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Lorenzo Da Ponte

 

(born March 10, 1749, Céneda, near Treviso, Veneto — died Aug. 17, 1838, New York, N.Y., U.S.) Italian poet and librettist. When his Jewish father converted to marry a Roman Catholic, he adopted the name of the local bishop. He took priestly orders in 1768, while teaching literature and publishing poetry. At odds with the authorities for his progressive views, he was expelled from the Venetian republic in 1779 for adultery. In 1783 he was appointed court poet for Vienna's Italian theatre. There he wrote a remarkable series of more than 40 opera librettos, including the masterpieces The Marriage of Figaro (1786), Don Giovanni (1787), and Così fan tutte (1790) for Wolfgang A. Mozart. Court intrigue forced him to leave Vienna in 1791. He settled in New York in 1805, taught at Columbia College, wrote his colourful memoirs, and helped establish Italian opera in the city.

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Music Encyclopedia: Lorenzo Da Ponte
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(b Vittorio Veneto, 10 March 1749; d New York, 17 Aug 1838). Italian librettist. He was first a professor and priest (he was a converted Jew) in Italy; after being banned from Venice in 1779 he went to Vienna, where he became librettist to the Italian theatre. His most notable librettos were for Mozart: Le nozze di Figaro (1786), Don Giovanni (1787) and Così fan tutte (1790); he also wrote for Salieri, Martín y Soler and others. In the 1790s he was librettist at the King's Theatre, London. He later emigrated to the USA (by 1805) and worked mainly as a teacher of Italian (ultimately at Columbia University); in 1823 he published his memoirs, which are racy, self-justificatory and unreliable. Most of his c 50 librettos, many of them adaptations of other writers works, are comic.



Biography: Lorenzo Da Ponte
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For nearly 150 years after his death the name of Lorenzo Da Ponte (1749-1838) languished in relative obscurity. It was only in the 1980s that he began to be recognized as one of the greatest librettists who ever lived. Of his 89 years, fewer than 20 were devoted to writing opera texts. Yet during this period, as poet first to the court of Joseph II in Vienna and then to the King's Theatre, the home of Italian opera in London, he wrote or adapted nearly 50 libretti for 19 different composers.

Lorenzo Da Ponte was born on March 10, 1749 in the Italian city of Ceneda, near Venice. His family was originally Jewish, but converted to Catholicism when Lorenzo was a young child. Da Ponte studied at the Ceneda Seminary and the Portogruaro Seminary, where he later obtained a teaching position (1770-73). He was ordained as a priest and administered sacraments for the first time in 1773. Da Ponte was a professor of rhetoric at Treviso from 1774 to 1776. He moved to Venice in 1776 but was banished for adultery three years later. In 1782, Da Ponte became the official poet to the Imperial Theater in Vienna, where he met and worked with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. He moved to London in 1793, becoming poet to the King's Theatre for the next five years. Da Ponte moved to the United States in 1805, where he taught Italian in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and ultimately at Columbia College in New York (1825). He died in New York on August 17, 1838.

Da Ponte's texts can be divided into four categories: translations, of which there are only a handful; adaptations from "straight" plays, especially those of Goldoni; adaptations from existing libretti ( Don Giovanni, partly based on a text by Bertati, is the best-known example); and original texts, of which there were few (for example, L'arbore di Diana, to music by Martín y Soler, and Così fan tutte, set by Mozart).

In his memoirs and in other writings, Da Ponte lists the many qualities that, in his view, were needed to make a good librettist: among them were feeling and heart, liveliness of affection, truth of characterization, grace of language, poetic imagery, and an understanding of how to alternate "the gentle and the fierce, the light-hearted and the pathetic, the pastoral and the heroic." He was a born versifier, turning out rhymes as easily as he could breathe, and he had a vast knowledge of classical and contemporary literature to which he could turn for inspiration. He also had an ear attuned to verbal and musical harmony.

One of Da Ponte's favorite composers was Martín y Soler, for whom he wrote the text of Una cosa rara, which was among the most popular and successful operas of the last quarter of the eighteenth century. This was an opera buffa, like most of the works put on at the Burgtheater during the reign of Joseph II. Another excellent collaboration with Martín y Soler was L'arbore di Diana, though some critics lambasted it as being indecent. One of the few serious operas he wrote was Axur, re d'Ormus, based on a play by Beaumarchais, and set to music by Antonio Salieri, director of music at the court. The text is at its best when the action involves intrigue, disguise and misunderstanding; nevertheless, Da Ponte's adaptation is typically skillful and dexterous. Whether writing seria or buffa texts, one of his greatest skills was his versatility and his ability to adjust to the needs of his composer.

It was in his partnership with Mozart that Da Ponte produced his best libretti. Almost nothing is known of how the two men worked together. It is clear from Mozart's letters to his father how exacting the composer was in what he required from his collaborators, and that he liked to have a large hand in the libretti he set. It is, therefore, revealing that the texts of Le nozze di Figaro, Don Giovanni and Così fan tutte all, in important respects, contradict his views. He believed, for instance, that Italian opera should be as comic as possible, whereas Da Ponte was convinced that changes of mood were essential if the listener's sympathies were to be engaged. Such changes occur in all three operas, and it is partly this that has made them immortal, giving us the feeling that we are watching human beings with real emotions rather than stock characters. Mozart felt, too, that the comic element in opera buffa should be violent and often absurd, as it is in Die Zauberflöte, whereas Da Ponte never forgot the literary and cultured tradition which was so fundamental a part of his being.

Mozart detested rhymes for their own sake. "Verses are indeed the most indispensable element for music," he wrote to his father, "but rhymes, solely for the sake of rhyming, the most detrimental." Yet rhymes abound in all three operas, and to accompany them Mozart composed some of the most ravishing music that has ever been written. In Cosìfan tutte in particular, the complex rhyming pattern is so skillful that the words almost sing themselves.

All three Da Ponte librettos for Mozart show an intimate knowledge of literary and theatrical Italian tradition which Mozart can hardly have possessed. From the time he was fourteen, Da Ponte had read voraciously, including the Italian classics, Latin and French masterpieces, modern dramatists such as Goldoni, prose, poetry, and history. To help him in his search for source material he had also read hundreds of opera libretti. He knew some of the greatest writers of the day, including Gasparo Gozzi, famous as one of the ablest critics in Italy, as well as one of the purest and most elegant stylists. Thus all the evidence seems to show that Mozart was influenced by him to an extent which the composer would never have tolerated from any of his other librettists.

That the two men were friends outside their professional collaboration is improbable, so unlike were their personalities; but as working partners they had an extraordinary empathy. For indifferent composers Da Ponte sometimes wrote indifferent texts; but for "the divine Mozart," as he called the composer in later years, he wrote libretti which are miracles of skill, poetry, and knowledge of the human heart.

Further Reading

Fitzlyon, April. The Libertine Librettist: a Biography of Mozart's Librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte. London, 1955; 1982.

Hodges, Sheila. Lorenzo Da Ponte: the Life and Times of Mozart's Librettist. London, 1985.

Livingston, A. Da Ponte in America. Philadelphia, 1930.

Russo, J.L. Lorenzo Da Ponte, Poet and Adventurer. New York, 1922.

Smith, P.J. The Tenth Muse: a Historical Study of the Opera Libretto. New York, 1970.

Music and Letters 46 (1965): 316.

Music Review 4 (1943): 171.

Opera Quarterly 1/no. 2 (1983): 79; 8 (1991): 9.

German Literature Companion: Lorenzo Da Ponte
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Da Ponte, Lorenzo (Ceneda, Italy, 1749-1838, New York), wrote the Italian libretti for Mozart's operas Le nozze di Figaro, Don Giovanni, and Così fan tutte. He spent the years from 1782 to 1791 in Vienna. The latter part of his life he lived in New York, where his memoirs, Memorie (4 vols.), appeared in 1823-7 (2nd edn. 1829-30).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Lorenzo Da Ponte
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Da Ponte, Lorenzo (lōrĕnt'sō dä pôn'), 1749-1838, Italian librettist and teacher, b. Ceneda as Emmanuele Conegliano. Born Jewish, he converted to Catholicism at 14, became (1773) a priest, and shortly after ordination moved to Venice. A freethinking liberal and sometime libertine and gambler, he was banished from Venice in 1779 due to several scandals. He lived briefly in Dresden, then settled (1781) in Vienna, where Emperor Joseph II named him (1783) poet of the imperial theaters, a post he held until 1790. During his tenure Da Ponte wrote the librettos for numerous operas. The most notable of these were for three Mozart masterpieces-The Marriage of Figaro (1786), Don Giovanni (1787), and Così fan tutte (1790)-for which he contributed elegant, witty, and eminently singable words and created or adapted powerful plots and characters. Driven from Vienna after the emperor's death, Da Ponte wandered through Europe, married in Trieste, and settled (1792) in London. There he worked as a tutor of Italian, a bookseller, and a librettist to an Italian opera company until he went bankrupt in 1804.

A year later Da Ponte immigrated to America, where he failed in attempts to be a grocer, at selling medicines and drygoods, and at running a distillery. After a chance meeting with Clement Clarke Moore, however, he soon began a more successful career, spending most of the rest of his life in New York City as a celebrated teacher of Italian. A pioneer in the dissemination of Italian culture in the United States, he taught (1805-25) nearly 2,000 private pupils and in 1830 was appointed Columbia College's first professor of Italian language and literature (and the first such professor in the United States). His library, bought by Columbia in 1825, was the nucleus of its collection of Italian poetry and miscellaneous literature. In 1833 he helped establish the Italian Opera House in lower Manhattan, the first attempt to create a permanent American home for Italian opera. Da Ponte's last years were marred by poverty and the failure (1836) of the opera house.

Bibliography

See his memoirs (1823-27; tr. 1929; ed. by A. Livingston, tr. 1955, repr. 2000) detailing his extraordinary life; biographies by J. L. Russo (1922, repr. 1966), A. Fitzlyon (1955, repr. 1982), L. J. Hetenyi (1988), S. Hodges (1985, repr. 2002), R. Bolt (2006), and A. Holden (2006); A. Steptoe, The Mozart-Da Ponte Operas (1988); M. Du Mont, The Mozart-Da Ponte Operas: An Annotated Bibliography (2000).

Artist: Lorenzo da Ponte
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  • Born: March 10, 1749 in Cèneda, Italy
  • Died: August 17, 1838 in New York, NY

Biography

Certain librettist/author collaborations have become legendary in the world of opera, such as von Hoffmannstal and Richard Strauss, Gilbert and Sullivan, and da Ponte and Mozart. Not only did Mozart began collaborating with da Ponte during his own musical maturity, but da Ponte's witty, precisely worded libretti combined drama and dry humor in a way perfectly suited to Mozart's musical style. He was not limited to Mozart by any means; his librettos inspired some of Vicente Martin y Soler's and Antonio Salieri's best work as well. His first career was as a priest, but his superiors were unamused by his liberal politics and amorous adventures and he was exiled from Venice. He eventually came to Vienna, where Salieri introduced him to Joseph II's court, where he was appointed poet to the court theater when Joseph revived the Italian tradition. Here he produced libretti for some of that theater's best premieres, including the Mozart operas and Martin y Soler's Una cosa rara (then a favorite, now largely forgotten). In 1790, he was forced to leave the court after Leopold II's accession and after various wanderings, settled in London in a position at the King's Theatre in Haymarket. He combined new libretti with arranging music and general involvement with the theater. However, unwise involvement in politics and unsound financial investments led him to start again in the United States, where he wrote his autobiography, some poetry and translations, and was named professor of Italian at Columbia College. ~ Ann Feeney, All Music Guide
 
 

 

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