Dramma lirico in three
acts
Libretto by Giuseppe Adami and Renato Simoni after the eponymous
work by Carlo Gozzi
Premiere: 25 April 1926
Teatro alla Scala, Milano
Turandot: from the Commedia dell’Arte to a sui generis expressionism
Turandot was Giacomo Puccini's last compositional adventure. Begun in 1921, it was a project that would occupy him until 1924. He died on 29 November that year, leaving sketches and many doubts about the text and music of the last two scenes, which would be completed by Franco Alfano. The libretto was inspired by the theatrical fable Turandotte (1762) by the Venetian count Carlo Gozzi. Although greatly transformed in its final form from its original comic overtones, Puccini rescued from it the homage to the commedia dell'arte in the figures of the three ministers and the emperor Altoum. The composer always felt it was an opera in one long act, and the division into three never satisfied him. Nevertheless, he resigned himself to accepting the custom of presenting it in three sections separated by curtain falls. Its 20th-Century modernity transcends its ‘ethnographic’ musical contributions (reworked authentic Chinese music), hints of bitonality, subtlety of orchestration and search for new timbres that denote Puccini's eternal youth in his venerable old age.