Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
In the autumn of 1748 the opera audience in London was introduced to a newly arrived troupe of Italian singers, an eccentric impresario and an operatic genre previously unknown in England. The buffo company, led by ‘Doctor’ Giovanni Francesco Crosa, would entertain the King's Theatre public for the first time with full-length Italian comic operas. In May 1750, after two tumultuous seasons which saw the gradual dissolution of the troupe and financial disaster for the management, Crosa fled the country, never to return. The King's Theatre closed its doors, to reopen only in the autumn of 1753 with a programme devoted exclusively to serious opera. It was not until 1766, when Piccini's La buona figliuola conquered the London opera stage, that Italian comic opera found real success at the King's.
This study is based in part on Saskia Willaert's M.A. thesis, ‘The First Italian Comic Operas in London, 1748-1750’ (King's College, London, 1990). Richard G. King wishes to thank the Ministry of Education of the Netherlands for a grant which made his part in the research and writing of this article possible.Google Scholar
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12 See Robert and Norma Weaver, A Chronology of Music in the Florentine Theater (Detroit, 1978), 263–4.Google Scholar
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18 Four of the operas Crosa and his troupe performed in London (La finta cameriera, Orazio, La maestra and Madama Ciana) were later to play a role in the famous querelle des bouffons, when they were brought to Paris in 1752–4 by the impresario Eustachio Bambini. See Lazarevich, Gordana, ‘Pergolesi and the Guerre des bouffons’, Guerre des bouffons 2 (1988), 195–203.Google Scholar
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54 Benefits in the first season had been offered to Crosa, Catherine Roland, Charles and Jane Poitier (the dance troupe), Mellini and Querzoli. Laschi, one of the principal singers, had not enjoyed a benefit, but at least his wife had had the privilege.Google Scholar
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78 Advertisements for the ‘Muziek Collegie’ appeared in the Amsterdamse Courant on 24 October, 5 and 7 November.Google Scholar
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84 A General History, ii, 850. As noted above, a Mrs Freeman performed in 1744, and The London Stage lists a dancer named Shawford who appeared frequently between May 1748 and May 1753 (his first appearance is dated December 1740). The name of Angelo de Angelis is familiar, but as a creditor, not a debtor, of Crosa (see above).Google Scholar
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92 ‘Je vis Penici avec plaisir; étant vieux et ne pouvant plus chanter, il jouait la comédie, et en bon acteur, ce qui est rare; car les chanteurs, hommes et femmes, se fiant sur la durée de leur voix, négligent l'art de la scène, et d'ordinaire un simple rhume en fait très médiocres sujets.’ Mémoires de J. Casanova de Seingalt, ed. Raoul Vèze, vii (Paris, 1928), 136.Google Scholar
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