Description
Donizetti: Don Gregorio 2 DVD Set / Playful melodrama in two acts, Libretto by lacopo Ferretti and Andrea Leone Tottola / Orchestra and Chorus of The Bergamo Musica Festival / Conductor: Stefano Montanar / Chorus master: Fabio Tartari / DVD
Format: NTSC
Run time: 135 Minutes
UPC: 8007144335793
- Aspect Ratio : 1.78:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : Yes
- MPAA rating : Unrated (Not Rated)
- Package Dimensions : 7.1 x 5.42 x 0.58 inches; 4.66 Ounces
- Director : Roberto Recchia
- Media Format : Subtitled, NTSC
- Release date : November 25, 2008
- Actors : Elizaveta Martirosyan, Livio Scarpellini, Paolo Bordogna, Giorgio Trucco, Giorgio Valerio
- Dubbed: : French
- Subtitles: : English, French, German, Italian
- Studio : Dynamic
- Number of discs : 2
Giorgio Valerio (Marchese Don Giulio Antiquati), Giorgio Trucco (Marchese Enrico), Elizaveta Martirosyan (Madama Gilda Tallemanni), Livio Scarpellini (Marchese Pippetto), Paolo Bordogna (Gregorio Cordebono), Alessandra Fratelli (Leonarda), Luca Ludovici (Simone), Orchestra and chorus of the Bergamo Musica Festival Gaetano Donizetti, Stefano Montanari, Roberto Recchia Bergamo, Italy, Teatro Donizetti , second edition of the Bergamo Music Festival, November 2nd-4th, 2007. Staged for the first time at Teatro Nuovo in Naples in 1826, Don Gregorio is the Neapolitan version of one of Donizetti’s earliest masterpieces, L’ajo nell’imbarazzo (1824). This is the first representation in Italy in modern times, and a world premiere recording. Director Roberto Recchia sets the performance in the 1920s, at a time when restrictions and false morality were strongly linked with Italian political and social situation. In its new adaptation, the work differs from the original version in several aspects, the most important being the insertion of spoken dialogues in Neapolitan dialect in place of the recitatives. But Donizetti’s musical verve remains unchanged as he underlines the very enjoyable farcical situations of this comic work. The characters are inspired by Italian Commedia dell’Arte, but possess at the same time a deeper psychological and human dimension.