I
Pagliacci
Leoncavallo
Before the opera begins, the clown
Tonio steps before the curtain to say that the author has written about actors,
who know the same joys and sorrows as other people.
PART 1
Southern Italy, around 1865-70. Excited villagers mill about as a small
theatrical road company arrives at the outskirts of a Calabrian town. Canio,
head of the troupe, describes that night's offering, and when someone jokingly
suggests that the hunchback Tonio is secretly enamoured of his young wife, Canio
warns he will tolerate no flirting with Nedda. As vesper bells call the women to
church, the men go to the tavern, leaving Nedda alone. Disturbed by her
husband's vehemence and suspicious glances, she envies the freedom of the birds
soaring overhead. Tonio appears and indeed tries to make love to her, but she
scorns him. Enraged, he grabs her, and she lashes out with a whip, getting rid
of him but inspiring an oath of vengeance. Nedda in fact does have a lover —
Silvio, who now arrives and persuades her to run away with him at midnight. But
Tonio, who has seen them, hurries off to tell Canio. Before long the jealous
husband bursts in on the guilty pair. Silvio escapes, and Nedda refuses to
identify him, even when threatened with a knife. Beppe, another player, has to
restrain Canio, and Tonio advises him to wait until evening to catch Nedda's
lover. Alone, Canio sobs that he must play the clown though his heart is
breaking.
PART 2
The villagers, Silvio among them, assemble to see the play Pagliaccio e
Colombina. In the absence of her husband, Pagliaccio (played by Canio),
Colombina (Nedda) is serenaded by her lover Arlecchino (Beppe), who dismisses
her buffoonish servant, Taddeo (Tonio). The sweethearts dine together and plot
to poison Pagliaccio, who soon arrives; Arlecchino slips out the window. With
pointed malice, Taddeo assures Pagliaccio of his wife's innocence, firing
Canio's real-life jealousy. Forgetting the script, he demands that Nedda reveal
her lover's name. She tries to continue with the play, the audience applauding
the realism of the "acting." Maddened by her defiance, Canio stabs
Nedda and then Silvio, who has rushed forward from the crowd to help her. Canio
cries out that the comedy is ended.