by calvert on 15 May 2009, 12:33
Donizetti's opera about a queen with a tragic eating disorder: Anna Bolemia.
Act I - The Great Hall in the Palace
The courtiers whisper among themselves about how thin the Queen is getting because she can't keep any food down. ("Ahi, Misera! Ella non puo mangiare!") They sing that the King no longer dines with her. Giovanna Seymour enters, distressed, and in a dramatic recitative-arioso, sings that the Queen sent for her and then threw up on her ("Ella di me solecita e poi m'ha vomitava!"). Anna now enters at the top of the staircase and, after vomiting on the landing, descends shakily to Giovanna. She asks Giovanna why she looks so distressed. Giovanna replies, who could not be distressed when wearing the Queen's breakfast? Anna says, yes, she has been praying to the porcelain God a great deal, ("E ver, afflitto son io, ne sol perché!), but she knows things will improve. She calls for Smeaton, a young page, and asks him to sing a song to cheer everyone up. Smeaton then sings a tender ballad about the joys of the table ("Deh, non volere a mangiarmi"). The Ballad covers the entire meal, a stanza for each course. But when he reaches the verse about the savory, Anna reacts violently ("Cessa, deh cessa!) and throws up ("Uuuuurrrppp!"). In a poignant aria ("Come, innocente giovane"), Anna recalls to herself how the King complained that she was fat and so she embarked on a binge-and-purge regimen that got out of hand. Then, while singing the cabaletta on the joys of regurgitation, "Non v'ha sguardo a cui si vomito," she stuffs herself with polenta, sausage, and delicious cinnamon rolls. At the end of the cabaletta, she snatches the helmet off of a guard, pukes into it, and after handing it back to the disconcerted guard, exits with as much dignity as she can muster.
To be continued...