Show results for
Explore
In Stock
Artists
Actors
Authors
Format
Theme
Genre
Rated
Studio
Specialty
Decades
Platforms
Size
Color
Deals
- The Movies That Made Me: David Morse
- The Movies That Made Me: Clayne Crawford
- The Movies That Made Me: Dr. Z (Dana Gould)
- The Movies That Made Me: Billie Piper
- The Movies That Made Me: B. Goldthwait/D. Gould
- Check Out the Latest Collectibles
- The Movies That Made Me: Mitch Watson
- The Movies That Made Me: Alex Kurtzman-Jenny Lumet
- The Movies That Made Me: Antonio Campos
- The Movies That Made Me: Sterlin Harjo
- The Movies That Made Me: Roger and Gala Avary
- The Movies That Made Me: Titus Welliver
- The Movies That Made Me: Boots Riley
- The Movies That Made Me: Scott Alexander
- Collectible Magazines
- The Movies That Made Me: Robert Krzykowski
- The Movies That Made Me: Brit Marling, Part II
- Awesome Action Sale
- Horror and Sci-Fi Highlights
- Favorites from the '50s on Sale
- Greats from Universal on Sale
- Flip Over These Fan Favorites
- Name's in the Title Sale
- Christmas in July Sale
- Deals on Sensational Sets from Paramount
- Buys on the Best from Ken Burns
- Midnight Movies from Blue Underground
- Cult Collectibles from Troma
- SpongeBob SquarePants 25th Anniversary Sale
- Check Out Our Recent Hits Roundup
- Region Free Imports for Collectors
- Better looking than ever on Blu-ray!
- Tons of TV Treasures on sale!
![](/content/img/_.gif)
![Il Tabarro](https://mediacdn.aent-m.com/prod-img/300/57/3829557-2572600.jpg?ae=3451203150)
![loading image](/content/img/loading.gif)
Get it between
Thu. Aug 1 - Fri. Aug 16
Deliver to
This production is new staging of the Teatro del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino. Il Tabarro is one of the three one-act operas that compose Giacomo Puccini's Il Trittico. Michele is married to young Giorgetta and shares with her a life full of hardships on a barge over the river Seine. She is in love with Luigi, a young longshoreman hired by her husband during the loading of the barge. When Michele overhears his wife giving a rendezvous to Luigi by night, he waits for the man and attacks him, forces him to admit he is his wife's lover and finally strangles him. Then he hides the body under his cloak, (il tabarro) and when Giorgetta, in mortal fear, comes on deck and asks Michele if he does not wish her to come and rest near him under his cloak, her wronged husband throws it open and Giorgetta discovers in horror her dead lover's body rolling at her feet. The element of Didier Gold's Houppelande that most attracted Puccini was the opportunity to represent, in music, a river, which is what acts as a backdrop in this plot and determines it's pace. The importance of this atmosphere is enormous, because it is linked to the mise en scene more tightly than usual. The action entirely takes place on a barge over the Seine in Paris, which is placed in the centre of the scene. The music describing the river uses a cyclic repetition of ostinato patterns, representing the monotonous flowing of the water, as inexorable as destiny and as regular as the flow of time. The pulse of the river cyclically marks, in the first part of Tabarro, the life of this world of vanquished: longshoremen and boatmen. But even when it disappears, the musical identity between drama and location does not cease to exist.
Street Date: | 7/17/2020 |