Vincenzo Negrini (born Vincenzo Bartolomeo Trentanove) (24 August 1804 – 16 August 1840) was an Italian bass-baritone opera singer. Born in Cesena, he sang leading bass and baritone roles in Italy's major opera houses and created several roles in early 19th-century operas, most notably Oroveso in Bellini's Norma and Folco in Donizetti's Ugo, conte di Parigi. Severe heart disease caused him to retire from the stage in June 1840. He died in Milan two months later at the age of 35.

Lithograph of Vincenzo Negrini, c. 1835

Life and career edit

Negrini was born in 1804 in Cesena, Italy, a city in the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy. He was the second of the four children of Luigi Trentanove and Maria née Negrini from whom he later took his stage name.[1] He studied singing in Bologna, and began his stage career at a young age. His earliest recorded performances were during the 1826 carnival season at the Teatro Comunitativo in Ravenna, where he appeared in Mercadante's opera Didone abbandonata and Rossini's Semiramide.[2]

During the next four years he sang in various smaller provincial theatres in Italy but also appeared at the Teatro Apollo in Rome in Mercadante's Caritea, regina di Spagna and Rossini's Eduardo e Cristina and at the Teatro Alfieri in Florence where he created the role of Rolando in Luigi Maria Viviani's L'amore in guerra. By early 1831 he had been engaged by the Teatro Ducale in Parma where he sang in four operas, including Rossini's Matilde di Shabran and Le comte Ory. In December of that year he appeared at La Scala in Milan, singing the role of Oroveso in the world premiere of Bellini's Norma and subsequently appeared there in several more operas during the 1832 season, including the world premiere of Donizetti's Ugo, conte di Parigi singing the role of Folco.[3]

Following the 1832 La Scala season he sang regularly in other major Italian opera houses of the day, including the Teatro San Benedetto in Venice, the Teatro Regio in Turin, and the Teatro Carlo Felice in Genoa. In 1837 he also appeared in Vienna at the Kärntnertortheater in the title role of Belisario, as Enrico Ashton in Lucia di Lammermoor, and as Filippo in Beatrice di Tenda. His last stage appearances were at the Teatro Carlo Felice in 1840 where he sang Enrico Ashton in Lucia di Lammermoor, the title role in Nicolai's Il templario, and Conte Sentinelli in the world premiere of Alessandro Nini's Cristina di Svezia. After the performances of Cristina di Svezia in June 1840, Negrini retired from the stage, gravely ill with heart disease.[4]

During the last months of his life Negrini lived with the Dufour family in Milan while being treated at the sanatorium which they had founded in 1830. He died there on 16 August 1840 a few days before his 36th birthday. His funeral took place at the Church of San Vittore Grande accompanied by a military band and choristers from La Scala. His friend and fellow baritone, Luigi Goffredo Zuccoli, read the eulogy over his grave in the nearby Porta Vercellina cemetery.[5] Francesco Regli wrote of Zuccoli's eulogy in the journal Il Pirata:

He was weeping ... and everyone was weeping with him ... I too was weeping ... I weep even as I write this ... I do not know when my tears will cease![6]

Roles created edit

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ Dell'Amore p. 183. The birth date in this source is based on a copy of Negrini's baptismal certificate dated 25 August 1804. Regli (1860) p. 357 and many later sources based on Regli erroneously give his birth year as 1807.
  2. ^ Dell'Amore p. 184
  3. ^ Dell'Amore pp. 192–193
  4. ^ Dell'Amore pp. 193–195; Regli (1860) p. 358
  5. ^ Regli (18 August 1840) pp. 56–57
  6. ^ Regli (18 August 1840) p. 57. Original Italian: "Egli piangeva ... e tutti piangevan con esso ... ed io pure ... io pure scrivo piangendo ... ne so quando potranno cessar le mie lagrime!
  7. ^ Teatri, arti e letteratura (20 March 1829) pp. 13–14
  8. ^ a b c d e Casaglia
Sources
  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Vincenzo Negrini". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  • Dell'Amore, Franco (2011). Le vite dei cesenati, Vol. 5, pp, 182–195. Editrice Stilgraf (in Italian)
  • Regli, Francesco (18 August 1840). "Necrologia: Vincenzo Negrini". Il pirata, Anno 6, Numero 14, pp. 56–57 (in Italian)
  • Regli, Francesco (1860). "Negrini, Vicenzo", Dizionario biografico dei più celebri poeti ed artisti melodrammatici, tragici e comici, maestri, concertisti, coreografi, mimi, ballerini, scenografi, giornalisti, impresarii, ecc. ecc. che fiorirono in Italia dal 1800 al 1860, pp. 357–358. Enrico Dalmazzo (in Italian)
  • Teatri, arti e letteratura (20 March 1829), "Spettacoli dello scorso carnevale". Anno 7, Numero 257, pp. 13–15 (in Italian).