awaited the public with Lablache singing Dandini and de Begnis as Don Magnifico: "The duet between them, "Un segreto d'importanza" was a rich unctuous piece of comic acting". This situation occurred again in 1833, when Vincenzo Galli sang Dandini opposite to de Begnis's Don Magnifico. In both instances the critics would have preferred a switch of the roles, although they credited de Begnis with doing an excellent job.
Dublin 1829 to 1837
Appearing in Dublin in 1829, de Begnis sang Figaro in ''Il Barbiere di Siviglia'' to great acclaim.[Lablache 2009, p. 280] Later, returning to Dublin between 1834 and 1837, his continued presence there led to his becoming the impresario who produced the first professionally managed Italian opera company in Northern Ireland. Furthermore, he was long remembered for being the first Giorgio in ''I Puritani'' on 4 February 1837:[ his ''Suoni la tromba'' with Berrettoni was very highly regarded.][Levy and O'Rourke 1880, p. 94]
America, 1838 until his death
In 1838 Giuseppe de Begnis travelled to the United States where he was to remain for the rest of his life. His reputation had preceded him and his New York debut took place on 18 September at the National Theatre where he shone as Figaro in a grand scene from ''Il Barbiere di Siviglia''; the following night he sang his time-tested ''Il fanatico per la musica''. Don Febeo and Figaro remained his most applauded roles in the United States. On 3 November 1838, he gave a concert in Boston at the Boylston Hall.
The positive reception which de Begnis received is confirmed by the contemporary American critic Richard Grant White
Richard Grant White (May 23, 1822 – April 8, 1885) was one of the foremost literary and musical critics of his day. He was also a prominent Shakespearean scholar, journalist, social critic, and lawyer, who was born and died in New York City.''A ...
:
:Among the artists of reputation who were known in the second quarter of this century, Giuseppe de Begnis was indisputably the great ''buffo'' of his time. He was a singer of the old Italian school, had been thoroughly trained in music from his childhood up, and would have been an accomplished artist even without his vocal gifts and his comic opera. With him, buffo-singing did not mean buffoonery, and he thought great scorn of those who descended to low tricks to promote laughter... By a mere look he sometimes produced an irresistibly comical effect; and although his voice was rich and smooth, its inflections conveyed ludicrous ideas with a delicacy and quickness which pierced his audiences with laughter. His principal operas were ''II Barbiere'' and ''Il fanatico per la musica''.
Based in New York and living and working there, de Begnis' experience was typical of Italian and other companies of the period which travelled to present performances in various parts of the East Coast, including Boston and other cities. For a while he successfully managed Palmo's Opera House
Palmo's Opera House (afterword Burton's Theater and the Chambers Street Theatre) was a 19th-century theatre in Manhattan, New York that was located on Chambers Street (Manhattan), Chambers Street between Broadway (Manhattan), Broadway and Centre ...
and given his entrepreneurial skills, in 1842 he made a concerted effort to organize an opera season in New York but encountered a large number of obstacles. In the meantime he had compiled and published ''The Carcanet'', an anthology of vocal music. He made a living as a vocal teacher and in due course he started a profitable pedagogical venture with Madame Mecovino-Malone, an English mezzo soprano that had settled in New York. As late as 1844 he was Figaro in ''Il Barbiere di Siviglia'' at Palmo's Opera House in April and in July; the latter was an eleventh hour notice to replace an indisposed baritone and save the night for Cinti-Domoreau who sang the Rosina.
De Begnis died in New York on 10 August 1849 after contracting cholera. Apparently he chose not to return to Europe by crossing the Atlantic again through fear of sea sickness.[ His obituary placed him at the same level of Lablache. According to a British magazine, de Begnis left a large fortune for unnamed heirs, and therefore the estate was passed on to the public administrator of New York, in default of a will. However, in November 1849, Giuseppina Ronzi de Begnis placed a claim on the husband's estate which was granted after her death to her daughter Clotilde Fraschini in September 1854.][Coldham 1989, p. 85]
References
Sources
*Brodsky, Vera, (1988), ''Strong on Music: The New York Music Scene in the days of George Templeton Strong'', Vol. 1. University of Chicago Press
*Coldham, Peter Wilson, (1989) ''American Wills and Administrations in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury 1610–1857'', Baltimore.
*Castellani, Giuliano, (2009), ''Ferdinando Paer: Biografia, Opere e Documenti degli anni parigini'', Bern: Peter Lang
*Ferner, Theodore (1994), ''Opera in London: Views of the Press, 1785–1830''. Southern Illinois University.
*Forbes, Elizabeth, (1998), “Begnis, Giuseppe de" in Stanley Sadie
Stanley John Sadie (; 30 October 1930 – 21 March 2005) was an influential and prolific British musicologist, music critic, and editor. He was editor of the sixth edition of the '' Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians'' (1980), which was publ ...
, (Ed.), '' The New Grove Dictionary of Opera'', Vol. One. London: MacMillan Publishers, Inc.
*Lablache Cheer, Clarissa, (2009), ''The Great Lablache: Nineteenth Century Operatic Superstar His Life and His Times'', Xlibris,
*Levy, Richard N.; O'Rourke, J. (1880), ''Annals of the Theatre Royal, Dublin, from Its Opening in 1821 to Its Destruction by Fire, February, 1880; With Occasional Notes and Observations''. Dublin. US: Nabu Press, 2010; UK: Read Books, 2008.
*Novello, J. Alfred (pub.) (1840), ''The Italian Opera in 1839: Its Latest Improvements and Existing Defects, Impartially Considered (1840)''. US: Kessinger Publishing, 2010.
Opera Scotland: "Giuseppe de Begnis":
details of his career in Scotland and elsewhere on operascotland.org.
*Osborne, Richard, (2007), ''Rossini'', New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press.
*Saintsbury, John H. (1827) ''A Dictionary of Musicians: from the Earliest Ages to the Present Time. Comprising the Most Important Biographical Contents of the works of Gerber, Choron, and Fayolle, Count Orloff, Dr. Burney, Sir John Hawkins, &c. &c.''. London: Sainsbury and Co.
*Schiavo, Giovanni E. (1947), ''Italian-American History'', Vol. I, New York
Further reading
*Campa, Cecilia (1997), "Giuseppe de Begnis" in '' Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani'', Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana 1925 forward. Online a
''Enciclopedia/arte lingua e letteratura''
Vol 33.
*Romani, Luigi (1862), ''Teatro alla Scala, Cronologia di tutti gli Spettacoli...con Annotazioni'', Milan, Pirola Publishers
External links
Begnis in "''Don Giovanni''"
on operascotland.org
{{DEFAULTSORT:Begnis, Giuseppe de
1793 births
1849 deaths
19th-century Italian male opera singers
Operatic basses
Italian basses
Italian emigrants to the United States
People from Lugo, Emilia-Romagna
Deaths from cholera
Infectious disease deaths in New York (state)