Teatro Santi Giovanni e Paolo

The Teatro Santi Giovanni e Paolo (often written as Teatro SS. Giovanni e Paolo) was a theatre and opera house in Venice located on the Calle della Testa, and takes its name from the nearby Basilica of Santi Giovanni e Paolo, Venice. Built by the Grimani family in 1638, in its heyday it was considered the most beautiful and comfortable theatre in the city.[1] The theatre played an important role in the development of opera and saw the premieres of several works by Francesco Cavalli, as well as Monteverdi's Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria and L'incoronazione di Poppea.

Teatro SS. Giovanni e Paolo
Carlo Fontana's 1654 sketch of the theatre's floor plan
AddressVenice
Italy
TypeTheatre and opera house
Construction
Opened1638
Closed1715
ArchitectCarlo Fontana

History

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The Grimani family originally built the theatre as a wooden structure on the Fondamenta Nuove around 1635. It was then rebuilt on a grander scale using both stone and wood in 1638 when it moved to the nearby Calle della Testa. It was built primarily for the performance of spoken drama, but from the very beginning operas were also performed there. In fact, the new theatre was inaugurated on 20 January 1639 with the premiere performance of Francesco Manelli's opera La Delia o sia La sera sposa del sole.[2]

 
Anna Renzi who sang Ottavia in the premiere of L'incoronazione di Poppea
 
Libretto for L' Alboino in Italia which premiered at the Teatro Santi Giovanni e Paolo in 1691

The librettist of La delia, Giulio Strozzi, became primarily based at the nearby Teatro Novissimo but returned to SS. Giovanni e Paolo for the 1642–1643 season, bringing with him the singers Barbara Strozzi and Anna Renzi (who sang Ottavia in the premiere of L'incoronazione di Poppea) and the pioneering set designer Giacomo Torelli. According to Rosand, it may have been at Santi Giovanni e Paolo that Torelli developed his machinery for changing several sets simultaneously.[3]

In 1654 the theatre was remodelled specifically as an opera house by the architect Carlo Fontana in one of his earliest commissions, and became the first fully developed horseshoe-shaped opera house in Italy,[4] a design which remained essentially unchanged for over two centuries. Its magnificent interior could seat about 900 people with five tiers of boxes and additional seating on the U-shaped floor (or platea) in front of the stage. The theatre was described in 1663 by an observer as having:

...marvellous scene changes, majestic and grand appearances [of performers] ... and a magnificent flying machine; you see, as if commonplace, glorious heavens, deities, seas, royal palaces, woods, forests...[5]

Marco Faustini[6] became the theatre's impresario in 1660, and for the next fifteen years the Teatro Santi Giovanni e Paolo and the Teatro di San Salvatore a San Luca (owned by the Vendramin family) were to be the dominant opera houses in Venice, each putting on two new operas every year.

By 1700, the Grimani family had built two more theatres in Venice, the Teatro San Samuele and the Teatro San Giovanni Grisostomo. An economic crisis made the Teatro Santi Giovanni e Paolo increasingly difficult to maintain, and it finally closed in 1715.[7]

Premieres

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Operas which had their first public performance at the theatre include:

Notes and references

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  1. ^ Rosand (2007) p. 77
  2. ^ Casaglia
  3. ^ Rosand (2007) p. 102
  4. ^ Forsyth (1985) p. 77
  5. ^ Ringer (2006) p. 217
  6. ^ Marco Faustini's brother Giovanni Faustini was a well-known librettist, who for a time was also the impresario of two smaller Venetian opera houses, the Teatro San Cassiano and the Teatro San Moisè.
  7. ^ Todarello (2006) p. 348. The Grimani family went on to build a fourth opera house, the Teatro San Benedetto, in 1755.

Sources

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  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "SS. Giovanni e Paolo". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  • Forsyth, Michael, Buildings for Music: the architect, the musician and the listener from the seventeenth century to the present day, CUP Archive, 1985. ISBN 0-521-26862-1
  • Ringer, Mark, Opera's First Master: The Musical Dramas of Claudio Monteverdi, Amadeus Press, 2006. ISBN 1-57467-110-3.
  • Rosand, Ellen, Opera in Seventeenth-Century Venice: The Creation of a Genre, University of California Press, 2007. ISBN 0-520-25426-0
  • Todarello, Nazzareno L., Le arti della scena: Lo spettacolo in Occidente da Eschilo al trionfo dell'opera, Latorre Editore, 2006. ISBN 88-903202-0-6

See also

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Opera houses and theatres in Venice