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Tosca’s Rome

The Play and the Opera in Historical Perspective

A timeless tale of love, lust, and politics, Tosca is one of the most popular operas ever written. In Tosca’s Rome, Susan Vandiver Nicassio explores the surprising historical realities that lie behind Giacomo Puccini’s opera and the play by Victorien Sardou on which it is based.

By far the most "historical" opera in the active repertoire, Tosca is set in a very specific time and place: Rome, from June 17 to 18, 1800. But as Nicassio demonstrates, history in Tosca is distorted by nationalism and by the vehement anticlerical perceptions of papal Rome shared by Sardou, Puccini, and the librettists. To provide the historical background necessary for understanding Tosca, Nicassio takes a detailed look at Rome in 1800 as each of Tosca’s main characters would have seen it—the painter Cavaradossi, the singer Tosca, and the policeman Scarpia. Finally, she provides a scene-by-scene musical and dramatic analysis of the opera.

"[Nicassio] must be the only living historian who can boast that she once sang the role of Tosca. Her deep knowledge of Puccini’s score is only to be expected, but her understanding of daily and political life in Rome at the close of the 18th century is an unanticipated pleasure. She has steeped herself in the period and its prevailing culture-literary, artistic, and musical-and has come up with an unusual, and unusually entertaining, history."—Paul Bailey, Daily Telegraph

"In Tosca’s Rome, Susan Vandiver Nicassio . . . orchestrates a wealth of detail without losing view of the opera and its pleasures. . . . Nicassio aims for opera fans and for historians: she may well enthrall both."—Publishers Weekly

"This is the book that ranks highest in my estimation as the most in-depth, and yet highly entertaining, journey into the story of the making of Tosca."—Catherine Malfitano

"Nicassio’s prose . . . is lively and approachable. There is plenty here to intrigue everyone-seasoned opera lovers, musical novices, history buffs, and Italophiles."—Library Journal

Read a web feature: Ten Things You Didn’t Know about Tosca.


356 pages | 40 halftones, 12 line drawings, 1 table, 14 musical examples | 6 x 9 | © 2002

History: General History

Music: General Music

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Historico-topographico-panoramic Inexactitudes
2. Sede Vacante: Rome without a Pope
3. The Painter’s Rome
4. The Singer’s Rome
5. The Policeman’s Rome
6. Act One
7. Entr’Act
8. Act Two
9. Act Three
Appendix 1: Sardou’s La Tosca and Puccini’s Tosca
Appendix 2: Libretto-making
Appendix 3: Entertainments in Rome
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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