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  2. In the Loge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_The_Loge

    The painting displays a bourgeois woman at the opera house looking through her opera glasses, while a man in the background looks at her. [2] The woman's costume and fan make clear her upper class status. [2] Art historians see the painting as commentary on the role of gender, looking, and power in the social spaces of the nineteenth century.

  3. List of prominent operas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_prominent_operas

    Donizetti's "comic masterpiece" is one of the last great opera buffas. [82] 1843 I Lombardi alla prima crociata (Verdi). Verdi's follow-up to Nabucco was the first of his operas to be performed in America. [83] 1843 The Bohemian Girl (Michael Balfe). One of the few notable 19th-century English-language operas apart from the works of Gilbert and ...

  4. La Fenice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Fenice

    It is one of "the most famous and renowned landmarks in the history of Italian theatre" [1] and in the history of opera as a whole. Especially in the 19th century, La Fenice became the site of many famous operatic premieres at which the works of several of the four major bel canto era composers—Rossini, Bellini, Donizetti, and Verdi—were ...

  5. Salvator Rosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvator_Rosa

    Salvator Rosa is a 19th-century Italian opera by Antônio Carlos Gomes, with libretto by Antonio Ghislanzoni, after the novel Masaniello by Eugène de Mirecourt. The 1846 ballet Catarina by the choreographer Jules Perrot and the composer Cesare Pugni was produced in London at Her Majesty's Theatre , and was inspired by the alleged story of Rosa ...

  6. Nineteenth-century theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nineteenth-century_theatre

    Richard Wagner's Bayreuth Festival Theatre.. A wide range of movements existed in the theatrical culture of Europe and the United States in the 19th century. In the West, they include Romanticism, melodrama, the well-made plays of Scribe and Sardou, the farces of Feydeau, the problem plays of Naturalism and Realism, Wagner's operatic Gesamtkunstwerk, Gilbert and Sullivan's plays and operas ...

  7. French opera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_opera

    The Salle Le Peletier, home of the Paris Opera during the middle of the 19th century. French opera is both the art of opera in France and opera in the French language.It is one of Europe's most important operatic traditions, containing works by composers of the stature of Rameau, Berlioz, Gounod, Bizet, Massenet, Debussy, Ravel, Poulenc and Messiaen.