Myth, Allegory, and Theory in Jacopo Peri’S and Ottavio Rinuccini’S Euridice (1600)*

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Myth, Allegory, and Theory in Jacopo Peri’S and Ottavio Rinuccini’S Euridice (1600)* chapter 3 The Accademia degli Alterati and the Invention of a New Form of Dramatic Experience: Myth, Allegory, and Theory in Jacopo Peri’s and Ottavio Rinuccini’s Euridice (1600)* Déborah Blocker On the evening of 6 October 1600, as part of the week-long festivities celebrat- ing the wedding by proxy of Maria de’ Medici and Henry IV of France, a new type of divertimento was staged inside the Pitti Palace in Florence. The per- formance was given in the apartments of Don Antonio de’ Medici (1576–1621) for the enjoyment of the official wedding guests of Grand Duke Ferdinando I de’ Medici (1549–1609), as well as a small number of Florentine courtiers. The piece was a poetic text set to music, staging a happy-ended version of the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice in stile recitativo. It bore the title Euridice and is often considered today to have constituted the first courtly opera. The performance also included an element that is usually absent from most modern operas: it was enhanced by ballets, sometimes involving the whole cast, as during the finale.1 Euridice’s libretto had been composed by the poet Ottavio Rinuccini (1562–1621), while the music was a creation of Jacopo Peri (1561–1633), both artists having worked in close collaboration with their patron, the Florentine merchant and music lover Jacopo Corsi (1561–1602). Corsi had financed and organised most of the court performance and went so far as to play the harpsi- chord to support the efforts of his protégés during the event. These men were not only tied by bonds of patronage and friendship; they were also tightly * I am very grateful to Tim Carter for his thorough comments on one of the last drafts of this essay. I also thank Anne Piéjus for her detailed remarks on the initial conference paper. 1 Tim Carter, ‘Epyllia and Epithalamia: Some Narratives Frames for Early Opera’, forthcoming, p. 17, also underscores that the performance was followed by two hours of communal court dancing. See Angelo Solerti, Musica, ballo e drammatica alla corte Medicea dal 1600 al 1637; notizie tratte da un diario, con appendice di testi inediti e rari (Florence: R. Bemporad & Figlio, 1905), p. 25, n. 1, where the Ambassador of Parma is quoted as having reported that after the performance ‘poi si ballò piu di due ore, mesticate la Regina e l’altre principesse con le pri- vate, et si fini la festa’. © déborah blocker, ���7 | doi ��.��63/97890043�9768_005 This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the CC-BY-NC License. 78 Blocker connected by their links to one of the major learned societies of late Renaissance Florence, the Accademia degli Alterati (1560–c. 1625), whose dis- cussions on the pleasures of art and on the effects of dramatic spectacles may well have been the basis for many of the novelties of Euridice. In what follows, the central aim is to better understand what these three men were trying to accomplish, both at the artistic level and in social and political terms, with the production of this new type of dramatic experience at the Florentine court. The study begins by documenting the particular cir- cumstances in which the work was originally produced in order to support the subsequent investigation of two main lines of inquiry. The first of these is the question of what types of pleasure(s) this spectacle attempted to generate as well as that of what forms of both sensual and spiritual experience the diverti- mento’s creators sought to make accessible to their audience. Because Euridice proposes nothing less than a self-reflexive representation of the types of expe- rience it strives, as a performance, to offer, these questions can be elucidated by studying how the primary features of the spectacle created by Rinuccini, Peri, and Corsi were exhibited, in an allegorical mode, within the work itself. Once the nature of the new artistic experience being experimented with in Euridice is defined, it becomes possible to ask a second question, which is equally cen- tral to the work’s allegorical plot: what is the place of the pleasures generated by art in a well-ordered polity? Because of the particular circumstances of Euridice’s performance, this question is, more specifically, how the spiritual pleasures of art’s materiality can be both produced and enjoyed in the context of an authoritarian regime, such as that of the Medici. The responses Euridice ventures to these two sets of questions shed new light on our historical under- standing of Renaissance drama and poetics alike—showing how, in specific circumstances, reflections on the pleasures of art could reflexively constitute the core of a dramaturgical production as well as how, within court culture itself, forms of autonomy were experimented with and even asserted within such productions, despite the constraints the patronage system is sometimes believed to have imposed upon artists. 1 Was Euridice the Covert Dramaturgical Manifesto of a Nonconformist Academy? Peri’s and Rinuccini’s Euridice has recently received quite a bit of scholarly attention,2 but many of the most central elements in the history of its creation 2 Angelo Solerti, Gli Arbori del Melodramma, 3 vols (Milan: R. Sandron, 1904), ii (on Ottavio Rinuccini), pp. 105–42 offers the first modern printing of the libretto. Claude Palisca’s work .
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