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A NEST OF NIGHTINGALES: CUZZONI AND SENESINO AT HANDEL'S ROYAL ACADEMY OF MUSIC
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 October 2010
Extract
Italian prima donna Francesca Cuzzoni (ca. 1698–1770) was the first internationally recognized virtuosa to sing high soprano women's roles. Although her work served as a model to the female performers who followed, no in-depth critical study has been written about her groundbreaking career on the opera stage of the Royal Academy of Music in London, where she was the celebrated prima donna from 1723 to 1728. During her tenure, the Royal Academy became one of the most important opera companies in Europe, rivaling those of the Viennese court, the Paris Opera, and the Italian opera houses of Naples and Venice. Her arrival on the London stage signaled a shift in the ways composers set roles in relationship to vocal categories and gender. In particular, Cuzzoni's superior virtuosic vocal abilities influenced and inspired German George Friedrich Handel's (1685–1759) compositional style and his musical treatment of dramatic elements.
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- Theatre Survey , Volume 51 , Special Issue 2: Operatic Intersections , November 2010 , pp. 247 - 273
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- Copyright © American Society for Theatre Research 2010
References
Endnotes
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104. Compare, for example, Somerset-Ward's descriptions of Cuzzoni (in chap. 2) and Senesino (in chap. 4).
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