Stefano Mandini
Stefano Mandini (1750-ca. 1810) was an outstanding baritone singer 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
[edit]His career began in Italy with performances in Venice (1775-1776) and Parma (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 (P. A. Guglielmi),
- La finta amante and Il re Teodoro in Venezia (Paisiello)
- La vendemmia (Giuseppe Gazzaniga).
- 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 (1 May)
- Lubino in Martín y Soler’s Una cosa rara
- Sarti’s I finti eredi
- Paisiello’s Le gare generose
- 1787–8
- 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.
Later he sang in Naples, Paris, again in Vienna, and St. Petersburg.
He was married to Maria Mandini, a French soprano.
Assessment
[edit]His singing was admired in St. Petersburg by the painter Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun. Raeburn observes, "His wide range permitted him to create Count Almaviva as a tenor for Paisiello and as a baritone for Mozart."
References
[edit]- Raeburn, Christopher (1992) "Mandini family (opera)". Now on line in Grove Music Online, [1]