Nina (opera)
Nina, o sia La pazza per amore (Nina, or the Girl Driven Mad by Love) is an opera, described as a commedia in prosa ed in verso per musica, in two acts by Giovanni Paisiello to an Italian libretto by Giambattista (also Giovanni Battista) Lorenzi after Giuseppe Carpani's translation of Benoît-Joseph Marsollier's Nina, ou La folle par amour, set by Nicolas Dalayrac in 1786.
The work is a sentimental comedy with set numbers, recitative and spoken dialog. It is set in Italy in the 18th century.
Nina was first performed in a one act version at the Teatro del Reale Sito di Belvedere in Caserta, San Leucio on 25 June 1789. A revised two-act work was presented at the Teatro dei Fiorentini in Naples in the autumn of 1790.
Roles
- Nina (soprano)
 - Lindoro, her lover/Un Pastore (tenor)
 - The Count, her father (bass)
 - Susanna, her companion (mezzo-soprano)
 - Giorgio, the Count’s valet (bass)
 - A musician (tenor)
 - Second musician
 - Chorus (staff and patients at the sanatorium)
 
Discography
- Arts Music Hans Ludwig Hirsch, 1998
 - Nuova Era Richard Bonynge, 2003
 - (DVD) at the Internet Movie Database, Ádám Fischer, 2002 (Zurich Opera)
 - Archipel Ennio Gerelli, 2007
 
References
- Synopsis and essays
 - A brief review of the DVD
 - Synopsis, essay (1.7MB) (Italian)
- Title page to the above (Italian)
 - Index page to the above (Italian)
 
 
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