Jone, ossia L'ultimo giorno di Pompei is an opera in four acts by Errico Petrella. The Italian-language libretto was by Giovanni Peruzzini, after Edward Bulwer-Lytton's famous novel The Last Days of Pompeii .
The opera was premiered at La Scala on 26 January 1858. [1] It was an immediate success, not only all over Italy, but in the rest of the world as well. It remained in the repertory for close to 50 years, being last given in Caracas in 1981. This performance has been recorded and issued both on LP and CD.
Role [1] | Voice type [1] | Premiere cast [1] 26 January 1858 |
---|---|---|
Jone | soprano | Augusta Albertini |
Nidia | mezzo-soprano | Carmelina Poch |
Glauco | tenor | Carlo Negrini |
Arbace | baritone | Giovanni Guicciardi |
Burbo | bass | Annibale Biacchi |
Dirce | mezzo-soprano | Linda Fiorio |
Sallustio | bass | Giuseppe Bernasconi |
Most of these singers were quite well known at the time, especially Carlo Negrini who was one of Italy's leading tenors and had created the role of Gabriele Adorno in Verdi's Simon Boccanegra a year earlier. Guicciardi was the first Conte di Luna in Il trovatore .
Both Glauco, a noble Roman, and Arbace, the high priest of Isis, love Jone. She is the latter's ward, and regards him as a second father. A slave girl, Nidia, also loves Glauco. Burbo, Arbace's henchman, gives Nidia some poison, asking her to give it to Glauco to drink. He assures her that it is an elixir of love. Glauco drinks only enough to become delirious.
This gives Arbace a chance to convince Jone that Glauco is worthless. He persuades her to come to the temple of Isis where he makes unwelcome advances. In the meantime, Glauco has been restored to reason. He rushes in to save her, but is seized, accused of sacrilege and condemned to death. Arbace offers to save Glauco's life in return for Jone's favors, which she refuses.
With the crowd assembled in the circus, Nidia reveals Arbace's infamy to the praetor. Glauco is freed. Vesuvius erupts and Arbace dies in the eruption. Jone and Glauco find each other in the crowd, and ask Nidia to flee with them. But she returns to the city to die, while the lovers escape.
Balbina Steffenone was a 19th-century soprano.
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The Last Days of Pompeii is a novel written by Edward Bulwer-Lytton in 1834. The novel was inspired by the painting The Last Day of Pompeii by the Russian painter Karl Briullov, which Bulwer-Lytton had seen in Milan. It culminates in the cataclysmic destruction of the city of Pompeii by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.
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Errico Petrella was an Italian opera composer.
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