Inspiration And Expert Advice: Famous People
Giacomo Puccini Biography
Claim to Fame: Operatic Composer
DOB: December 22, 1858
Date of Death: November 29, 1924
Diabetes Type: unknown
The last descendant in a long line of musical directors for the Cathedral of San Martino in Lucca, Italy, music for Giacomo Puccini was the family profession. His father, Michelle, was
organist and choirmaster of the Cathedral of San Martino, director
of the city's music school (the Instituto Pacini) and a minor
composer. When Giacomo was 6 his father died, leaving behind a wife with a large family and financial dire straights. Puccini's mother, however, was determined that he continue his musical education. He studied with an uncle and then at the Instituto Pacini. At 10 he became a choirboy at San Martino and San Michele, and
at 14 he began to play organ for the convent church. He earned money for his musical talent and even, allegedly, stole organ pipes along with his brother in order to resell them and earn money for his family.
Puccini's inspiration to become a composer was born during a performance of Aida, which he saw in his late teens. He enrolled in the Milan Conservatory,
for which he petitioned Queen Margherita for support and also
received a subsidy from his great-uncle Dr. Ceru. At the conservatory his teachers
were Ponchielli and Brazzini, and a fellow student was Mascagni.
For his graduation he wrote not opera music but an orchestral
composition which was played July 14, 1883 to great acclaim.
One of his first operas, “Le villi”, opened to great fanfare in Milan, earning him a contract to write operas for the prodigious La Scala theatre. After his firedt great success, Puccini's mother died. And on that same time, he entered a scandalous relationship with a married woman - the wife of a former school
friend along with one of her children - and settled with her in Torre del Lago, a small Tuscan fishing village. She bore him a son, Antonio.
Puccini's next work - Edgar, at La Scala, Milan on Easter Sunday 1889 - was
greeted with public appreciation but critical disdain. It received
only two more performances. The shareholders of his friend and publisher Giulio Ricordi wanted
to release Puccini, but Ricordi stood up for him and agreed
to pay his retainer himself. The opening of Manon Lescaut in Turin, (Ricordi's idea
to remove it from Milan) February 1, 1893, received the
greatest response of any of Puccini's premieres. Puccini was hailed
as the true heir to Verdi. He settled at the remote Tore Del
Largo where he built his own villa and could work undisturbed.
After a brief visit to Bayreuth, Germany, Puccini was inspired by the work of Richard Wagner and, working with the team of Luigi Illica and Giuseppe
Giacosa, produced the seminal works of his career following Manon Lescaut: the famous La Bohème, Tosca, Madama Butterfly, and La fanciulla del west (1910; The Girl of the Golden West). Although
it eventually became celebrated worldwide, Madama Butterfly
was a disaster at its premiere, the same year that Puccini finally
married Elvira Gemignani.
In 1903, he was diagnosed with diabetes, which he would struggle to control for much of his life. 1909, there was scandal after Puccini's wife, Elvira, falsely accused
their maid Doria Manfredi of having an affair with Puccini. The maid
then committed suicide. Elvira was successfully sued by the Manfredis, and Giacomo had to pay damages.
Traveling to New York, Puccini sought inspiration for his last works before returning to Europe. His last opera, based on the fable of Turandot, would remain unfinished due to his death from throat cancer in Brussels in 1924. Arturo Toscanini had Turandot completed by Franco
Alfano, and it was presented April 25, 1926 at La Scala. Toscanini
laid down his baton at the point that Puccini had stopped writing
and addressed the audience. The exact wording he used is the
subject of much debate. My favorite is 'Here death triumphed
over art.' The following evening Turandot was presented
as completed by Alfano.
Today, Puccini's epic operas are viewed as ultimate classics.
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