October 13, 2013

58 - Tosca (2001)

Giacomo Puccini’s 1899 opera Tosca is based on a play Victorien Sardou wrote as a star turn for Sarah Bernhardt in 1887 (La Tosca), with an opera libretto by Luigi Illicca and Giuseppe Giascosa. Sardou’s five act play was reduced to three acts. Elements of Shakespeare’s Othello [Iago] and Measure for Measure  [Angelo] surround three main characters:  Singer Floria Tosca, who says of herself, “Tosca’s blood burns with a mad love,” her painter lover Mario Cavaradossi and the Chief of Police Vittelio Scarpia -- imaginary characters peopling real Roman settings.

The opera opens in 1800 in the church of Sant’Andrea della Valle in Rome, at the Attavanti Chapel. On one side, a large easel holds a painting of a blonde blue-eyed Mary Magdalene, the work of the painter Mario Cavaradossi. Unbeknownst to Cavaradossi, the woman he has painted is the sister of Angelotti, consul of the late Roman Republic, who has just escaped from prison and is hiding in the church. Cavaradossi, a support of Angelotti’s hides him as Tosca enters. Angelotti tells him his sister has been in the church to leave him a disguise of women’s clothes and a fan. Just then Tosca, Mario’s jealous lover, comes and hears voices. She assumes he is hiding another lover and is even more suspicious when she sees the painting, since she has dark hair and eyes. Eventually, she goes off having made a date to see Mario later. Fearful of Angelotti being discovered, Mario takes him off to hide in his villa. When Il Barone Scarpia comes searching for Angelotti. He believes the painter has hidden him, so when Tosca returns to cancel their date because she has to sing celebrating the Italian victory over Bonaparte, Scarpia plays on her jealousy and says that the fan he carries (which Angelotti had left behind) was actually belonged to the girl Mario was meeting. she goes off to confront him. Scarpia plans to trap Angelotti and Cavaradossi and bed Tosca. The act ends with the people filling the church, celebrating a Te Deum.

Act II opens at the Farnese palace in Scarpia’s apartment on the upper floor, where he is having a late supper. During the first part of the scene, Tosca and the chorus sing offstage. Cavaradossi is brought in for questioning and denies knowing about Angelotti’s whereabouts. When Tosca arrives, Mario is taken offstage and tortured while Scarpia tries to get her to admit where Angelotti is. As Mario’s pain become unbearable to her, she finally tells Scarpia what he wants to know. Mario is brought back in and Scarpia revels in telling him he’s been betrayed. He is taken off to be executed. Scarpia finally tells Tosca that if she will have sex with him, he will spare Mario’s life. Not wanting to outright pardon him, he proposes that blanks be used in his execution. She agrees’ and at her urging, he signs safe passage for the two lovers. As he tries to attack Tosca, she takes a dinner knife and stabs Scarpia. In the libretto stage directions, “Tosca puts down the knife, washes her hands, pulls the safe conduct from Scarpia’s clenched hand, places a lighted candleon each side of the dead man’s head and a crucifix on his chest. Looking about cautiously, she goes out the door and quietly closes it.”

Act III takes place in a cell in the Castel Sant’Angelo and above is an outdoor platform reached by stairs. A shepherd is heard in the distance. Mario sings of his sweet memories of Tosca. She comes and tells him of the plans, telling him how to act when shot and not to move until she calls him. After they sing of their love, the soldiers come and Mario is shot. But Tosca has been tricked. The bullets are real and Mario is dead. As they discover Scarpia’s murder, Tosca climbs to the top of wall and after telling Scarpia that he and she will stand together before God, she throws herself off the wall.

While the real places mentioned in the opera offer the glorious opportunities of setting, the film relies on props and set pieces in front of a black background. Occasionally, however, brief images of the real places present jarring intrusions. Tosca sings of the villa where they’ll meet and we are shown it. Scarpia walks through the church and we suddenly see the baroque paintings of the ceiling.  Also, to establish a concert feel to the production, black and white images of the orchestra and the singers in a studio are used to open and close scenes. When the actors would sing to themselves, we tend to get these as voice-overs.

The strongest visual image of the film is Tosca’s second costume, a flame red empire gown with lengthy train and cape with even longer train. As seen from above, the swash of color looks like blood spilling on the floor.  One of the surprises of the film for me is the director’s choice to eliminate Tosca’s business with the candles and crucifix. This moment is one of the most seen images of the opera and the play. Without it, I reacted with a “wtf?”

Angela Gheorghiu (Tosca), Robert Algna (Cavaradossi), and Ruggero Raimondi (Scarpia) all have strong and often lyrical voices. But since director Benoit Jacquot likes close-ups, we often have operatic large gestures and emotions thrust into our face.

The subtitles in the version I saw (unlike the clip below) do help.

I would not call this the definitive version of the opera, but it is worth a look.


Tosca (2001) ***


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