Isabeau of Bavaria and Charles VI at the Treaty of Troyes.jpg
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''Isabeau'' is a ''leggenda drammatica'' or opera in three parts by Pietro Mascagni, 1911, from an Italian
libretto A libretto (Italian for "booklet") is the text used in, or intended for, an extended musical work such as an opera, operetta, masque, oratorio, cantata or Musical theatre, musical. The term ''libretto'' is also sometimes used to refer to the t ...
by
Luigi Illica Luigi Illica (9 May 1857 – 16 December 1919) was an Italian librettist who wrote for Giacomo Puccini (usually with Giuseppe Giacosa), Pietro Mascagni, Alfredo Catalani, Umberto Giordano, Baron Alberto Franchetti and other important Italian co ...
. Mascagni conducted its first performance on 2 June 1911 at the Teatro Coliseo, Buenos Aires. A retelling of the medieval English legend of Lady Godiva, Mascagni described it in an interview as his attempt to "return to the romanticism which inspired so much of Italian opera."Girardi, Michelle
Grove Music Online">''Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Grove Music Online
'' "''Isabeau''" (Ed.) L. Macy. (By subscription). Retrieved on 22 March 2008


Roles


Synopsis

King Raimondo tries to find a husband for the princess Isabeau by holding a tournament, but she is unwilling to choose a husband. When the king forces her to ride naked through the city, the people refuse to look at her out of respect. Furthermore, they demand from the king an edict condemning to blindness anyone who dares to look at her. Unaware of the edict, the falconer Folco accidentally looks upon Isabeau during her ride and is arrested. When Isabeau visits him in prison, she falls in love with him and begs her father to pardon him. However, the king's minister stirs up the passions of the people who rise up in a vigilante mob and kill Folco. Isabeau kills herself over his dying body.Warrack, John & West, Ewan, "''Isabeau''" ''The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Opera'' Oxford University Press, 1996 ''Oxford Reference Online'' (Retrieved on March 22, 2008)


References

Notes Sources *Warrack, John & West, Ewan "Buenos Aires" ''The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Opera'' Oxford University Press, 1996 ''Oxford Reference Online'' (Retrieved on 22 March 2008) {{Authority control Italian-language operas Operas by Pietro Mascagni Operas 1911 operas Lady Godiva