Stefano Mandini
Stefano Mandini was an outstanding Italian operatic baritone of the second half of the 18th century. He appeared in the premieres of many well-known operas of his day, of which the most famous at the present time is Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro, for which Mandini created the role of Count Almaviva.
Career
His career began in Italy with performances in Ferrara in 1774 and Parma in 1776. A key event occurred when Emperor Joseph II of Austria chose to found a top-rank Italian opera company at his capital in Vienna, and sent his representatives seeking the best available talent. Mandini was recruited during this search, and first sang in the Emperor's company on 5 May 1783 as Milord Arespingh in L'italiana in Londra by Domenico Cimarosa. He sang in a number of operas with the company, including the following:- 1783
- *Mingone in Giuseppe Sarti's Fra i due litiganti il terzo gode
- *Don Fabio in Cimarosa's Il falegname
- *Count Almaviva in Giovanni Paisiello's The Barber of Seville
- 1784
- *Le vicende d'amore
- *La finta amante and Il re Teodoro in Venezia
- *La vendemmia
- 1785
- *Artidoro in Stephen Storace's Gli sposi malcontenti
- *Plistene in Antonio Salieri's La grotta di Trofonio
- 1786
- *the Poet in Salieri's Prima la musica e poi le parole
- *Count Almaviva in Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro
- *Lubino in Martín y Soler's Una cosa rara
- *Sarti's I finti eredi
- *Paisiello's Le gare generose
- 1787–88
- *Leandro in Paisiello's Le due contesse
- *Doristo in Martín y Soler's L'arbore di Diana
- *Biscroma in Salieri's Axur, re d'Ormus
Mandini left Vienna, following a gala benefit concert for himself, in 1788. He moved to sing in Naples, later Paris, again Vienna, and Saint Petersburg.
He was married to Maria Mandini, a French soprano, also member of the Vienna company.
His connection with Mozart
The first time Mozart composed music for Mandini to sing was not a complete opera but rather an insertion piece, composed for a revival performance of Francesco Bianchi's opera La villanella rapita. This is the trio "Mandina amabile", K. 480, from act 1 of the opera, performed 5 and 21 November, 1785.When Mandini was cast as Count Almaviva in Mozart's Le Nozze di Figaro, Mozart followed his normal practice in tailoring the music to the singer's strengths. In the opera, the biggest scene for the Count is his long solo appearance near the start of Act 3, where he first ponders his options, then expresses rage at Figaro, and finally breaks out into triumph and joy as he imagines revenge. Keefe notes that in preparing this scene, Mozart followed his normal practice, preparing a particella, a score "comprising vocal lines, an instrumental bass line and occasional instrument material". Keefe suggests that, at Mozart's invitation, Mandini inspected the particella and requested a change, namely the insertion of coloratura material near the very end. Mozart obliged him with three measures of virtuosity, with rapid triplets rising to a trill on C sharp. Thus some of the actual content of the opera may be attributable to Mandini's influence.
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