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Stream Tosca

22 January21 February 2021

Stream Tosca

22 January21 February 2021

Stream Tosca

22 January21 February 2021
Online only
Opera and music
Cancelled
Tosca © 2020 ROH. Photograph by Catherine Ashmore, 2009, 2011
0

Due to England's national lockdown, we must with sadness cancel all performances of Tosca. Those who have bought access to the live stream on 22 January will be contacted and refunded.

Language
Sung in Italian with English surtitles
#royaloperahouse
Season Principal

Mrs Aline Foriel-Destezet

Generous philanthropic support from

Melinda and Donald Quintin, Susan and John Singer, Beth Madison, Didier Tandy and the Friends of Covent Garden

Story

Stream Tosca

Rome in 1800 is in political chaos. Cesare Angelotti, a former consul of the short-lived Roman Republic, has escaped imprisonment, and seeks refuge in the church of Sant'Andrea della Valle. The painter and republican sympathizer Mario Cavaradossi promises to hide him at his country villa. Baron Scarpia, Rome's tyrannical Chief of Police, suspects that Cavaradossi has helped Angelotti to escape. He persuades the painter's opera singer lover Floria Tosca, whom he himself desires, that Cavaradossi has betrayed her. She leaves to confront Cavaradossi at his villa and Scarpia orders his men to follow her, in the hope they'll find Angelotti.

Scarpia arrests Cavaradossi, and tortures him in Tosca's presence until she reveals Angelotti's hiding place. Scarpia subsequently condemns Cavaradossi to death. Alone with Tosca, Scarpia tells her that he will save Cavaradossi - but only if Tosca spends the night with him. Will Tosca yield to the man she hates to save the man she loves?

Background

Due to England's national lockdown, we must with sadness cancel all performances of Tosca. Those who have bought access to the live stream on 22 January will be contacted and refunded.

Anna Netrebko returns to the Covent Garden stage, sharing the title role in Tosca with Saioa Hernández and Malin Bystrom in Puccini's great opera of passion and politics.

Puccini had toyed with setting Victorien Sardou's 'hit' play La Tosca (written for the great actress Sarah Bernhardt) from the early 1890s, but only began serious work following the premiere of La bohème in 1896. He employed Bohème's gifted librettists Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica to streamline Sardou's complicated plot and give depth to his rather stereotypical characters. The opera's premiere at Rome's Teatro Costanzi on 14 January 1900 was indifferently received by the critics, many of whom disliked Tosca's violence. However, the public loved it and it has remained hugely popular.

Puccini portrays the idealism of Tosca and her lover Cavaradossi through radiant, expansive music, including Act I's duet 'Qual occhio al mondo', Cavaradossi's ardent aria 'Recondita armonia' and Tosca's despairing Act II prayer 'Vissi d'arte'. Scarpia's music, by contrast, is dark and terrifying – from the demonic chords that open the opera to the violence of his Act II exchanges with Tosca. Jonathan Kent's production, with Paul Brown's stunning designs, perfectly evokes the troubled atmosphere of Rome in 1800 and Tosca's combination of sensuality and religious sincerity.

Antonio Pappano in rehearsal for Live from Covent Garden, 13 June 2020 ©2020 ROH. Photograph by Lara Cappelli

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