In the first half of the 19th century, the most important aspect in opera productions was deemed beautiful singing, “bel canto”, vocal mastery combining paramount technique and emotive performance, with the legendary prima donnas’ artistry of the time serving as an endless source of inspiration.
The inception of Norma, the best-known opera by the Italian composer Vincenzo Bellini (1801–1835), was instigated by the phenomenal Italian soprano Giuditta Pasta (1797–1865), who, following numerous international triumphs, was scheduled to appear at La Scala and for her Milan debut wished a new opera by Bellini. The librettist Felice Romani reached for an older text of his, based on Alexandre Soumet’s tragedy Norma, ou L’infanticide. The story is set in the time of the Roman occupation of Gaul and the main plot is the secret marriage of Norma, the High Priestess of the Druids, and Pollione, the Roman proconsul in Gaul. The immense success of the premiere at La Scala, on 26 December 1831, was also down to Giuditta Pasta, who had initially turned down the part of Norma owing to its being extremely challenging.
The opera was only staged in Prague in 1835, when it was sung in Italian at the Estates Theatre. The National Theatre first took over a production from the Provisional Theatre and performed it on 5 October 1884 in Václav Alois Svoboda’s Czech translation.
State opera.
author: Vincenzo Bellini
libretto: Felice Romani
conductor: Enrico Dovico/Peter Valentovič
stage director: Tomo Sugao
sets: Boris Kudlička
costumes: Alexandra Grusková
chorus master: Adolf Melichar
dramaturgy: Jitka Slavíková
cast: Edita Gruberová, Jana Horáková Levicová, Aleš Briscein/Zoran Todorovič, Oleg Korotkov
Type | opera |
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Language of subtitles | English, Czech |
Foreign languages | Italian |
Event venue | National Theatre (Praha) |
Date and time of event | Past dates |
URL | www.narodni-divadlo.cz/cs/predstaveni/9392 |
Data source | Prague City Tourism |