Mad scene  

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A mad scene is an enactment of insanity in an opera. It was a popular convention of Italian and French opera in the early decades of the nineteenth century.

Mad scenes were often created as a way to offer star singers a chance to show off their abilities as singers, though many of them are also very dramatic. The vocal writing is often exciting and highly demanding, requiring immense skill. Most mad scenes were composed for the soprano voice, but there are examples for the baritone and the tenor.

They are most popularly associated with works of the bel canto period, though examples may also be found in earlier works, such as George Frederick Handel's Orlando and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Idomeneo. Almost all mad scenes were composed for either opere serie or opere semiserie; Gaetano Donizetti was probably the most famous exponent of the form.

The convention of writing mad scenes largely died out after the bel canto era, as composers sought to inject more realism into their operas. More recently, some composers have returned to the form for dramatic effect, most notably Benjamin Britten in the final act of Peter Grimes.

It is also for ballets because Giselle has a mad scene.

Examples

Gaetano Donizetti

Vincenzo Bellini

  • I puritani ("O rendetemi... Qui la voce sua soave... Vien, diletto, e in ciel la luna")
  • Il Pirata ("Cor sorriso d'innocenza... Oh, Sole! ti vela di tenebra fonda")
  • La Sonnambula ("Oh! se una volta sola... Ah! non credea mirarti... Ah! non giunge uman pensiero"). (not strictly a mad scene, as it is written for a character who is sleepwalking rather than losing her mind)

Ambroise Thomas

  • Hamlet ("Partagez-vous mes fleurs").

Benjamin Britten

Giuseppe Verdi

Parodies

Gilbert & Sullivan

Benjamin Britten

References

  • Anderson, James (1993) The Complete Dictionary of Opera & Operetta, New York
  • Ewen, David (1963) Encyclopedia of the Opera, New York





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Mad scene" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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