In the Beginning: Claudio Monteverdi’s The Coronation of Poppea

Musicologists have deemed Claudio Monteverdi’s The Coronation of Poppea the undisputed masterpiece of early 17-century opera. But usually in the same breath, they acknowledge they have trouble reconciling the work’s pioneering structure with questions about its meaning, pointing to a central problem surrounding the immorality and evil that overshadow Roman emperor Nerone’s love affair with Poppea and their triumphant collusion.

Setting aside concerns about why librettist Giovanni Francesco Busenello allows the couple’s lust and greed for power to override the fidelity of those closest to them, Jane Glover, music director of Chicago’s Music of the Baroque, has described Poppea as unparalleled in 17th-century opera in every other respect. In The New Monteverdi Companion, she calls its plot structure, musical variety and depth of characterization nothing short of brilliant. A close look at Poppea, the composer’s last dramatic work, offers a rare glimpse into the beginnings of opera, particularly as it evolved in Venice during a fertile period of theatrical experimentation in the early 1600s.

Poppea premiered in 1642 at the Teatro Giovanni e Paolo in Venice, only five years after Italy’s first public opera house, the Teatro San Cassiano, had opened—also in Venice. Previously, opera was a court entertainment, accessible only by aristocrats, court members, or invited guests.

What was early opera like? In the Norton/Grove History of Opera, Stanley Sadie reminds us that 17th-century Venetian audiences were drawn to the opera house to socialize as well as hear musical entertainment. Candles illuminated the theater where Poppea was first produced, and they burned throughout the performance. Early Venetian public theaters generally seated no more than one thousand people. Because Monteverdi created the roles of Nerone and Ottone (Poppea’s betrothed) for sopranos, castrati performed both roles, a standard practice from church tradition that carried over to the baroque stage.

In 2001, Opera Atelier’s period rendering of Poppea, staged by Houston Grand Opera in the intimate Cullen Theater, emulated a candlelit ballroom stage inside a Venetian palace, a plausible venue for an early private performance. To achieve a baroque atmosphere, the lighting designer merely dimmed the houselights. Footlights rested at the front edge of the stage as substitutes for the candles that would have provided the lighting in Monteverdi’s day. (Houston Grand Opera’s 2006 Poppea, starring powerhouse mezzo-soprano Susan Graham in the title role, looked quite different from the 2001 staging. It was performed in the much larger Brown Theater, with a larger orchestra, in the tradition of grand opera—much as it was performed after its rediscovery in the 1960s.)

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Article Author: Cynthia Greenwood

Cynthia Greenwood writes about books and the performing arts. She is the author of The Complete Idiot's Guide to Shakespeare's Plays (released in April 2008 by Penguin/Alpha Books). Currently she reviews books and plays for PlayShakespeare.com. …

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  • 1 - alessandro

    Mar 11, 2008 at 7:14 pm

    Bravo. Nice to read something about the forgotten Monteverdi! Thanks.

  • 2 - Cynthia Greenwood

    Mar 11, 2008 at 7:28 pm

    Thanks, Alessandro, for reading the piece and responding!

  • 3 - bliffle

    Mar 12, 2008 at 7:17 am

    It's good to be reminded that excellent music existed before the Baroque.

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