Lucia di Lammermoor

opera by Gaetano Donizetti

Performed in Italian (the performance will have synchronised Russian and English supertitles)
 

World premiere: 26 September 1835, Teatro di San Carlo, Naples
Premiere at the Bolshoi (Kamenny) Theatre:
8 October 1840 – Imperial Russian Opera Company
29 November 1843 – Imperial Italian Opera Company
Premiere of this production: 29 December 2018


Running time 3 hours
The performance has one interval

Age category: 12+

Credits

Music by Gaetano Donizetti
Libretto by Salvadore Cammarano after Sir Walter Scott´s novel The Bride of Lammermoor

Musical Director: Valery Gergiev
Stage Director: Andrea De Rosa
Production Designer: Simone Mannino
Costume Designer: Alessandro Lai
Lighting Designer: Pasquale Mari
Lighting Adaptation for the Mariinsky II by Yegor Kartashov
Musical Preparation: Ilona Yansons
Principal Chorus Master: Konstantin Rylov

SYNOPSIS

Part 1. The Departure
Act I
Scene one. An intruder has been spotted at night on the grounds of Ravenswood Castle. Norman, the captain of the guard, sends his men off in search of the stranger. Lord Henry tells Raymond Bidebent, his sister Lucia’s chaplain and tutor, that his family’s fortunes are in danger. Edgar Ravenswood, the son of the castle’s previous owner, can maneuver Henry out of his property and gain back his political influence. Only the arranged marriage of his sister, Lucia, can save them. However, Lucia does not want to accept the marriage. Raymond reminds Henry that the girl is still mourning the death of her mother. But Norman reveals that Lucia is concealing a great love for a mysterious stranger who saved her from the attack of a raging bull. She meets with him in secret. The returning men reveal the identity of the man whom Lucia is secretly meeting each day – it is Edgar Ravenswood. Henry is furious.

Scene two. Lucia is waiting by an old fountain with her maid Alice for a secret meeting with Edgar. Lucia is frightened by the legend of the fountain: a woman was murdered here by an insanely jealous member of the Ravenswood family. The ghost of the murdered woman has recently appeared to her, beckoning Lucia to follow her. When the ghost disappeared, the water in the fountain turned red with blood.

Edgar appears. He explains that he must leave Scotland and go to France on a political mission. Before he leaves, Edgar wants to ask Henry for Lucia's hand. Terrified of her brother’s reaction, Lucia asks Edgar to keep their love a secret. Edgar tells Lucia of his undying hatred of the Ashtons, how he swore a vow of vengeance upon her family. But now the vow is destroyed by love. The young lovers solemnly pledge their troth by exchanging rings.

Part 2. The Marriage Contract
Act II
Scene one. Guests are arriving at the wedding of Lucia and Lord Arthur Bucklaw. Henry is still worried that Lucia will not accept the groom. Norman reassures him: all the letters that Edgar has written during his long absence have been seized and replaced with artful forgeries in which Edgar confesses that he has fallen in love with another woman. As his sister enters, Henry chastises her for being so melancholy on the day of her wedding. She replies that his cruelty is the cause of her grief. Henry tries to persuade his sister to forget her illicit love and hands her a forged letter. Lucia is shattered: all her tears, her hopes, and her yearning have been wasted on an unfaithful man. At Raymondʼs fervent pleading, the exhausted Lucia finally gives in and agrees to marriage.

Scene two. The guests enthusiastically greet Lord Arthur Bucklaw. Arthur assures Henry of his friendship and promises his support. He asks, however, wherever the rumours about Edgar Ravenswood being in love with Lucia are true. Lucia appears.

Lucia is showed into the room with her marriage contract on the table. There is commotion outside: it is Edgar, who has now returned from France. The men draw their swords. Lucia falls unconscious. Raymond intercedes and shows Edgar the contract with Lucia’s signature. Lucia tearfully confesses that the signature is hers. Enraged, Edgar returns his ring and demands that she returns hers.

Act III
Scene one. A heavy thunderstorm rages outside. Henry visits Edgar at the Wolf's Crag. He challenges Edgar to a duel. They agree to fight in the morning by the graveyard of the Ravenswoods.

Scene two. The guests continue to celebrate the wedding. Raymond breaks up the festivities with terrible news: Lucia has gone mad and stabbed Arthur to death. The crazed Lucia, her nightgown stained with blood, appears in the hall. She thinks that she is once more in the garden, on the way to meet her beloved Edgar. However, her happiness quickly turns into horror as she sees the ghost. Lucia begs Edgar to hide and leads him to the altar decorated with roses. She sees a church, where she is married to Edgar, not Arthur. Lucia collapses.

Scene three. Edgar is at the graveyard of the Ravenswoods, where he is to duel Henry. He laments that he has to live without Lucia and hopes that his duel with Henry will end his own life. Guests coming from the Castle tell him that Lucia has gone mad and is dying. The bell tolls.

Lucia di Lammermoor is one of the greatest masterpieces of Romantic bel canto. It is an outcome of years of bitter rivalry between Donizetti and Bellini. The opera has never fallen into oblivion; it regularly appears on theatre playbills all over the world. The Mariinsky Theatre is no exception. The opera was performed by both Imperial companies – Russian and Italian – more than 200 times over several decades. The current production of the Mariinsky Theatre is the third production staged in the last 18 years. The romantic melodrama has it all: emotions fully taking over the characters, distinct personalities, unrelenting intrigue, unexpected plot twists, and, finally, Donizetti’s delightful music. The composer turned every music element into a veritable masterpiece. All that combined gave Lucia di Lammermoor such a long stage life and made it a huge success with various audiences.
The stage adaptation was prepared by an Italian team that has already staged such operas as Simon Boccanegra and Falstaff at the Mariinsky Theatre.

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