Tosca: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Shot At Dawn]]: Cavaradossi's execution.
* [[Shot At Dawn]]: Cavaradossi's execution.
* [[Smite Me, O Mighty Smiter!]]: Tosca has a moment of this in act 2 after Scarpia demands that she has sex with him.
* [[Smite Me, O Mighty Smiter!]]: Tosca has a moment of this in act 2 after Scarpia demands that she has sex with him.
* [[Shout Out/To Shakespeare|Shout Out To Shakespeare]]: Scarpia compares himself to [[Othello|Iago]] in his first scene. You know, just in case you were confused about who the villain here was.
* [[Shout-Out/To Shakespeare|Shout Out To Shakespeare]]: Scarpia compares himself to [[Othello|Iago]] in his first scene. You know, just in case you were confused about who the villain here was.
* [[Staged Shooting]]: Cavaradossi's firing squad is a subversion -- Scarpia tells Tosca that the guns will be loaded with blanks, but he pulls a variation on [[You Said You Would Let Them Go]] instead.
* [[Staged Shooting]]: Cavaradossi's firing squad is a subversion -- Scarpia tells Tosca that the guns will be loaded with blanks, but he pulls a variation on [[You Said You Would Let Them Go]] instead.
* [[Tenor Boy]]: Cavaradossi
* [[Tenor Boy]]: Cavaradossi

Revision as of 04:37, 26 January 2014

Tosca is an Opera by Giacomo Puccini, one of the most famous operas.

On the eve of Napoleon's occupation of Rome, the painter Mario Cavaradossi hides his friend, escaped political prisoner Cesare Angelotti, from the police. Unfortunately this brings both him and his sweetheart, the singer Floria Tosca, to the attention of the villainous chief of police Scarpia. Scarpia arrests Cavaradossi and demands that Tosca spend the night with him, then the painter's execution will be fake, and the lovers will be able to leave Rome. Tosca agrees, but when Scarpia comes to embrace her, she stabs him in the heart with a knife. Unfortunately, Scarpia did not intend to release Cavaradossi at all, and the execution turns out to be real. Seeing her lover dead and Scarpia's henchmen running to get her, Tosca leaps off the parapet of the Castel Sant'Angelo, crying that she will meet Scarpia before God.

Oh, and did we mention that poor Angelotti commits suicide somewhere in the middle of the second act? This gets us 4 dead people by the end of the opera.

Yeah. Opera really is angsty business, folks.


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