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ATTILA (Verdi) St.Petersburg 2010 Ildar Abdrazakov, Vladislav Sulimsky, Anna Markarova, Sergey Skorokhodov

In this video

ATTILA  by Giuseppe Verdi
Mariinsky Theatre, St. Petersburg, Russia
2010

CAST

Ildar Abdrazakov — Attila, King of the Huns

Vladislav Sulimsky — Ezio, a Roman General

Anna Markarova — Odabella, daughter of the Lord of Aquileia

Sergey Skorokhodov — Foresto, a Knight of Aquileia

Mikhail Makarov — Uldino, Attila’s slave

Timur Abdikeyev — Leone, an old Roman
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Valery Gergiev — Conductor, music director
Mariinsky Orchestra
Mariinsky Chorus
Andrei Petrenko — Chorus director
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Arturo Gama — Stage director
Frank Philipp Schlössmann — Stage designer
Hanne Loosen — Costume designer
Yevgeny Ganzburg — Lighting designer
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Attila is an opera in a prologue and three acts by Giuseppe Verdi to an Italian libretto by Temistocle Solera, based on the 1809 play Attila, König der Hunnen (Attila, King of the Huns) by Zacharias Werner. The opera received its first performance at La Fenice in Venice on 17 March 1846.

Ezio’s act 2 aria of heroic resolution “È gettata la mia sorte” (My lot is cast, I am prepared for any warfare) is a fine example of a characteristic Verdian genre, and it achieved fame in its own time with audiences in the context of the adoption of a liberal constitution by Ferdinand II.[1] Other contemporary comment praised the work as suitable for the “political education of the people”, while, in contrast, others criticised the opera as “Teutonic” in nature.

Synopsis

Time: Mid-5th century (it was in 452 that the historical Attila destroyed the city of Aquileia)
Place: Aquileia, the Adriatic lagoons, and near Rome

Prologue
Scene 1: The ruined city of Aquileia

Attila and his victorious horde have destroyed the city of Aquileia (Urli, rapine / “Shouts, pillage”). They are surprised to see a group of women spared as prisoners of war (Di vergini straniere / “Ah, what is this group”). Their leader, Odabella, asks why the Huns’ women remain at home (Allor che i forti corrono / “While your warriors rush to their swords like lions”). Attila, impressed by her courage, offers a boon and she asks for her sword, with which she intends to avenge the death of her father at Attila’s own hand (Da te questo or m’è concesso / “O sublime, divine justice by thee is this now granted”). After she leaves, the Roman envoy Ezio asks for an audience and proposes a division of the empire (Avrai tu l’universo, Resti l’Italia a me / “You may have the universe, but let Italy remain mine”). Attila disdainfully calls him a traitor to his country.

Scene 2: A swamp, the future site of Venice

A boat bearing Foresto and other survivors arrives. He thinks of the captive Odabella (Ella in poter del barbaro / “She is in the barbarian’s power!”) but then rouses himself and the others to begin building a new city (Cara patria già madre e reina / “Dear homeland, at once mother and queen of powerful, generous sons”).

Act 1
Scene 1: Some weeks later. A wood near Attila’s camp, near Rome

Odabella laments her late father and (believing him to be dead) also her lover Foresto (Oh! Nel fuggente nuvolo / “O father, is your image not imprinted on the fleeting clouds?…”). When he appears, she is put on the defensive, denying any infidelity and reminding him of the biblical Judith. The couple is reunited: Oh, t’inebria nell’amplesso / “O vast joy without measure”.

Scene 2: Attila’s tent

Attila awakes and tells Uldino of a dream in which an old man stopped him at the gates of Rome and warned him to turn back (Mentre gonfiarsi l’anima parea / “As my soul seemed to swell”). In the daylight, his courage returns and he orders a march (Oltre a quel limite, t’attendo, o spettro / “Beyond that boundary I await you, O ghost!”). However, when a procession of maidens clad in white approaches, singing the Veni Creator Spiritus prayer (Vieni. Le menti visita / “Come, visit our minds”), he recognizes the Roman bishop Leo as the old man of his dream and collapses in terror.

Act 2
Scene 1: Ezio’s camp

Ezio has been recalled after a peace has been concluded. He contrasts Rome’s past glory with the current child emperor Valentine (Dagl’immortali vertici / “From the splendid immortal peaks of former glory”). Recognizing the incognito Foresto among the bearers of an invitation to a banquet with Attila, he agrees to join forces with him (È gettata la mia sorte, son pronto ad ogni guerra / “My lot is cast, I am prepared for any warfare” ).

Scene 2: Attila’s banquet

Foresto’s plot to have Uldino poison Attila is foiled by Odabella, jealous of her own revenge. A grateful (and unsuspecting) Attila declares she shall be his wife, and places the unmasked Foresto in her custody.

Act 3
The forest

Uldino informs Foresto about the plans for the wedding of Odabella and Attila; Foresto laments Odabella’s apparent betrayal (Che non avrebbe il misero / “What would that wretched man not have offered for Odabella”). Ezio arrives with a plan to ambush the Huns; when Odabella comes Foresto accuses her of treachery, but she pleads for his trust (Te sol quest’anima / “Foresto, my soul belongs to you”). Attila finds the three together and realizes he has been betrayed. As Roman soldiers approach, Odabella stabs him with the sword he had given her. The three conspirators cry that the people have been avenged.

Quoted from Wikipedia

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