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Così fan tutte 1977

July 30 - August 25, 1977

Comic proof…

…that testing women’s faithfulness is dangerous – the score contains some of Mozart’s best-loved and most famous music.

Music By
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Libretto By
Lorenzo da Ponte
English Version By
Ruth and Thomas Martin

Synopsis

Act I

The scene is set in the neighborhood of Naples.

Scene I: The curtain rises on a heated argument between two ardent young men – Ferrando and Guglielmo-and the worldly-wise, cynical old Don Alfonso.

Of course, their beloved Fiordiligi and Dorabella are not like other girls, and what did he mean by saying that none of them can be trusted in matters of the heart?

A bet perhaps? But they have to keep the secret and do as they are told during the test period. The bet is accepted.

Scene 2: Don Alfonso enters breathless and agitated. Dreadful news. The young men are called away to their regiment and have to leave at once.

Amid tears and protestations of eternal love, the parting is made with exhortations for a safe journey.

Scene 3: The girls’ maid, Despina, making their morning chocolate has to listen to ardent expressions of despair at separation. Getting tired of it, she advises the girls to amuse themselves in other directions. After all, their young men are away, and they need cheering up.

Don Alfonso and Despina are old friends, and he comes now to seek her help in urging the attentions of two delightful young men recently arrived from abroad. Ferrando and Guglielmo enter suitably disguised, and as the girls return the two men express their admiration-each for the other’s lover.

Horrendous scenes of outraged modesty and assaulted honor are somewhat mollified by Don Alfonso claiming that the two men are old friends and perfectly respectable. Nevertheless, the girls remain firm as rocks in their professions of constancy and, at Guglielmo’s further insistence, retreat in confusion leaving the men convulsed with laughter.

Scene 4: The girls, still inconsolable, are further alarmed by the sudden appearance of the two men, who, protesting their unrequited passions, swallow what appears to be arsenic and collapse in front of them.

Despina and Don Alfonso are dispatched in search of a doctor while the girls give some embarrassed consolation to the inert-but secretly very amused – patients.

Compassion begins to overcome prudery, and when Dr. Mesmer’s disciple (Despina in disguise) effects a miraculous cure through the magic properties of mesmerism the girls find that their obvious relief and concern have served to incite the two men to further protestations of love.

Artists

Linda Zoghby

Soprano

Fiordiligi

Evelyn Petros

Mezzo-soprano

Dorabella

Jon Garrison

Jon Garrison

Tenor

Ferrando

Stephen Dickson

Baritone

Guglielmo

Claude Corbeil

Claude Corbeil

Bass-baritone

Don Alfonso

Patricia Kern

Mezzo-soprano

Despina

Raymond Leppard

Conductor

Peter Wood

Director

Paul Steinberg

Paul Steinberg

Scenic Designer

Costume Designer

Stephen Ross

Lighting Designer

Terry Lusk

Chorus Master