Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%
Print this page

Così Fan Tutte

Mozart's moving and ambiguous late opera
State Opera of South Australia
by
ABR Arts 06 September 2024

Così Fan Tutte

Mozart's moving and ambiguous late opera
State Opera of South Australia
by
ABR Arts 06 September 2024
Sky Ingram as Fiordiligi (photograph by Andrew Beveridge)
Sky Ingram as Fiordiligi (photograph by Andrew Beveridge)

Così Fan Tutte – the third and last of Mozart and Lorenzo da Ponte’s collaborations – followed Le nozze di Figaro (Vienna, 1786) and Don Giovanni (Prague, 1787). This was a time of increased penury and loss for Wolfgang and Constanze (two children died during the writing of writing Così) but also one of almost unfathomable creativity for Mozart, who wrote his three last symphonies within a matter of weeks. Così (commissioned by the Emperor Joseph II) had its première in Vienna on 26 January 1790 (with Joseph Haydn in the audience) and would have run for longer than its season of ten performances but for the emperor’s death in February 1790. Mozart would compose two more operas – La Clemenza di Tito and Die Zauberflöte (both in 1791) – before dying at the end of that year, aged thirty-five.