Simon Boccanegra

Giuseppe Verdi

Simon Boccanegra

This production ran: Apr 10 - Apr 25

This production is in the past.

Overview

All remaining performances in the 2019–20 season have been canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic. Click here to learn more.

Audience favorite Ailyn Pérez takes on the touching role of Amelia Grimaldi, with legendary baritone Carlos Álvarez returning to the Met for the first time in more than a decade in the title role. Elegant tenor Joseph Calleja is her lover, Gabriele Adorno, and magisterial bass Dmitry Belosselskiy completes the principal cast as Amelia’s grandfather, Jacopo Fiesco. Carlo Rizzi takes the podium for Verdi’s timeless tale of political and family intrigue.

Production a gift of the Estate of Anna Case Mackay

Additional funding from the Metropolitan Opera Club, the Annie Laurie Aitken Charitable Trust, The Eleanor Naylor Dana Charitable Trust, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Montrone

Revival a gift of the NPD Group, Inc.

 

Languages

Languages sung in Simon Boccanegra

Sung In

Italian

Titles

Title languages displayed for Simon Boccanegra

Met Titles In

  • English
  • German
  • Spanish
  • Italian

Timeline

Timeline for the show, Simon Boccanegra

Estimated Run Time

3 hrs 20 mins

  • House Opens

  • Prologue & Act I

    100 mins

  • Intermission

    40 mins

  • Acts II & III

    60 mins

  • Opera Ends

Simon Boccanegra

World Premiere: Teatro la Fenice, Venice, 1857 (original version); Teatro alla Scala, Milan, 1881 (revised version). Simon Boccanegra is Verdi’s compelling portrayal of a man who is both a leader and an outsider, set against one of the most incisive depictions of politics ever put on the stage. The title character, with his complex relationships with rivals and his long-lost daughter, is one of the summits of the baritone repertoire. The opera’s complicated story and dark tone have proven stumbling blocks for many critics and audiences in America. Yet it remains a rewarding example of Verdi’s genius at its most humane and insightful.

Creators

In a remarkable career spanning six decades in the theater, Giuseppe Verdi (1813–1901) composed 28 operas, at least half of which are at the core of today’s repertoire. This opera was based on the play Simón Bocanegra (1843) by the Spanish playwright Antonio García Gutiérrez (1813–1884), whose El Trovador was the source for Verdi’s Il Trovatore. The librettist for the original version was Francesco Maria Piave (1810–1876), who was Verdi’s librettist during his extremely successful and productive middle period. Composer and writer Arrigo Boito (1842–1918), who later collaborated with Verdi on Otello and Falstaff, worked on the revised version of Boccanegra.

PRODUCTION

Giancarlo del Monaco

SET AND COSTUME DESIGNER

Michael Scott

LIGHTING DESIGNER

Wayne Chouinard

Headshot of Giuseppe Verdi

Composer

Giuseppe Verdi

Setting

Simon Boccanegra

The opera is based on a historical figure who, in 1339, became doge of the Republic of Genoa.

Music

Even looking at its original 1857 form, Verdi was attempting something new with Boccanegra. He supplied each act with the customary rousing music but insisted that the important parts of the score were found between the applause-grabbing moments. His sophisticated revision more than two decades later further expanded the role of the orchestra and deepened the characterizations.

Simon Boccanegra