Lorenzo Da Ponte

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Engraving by Michele Pekenino after Nathaniel Rogers (c. 1822)

Lorenzo Da Ponte[a] ( Emanuele Conegliano; 10 March 1749 – 17 August 1838[4]) was a Venetian, later American, opera librettist, poet and Roman Catholic priest. He wrote the libretti for 28 operas by 11 composers, including three of Mozart's most celebrated operas: The Marriage of Figaro (1786), Don Giovanni (1787), and Così fan tutte (1790).

He was the first professor of Italian literature at Columbia University, and with Manuel Garcia, the first to introduce Italian opera to America.[5][6] Da Ponte was also a close friend of Mozart and Casanova.[7][8]

Early career[edit]

Republic of Venice, birthplace of Lorenzo Da Ponte

Lorenzo Da Ponte was born Emanuele Conegliano in 1749 in Ceneda in the Republic of Venice (now Vittorio Veneto, Italy). He was Jewish by birth, the eldest of three sons.[9] In 1764, his father, Geronimo Conegliano, then a widower, converted himself and his family to Roman Catholicism in order to marry a Catholic woman. Emanuele, as was the custom, took the name of Lorenzo Da Ponte from the bishop of Ceneda who baptised him.

Thanks to the bishop, the three Conegliano brothers studied at the Ceneda seminary. The bishop died in 1768, after which Lorenzo moved to the seminary at Portogruaro, where he took Minor Orders in 1770 and became Professor of Literature. He was ordained a priest in 1773. He began at this period writing poetry in Italian and Latin, including an ode to wine, "Ditirambo sopra gli odori".[10]

In 1773 Da Ponte moved to Venice, where he made a living as a teacher of Latin, Italian and French. Although he was a Catholic priest, the young man led a dissolute life. While priest of the church of San Luca, he took a mistress, with whom he had two children. In 1777, he met for the first time Giacomo Casanova, who will become a close friend for over 20 years, and be featured in his memoirs.[11][12][13] Both were Venetian adventurers, kindred spirits, and seducers.[14][15]

At Da Ponte's 1779 trial, where he was charged with "public concubinage" and "abduction of a respectable woman", it was alleged that he had been living in a brothel and organizing the entertainments there. He was found guilty and banished for fifteen years from Venice.[16]

Vienna and London[edit]

Painting of Venice, Italy, circa 1735, by artist Canaletto

Da Ponte moved to Gorizia (Görz), then part of Austria, where he lived as a writer, attaching himself to the leading noblemen and cultural patrons of the city. In 1781 he believed (falsely) that he had an invitation from his friend Caterino Mazzolà, the poet of the Saxon court, to take up a post at Dresden, only to be disabused when he arrived there. Mazzolà however offered him work at the theatre translating libretti and recommended that he seek to develop writing skills. He also gave him a letter of introduction to the composer Antonio Salieri.[17] In 1784, he met his friend Casanova once again in Vienna, and with his newly made fortune, financed him and received his counsels.[18]

With the help of Salieri, Da Ponte applied for and obtained the post of librettist to the Italian Theatre in Vienna. Here he also found a patron in the banker Raimund Wetzlar von Plankenstern, benefactor of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. As court poet and librettist in Vienna, he collaborated with Mozart, Salieri and Vicente Martín y Soler.

Mozart's portrait, Da Ponte wrote numbers of his libretti, including The Marriage of Figaro

Da Ponte wrote the libretti for Mozart's most popular Italian operas, The Marriage of Figaro (1786), Don Giovanni (1787), and Così fan tutte (1790), and Soler's Una cosa rara, as well as the text on which the cantata Per la ricuperata salute di Ofelia (collaboratively composed in 1785 by Salieri, Mozart and Cornetti) is based. All of Da Ponte's works were adaptations of pre-existing plots, as was common among librettists of the time, with the exceptions of L'arbore di Diana with Soler, and Così fan tutte, which he began with Salieri, but completed with Mozart. However the quality of his elaboration gave them new life.

In the case of Figaro, Da Ponte included a preface to the libretto that hints at his technique and objectives in libretto writing, as well as his close working with the composer:

I have not made a translation [of Beaumarchais], but rather an imitation, or let us say an extract. ... I was compelled to reduce the sixteen original characters to eleven, two of which can be played by a single actor and to omit, in addition to one whole act, many effective scenes. ... In spite, however, of all the zeal and care on the part of both the composer and myself to be brief, the opera will not be one of the shortest. ... Our excuse will be the variety of development of this drama, ... to paint faithfully and in full colour the divers passions that are aroused, and ... to offer a new type of spectacle. ...[19]

Casanova's portrait, was placed under arrest and is featured in Da Ponte's memoirs

Only one address of Da Ponte's during his stay in Vienna is known: in 1788 he lived in the house Heidenschuß 316 (today the street area between Freyung and Hof), which belonged to the Viennese archbishop. There he rented a three-room apartment for 200 Gulden.[20]

With the death of Austrian Emperor Joseph II, brother of Marie-Antoinette, in 1790, Da Ponte lost his patron and position as court theater poet.[21] He was formally dismissed from the Imperial Service in 1791, due to intrigues, receiving no support from the new Emperor, Leopold. At this time, he was still banished from Venice (until the end of 1794), so he would travel elsewhere. In Trieste he met the half-jewish daughter of an English chemist Nancy Grahl (who he would never marry but eventually have four children with).[22]

In August 1792, he set off for Paris via Prague and Dresden armed with a letter of recommendation to Queen Marie Antoinette that her brother, the late Emperor Joseph II, had given Da Ponte before his death. On the road to Paris, on learning about the worsening political situation in France and the arrest of the king and queen, he decided to head for London instead, accompanied by his companion Grahl and their then two children.[23][24]

During this time, he met for the last time Casanova in Vienna, looking for his old friend to settle a debt but after seeing Casanova's poor situtation, he decided to not recall the debt.[25] He still accompanied him on his way to Dresden while he was serving as Secretary to Count Waldstein, the patron of Ludwig van Beethoven, and advised him to not go to Paris but London.[26]

Da Ponte would later comment in his memoirs on Casanova's arrest at the Piombi prison in the Doge's Palace in Venice.[27] After a precarious start in England, exercising a number of jobs including that of grocer and Italian teacher, he became librettist at the King's Theatre, London, in 1803. He remained based in London, undertaking various theatrical and publishing activities until 1805, when debt and bankruptcy caused him to flee to the United States with Grahl and their children.[10]

American career (1805-1838)[edit]

Portrait by Samuel Morse, Lorenzo Da Ponte, at the New York Yacht Club

Having moved to the United States in 1805, Da Ponte settled in New York City first, then Sunbury, Pennsylvania, where he briefly ran a grocery store and gave private Italian lessons while entertaining in some business activities in Philadelphia. He returned to New York to open a bookstore. He became friends with Clement Clarke Moore, and, through him, gained an unpaid appointment as the first professor of Italian literature at Columbia College.

He was the first Roman Catholic priest to be appointed to the faculty, and he was also the first to have been raised a Jew. In New York he introduced opera and produced in 1825 the first full performance of Don Giovanni in the United States, in which Maria García (soon to marry Malibran) sang Zerlina.[10] He also introduced Gioachino Rossini's music in the U.S., through a concert tour with his niece Giulia Da Ponte.

In 1807 he began to write his Memoirs (published in 1823), described by Charles Rosen as "not an intimate exploration of his own identity and character, but rather a picaresque adventure story."[28] In 1828, at the age of 79, Da Ponte became a naturalized U.S. citizen.

The Italian Opera House, New-York, Lorenzo Da Ponte company

In 1833, at the age of eighty-four, he founded the first purpose-built opera theater in the United States, the Italian Opera House in New York City, on the northwest corner of Leonard and Church Streets, which was far superior to any theater the city had yet seen.[29][30][31][32] Owing to his lack of business acumen, however, it lasted only two seasons before the company had to be disbanded and the theater sold to pay the company's debts. In 1836 the opera house became the National Theater. In 1839 the building was burned to the ground, but it was speedily rebuilt and reopened. On 29 May 1841 however, it was destroyed by fire again.[31] Da Ponte's opera house was, however, the predecessor of the New York Academy of Music and of the New York Metropolitan Opera.

Da Ponte died in 1838 in New York; an enormous funeral ceremony was held in New York's old St. Patrick's Cathedral on Mulberry Street. Records indicate that he was originally buried in a Catholic Cemetery on 11th Street between First Avenue and Avenue A. That cemetery was later paved over and the remains of the people buried there were removed to Calvary Cemetery in 1909. While the exact location of his grave at Calvary is unknown, Calvary Cemetery does contain a stone marker as a memorial.[33][34]

In 2009 the Spanish director Carlos Saura released his Italian film Io, Don Giovanni, a somewhat fictionalized account of Da Ponte, which attempted to link his life with his libretto for Don Giovanni.

Da Ponte's libretti[edit]

Libretto Don Giovanni, melodramma by Da Ponte and Mozart

The nature of Da Ponte's contribution to the art of libretto-writing has been much discussed. In The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, it is pointed out that "the portrayal of grand passions was not his strength", but that he worked particularly closely with his composers to bring out their strengths, especially where it was a matter of sharp characterization or humorous or satirical passages.[10]

Richard Taruskin notes that Mozart, in letters to his father Leopold, had expressed concern to secure Da Ponte, but was worried that the Italian composers in town (e.g. Salieri) were trying to keep him for themselves.

He specifically wished to create a buffa comedy opera which included a seria female part for contrast; Taruskin suggests that "Da Ponte's special gift was that of forging this virtual smorgasbord of idioms into a vivid dramatic shape."[35] David Cairns examines Da Ponte's reworking of the scenario for Don Giovanni, (originally written by Giovanni Bertati and performed in Venice as Don Giovanni Tenorio, with music by Gazzaniga, in 1787).

Cairns points out that "the verbal borrowings are few", and that Da Ponte is at every point "wittier, more stylish, more concise and more effective." Moreover, Da Ponte's restructuring of the action enables a tighter format giving better opportunities for Mozart's musical structures.[36] David Conway suggests that Da Ponte's own life 'in disguise' (as a Jew/priest/womaniser) enabled him to infuse the operatic cliche of disguise with a sense of Romantic irony.[37]

Family[edit]

Da Ponte's statue, Millstätter See, Austria

With Nancy Grahl he had five children :[38]

  • Louisa (Da Ponte) Clossey (1798–1823)
  • Frances (Da Ponte) Anderson (1799–1844)
  • Joseph Da Ponte (1800–1821)
  • Lorenzo Luigi Da Ponte (1804–1840)
  • Charles Grahl Da Ponte (b. 1806)

Frances Da Ponte married Knight commander Henry James Anderson.[39] Their son, Maj. Elbert Ellery Anderson (1833–1903), married to Augusta Chauncey (b. 1835), granddaughter of Commodore Isaac Chauncey, and descendant of Charles Chauncy, the 2nd President of Harvard.[40][41] Maj. Ellery Anderson was of the family of Founding father William Ellery, and his cousin Elbert Jefferson Anderson, was a millionaire in 1892.[42][43][44]

Their son, Peter Chauncey Anderson, was married to Mary Yale Ogden, who was the daughter of Elias Hudson Ogden and Martha Louise Goodrich.[45] Her grandparents were Dr. Oren Goodrich and Olivia Yale, daughter of Colonel Braddam Yale, members of the Yale and Ogden families.[46][47][48] She was a distant relative of Edith Ogden, wife of Carter Harrison Jr., Mayor of Chicago, and cousin of US President William Henry Harrison, and of Senator Aaron Ogden, Governor of New Jersey.[49]

Works[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Notes

  1. ^ UK: /dɑː ˈpɒnt/ dah PON-tay,[1] US: /də ˈpɒnti/ PON-tee,[2][3] Italian: [loˈrɛntso da (p)ˈponte].

Citations

  1. ^ "Da Ponte, Lorenzo". Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on May 8, 2021.
  2. ^ "Da Ponte". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 4 August 2019.
  3. ^ "Da Ponte". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 4 August 2019.
  4. ^ "Signor Lorenzo Daponte died on Friday". The Baltimore Sun. August 21, 1838.
  5. ^ Music View, Did Casanova Lend a Helping Hand?, The New York Times, Donald Henahan, Nov. 10, 1985
  6. ^ Smith, Howard Jay (2022). The Man Who Brought Opera to America, American Heritage Magazine, Vol. 67, Issue 3.
  7. ^ Music View, Did Casanova Lend a Helping Hand?, The New York Times, Donald Henahan, Nov. 10, 1985
  8. ^ A Dictionary of Music and Musicians/Ponte, Lorenzo da, George Grove Ponte, Lorenzo da by Victor de Pontigny
  9. ^ "Lorenzo Da Ponte's Jewish roots". www.jewishindependent.ca. Retrieved 2021-06-14.
  10. ^ a b c d Angermüller (1990)
  11. ^ Music View, Did Casanova Lend a Helping Hand?, The New York Times, Donald Henahan, Nov. 10, 1985
  12. ^ Smith, Howard Jay (2022). The Man Who Brought Opera to America, American Heritage Magazine, Vol. 67, Issue 3.
  13. ^ Maynial, Edouard (1911). Casanova and his time, Chapter Lorenzo Da Ponte, Chapman & Hall, London, p. 208-209
  14. ^ Music View, Did Casanova Lend a Helping Hand?, The New York Times, Donald Henahan, Nov. 10, 1985
  15. ^ Casanova’s Homecoming, Minnesota Opera, Opera Box, Imagineppera.org, 2010, p. 45
  16. ^ Holden (2006), 34–39.
  17. ^ Holden (2006), 50–55.
  18. ^ Maynial, Edouard (1911). Casanova and his time, Chapter Lorenzo Da Ponte, Chapman & Hall, London, p. 208-211
  19. ^ cited in Einstein (1962), 430
  20. ^ Michael Lorenz, "Mozart's Apartment on the Alsergrund" (Vienna, 2009), published in print in: Newsletter of the Mozart Society of America, Vol. XIV, No. 2 (27 August 2010)
  21. ^ Da Ponte in New York, Mozart in New York, Otto Biba, Academiccommons, Columbia University, p. 109-110.
  22. ^ "Review: Lorenzo da Ponte by Rodney Bolt". TheGuardian.com. 5 August 2006.
  23. ^ Holden (2006), 128–131.
  24. ^ "Mozart? He owes it all to me". TheGuardian.com. 2 July 2004.
  25. ^ Maynial, Edouard (1911). Casanova and his time, Chapter Lorenzo Da Ponte, Chapman & Hall, London, p. 211-212
  26. ^ Maynial, Edouard (1911). Casanova and his time, Chapter Lorenzo Da Ponte, Chapman & Hall, London, p. 211-212
  27. ^ Maynial, Edouard (1911). Casanova and his time, Chapter Lorenzo Da Ponte, Chapman & Hall, London, p. 211-212
  28. ^ Da Ponte (2000), ix–x.
  29. ^ Acocella, Joan (8 January 2007). "Nights at the Opera". The New Yorker.
  30. ^ Thorpe, T. B. (23 November 1872). "The Old Theatres of New York, 1750–1827". Appletons' Journal. VIII (191): 580.
  31. ^ a b Wilson, James Grant, ed. (1893). The Memorial History of the City of New-York. Vol. IV. New York: New-York History Company. pp. 173–74.
  32. ^ Da Ponte in New York, Mozart in New York, Otto Biba, Academiccommons, Columbia University, p. 114-115.
  33. ^ Da Ponte memorial at Find a Grave
  34. ^ Some[weasel words] sources claim Da Ponte was buried in Calvary Cemetery. In the sense "the act of burial" this cannot be correct since that cemetery did not exist before 1848, but in the act "lie buried" it likely is true - Da Ponte's remains likely were moved along with everyone else's from that first cemetery
  35. ^ Taruskin (2010), 476–477.
  36. ^ Cairns (2006), 147–151.
  37. ^ Conway (2012), 52–53.
  38. ^ "Lorenzo Da Ponte (1749–1838), Librettist, Professor, and the Father of Italian Opera in the United States". Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  39. ^ "Henry James Anderson (1799–1875), Henry J. Anderson, LL.D., Professor of Mathematics & Astronomy, New York". Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  40. ^ The Chauncey Family, Nine Generations, 1590-1934, Stanton W. Todd Jr., Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1934
  41. ^ Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain (1900). "Universities and Their Sons: History, Influence and Characteristics of American Universities, with Biographical Sketches and Portraits of Alumni and Recipients of Honorary Degrees, Volume 5". p. 449. Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  42. ^ "Elbert Jefferson Anderson (1800–1888), Lt.-Col. Elbert J. Anderson, Merchant, of New York City & Portsmouth, R.I." Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  43. ^ Tribune Associationn (1892). "American Millionaires: The Tribune's List of Persons Reputed to Worth a Million Or More. Lines of Business in which the Fortunes Were Made". p. 58.
  44. ^ "Elbert Ellery Anderson (1833–1903), Major E. Ellery Anderson, Attorney, of 11 East 38th Street, New York City". Retrieved 2022-11-30.
  45. ^ William Ogden Wheeler (1907). "The Ogden Family in America and Their English Ancestry". J. B. Lippincott Company Philadelphia. p. 444.
  46. ^ Social Register, New York, 1896
  47. ^ Rodney Horace Yale (1908). "Yale genealogy and history of Wales. The British kings and princes. Life of Owen Glyndwr. Biographies of Governor Elihu Yale". Milburn and Scott company. p. 348–349.
  48. ^ William Ogden Wheeler (1907). "The Ogden Family in America and Their English Ancestry". J. B. Lippincott Company Philadelphia. p. 444.
  49. ^ William Ogden Wheeler (1907). "The Ogden Family in America and Their English Ancestry". J. B. Lippincott Company Philadelphia. p. 444-445-446.
  50. ^ Holden (2006), pp. 113–116.
  51. ^ Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Da Ponte, Lorenzo" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.

Sources

Further reading[edit]

  • Baker, Felicity (2021) (edited by Magnus Tessing Schneider). Don Giovanni's Reasons: Thoughts on a masterpiece. Bern: Peter Lang.
  • Bolt, Rodney, The Librettist of Venice: The Remarkable Life of Lorenzo Da Ponte – Mozart's Poet, Casanova's Friend, and Italian Opera's Impresario in America, New York: Bloomsbury, 2006 ISBN 1-59691-118-2
  • FitzLyon, April, Lorenzo Da Ponte: A Biography of Mozart's Librettist, London: John Calder, and New York: Riverrun Press,

1982 ISBN 0-7145-3783-7

External links[edit]