Carlo Felice Cillario: Italian maestro of the Australian Opera
Connors Court Publishing, $59.95 hb, 543 pp
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Ageless maestro
My first experience of Carlo Felice Cillario was in March 1969, when he conducted the Elizabethan Trust Opera’s production of Verdi’s Un ballo in maschera at Her Majesty’s Theatre, Melbourne. I had never seen the opera; nor had I heard of its conductor, whose triple-barrelled name was more indicative of a musical marking than something that belonged to an active musician. ‘Active’ was certainly the word: Cillario rushed into the pit and, afterwards, practically danced on to the stage, baton still in hand, to rapturous applause. In between, the actual performance was the first time I really connected to the compelling vivacity and innate drama of live opera. It helped immeasurably that the cast included the great Australian tenor Donald Smith as King Gustavus III. That night, all of it, still resounds in my mind.
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Carlo Felice Cillario: Italian maestro of the Australian Opera
by Stephen Mould
Connors Court Publishing, $59.95 hb, 543 pp
ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.
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