Libretto (singular) or Libretti (plural)
Libretto. Italian for "little book."
I have no idea of what are you talkingabout
The script from an opera is called "libretto". An opera is the most complete of all musical works in my modest opinion, once require not only the orchestra's performance and the singers and their prepared voices but also their interpretation of the "libretto". So the singers performs like actors in a play which is very often a dramatic history. Listen to Madame Butterfly for example.
The text of an opera is called the libretto. If you're asking about the words or story of the opera itself, it's called a libretto. If you're asking about the translations now being offered at some operas during the performance, they're called "supertitles" or "surtitles."
They are called "opera glasses"
Essentially the script or dialogue scenario, called a script in drama and a libretto in opera.
Libretto. Italian for "little book."
I have no idea of what are you talkingabout
It is the play's script.
If by Play you mean drama and script, then when Opera is to sing, Play is to act.
The script from an opera is called "libretto". An opera is the most complete of all musical works in my modest opinion, once require not only the orchestra's performance and the singers and their prepared voices but also their interpretation of the "libretto". So the singers performs like actors in a play which is very often a dramatic history. Listen to Madame Butterfly for example.
Surtitles or supertitles.
The text of an opera is called the libretto. If you're asking about the words or story of the opera itself, it's called a libretto. If you're asking about the translations now being offered at some operas during the performance, they're called "supertitles" or "surtitles."
Every script is called a script. Regardless of the genre, the script is still called the script.
They are called "opera glasses"
Example. You are writing a play for school. The actual writing part is called the script, script errors are words that are spelled wrong, or scenes that don't follow and there-fore re-writes are necessary.
To a libretto (script) by Lorenzo da Ponte, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote the music of Cosi Fan Tutte.