Giovanni Emanuele Bidera
Giovanni Emanuele Bidera (or Bideri)[a] (4 October 1784 – 8 April 1858) was an Italian writer. He is primarily known as the librettist of Gaetano Donizetti's operas Gemma di Vergy and Marino Faliero, but he also wrote many other librettos for lesser known composers as well as plays, essays, books about Naples, and a treatise on acting. Bidera was born in the small Sicilian town of Palazzo Adriano and spent most of his career in Naples. In 1850 he retired to Palermo where he died at the age of 73.[2][3] BiographyBidera was born in Palazzo Adriano, now a commune of Palermo. His family was part of the Arbëreshë community of Sicily.[4] According to the Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, his family were of humble origins. However, according to a 1986 article on Bidera's life and work written by his great-great-grandson, Luciano Villevieille Bideri, the Bideri were a noble family who later fell on hard times. Bidera was one of the seven children of Baroness Anna Dara and Count Pietro Atanasio Bideri.[b] In his childhood and adolescence, the family owned a large palazzo on the Piazza Beati Paoli in Palermo and another in Palazzo Adriano on the main piazza (now called Piazza Umberto I) as well as numerous houses and land in the town and its surroundings. Because of his father's support for King Ferdinand IV, the family lost virtually all their holdings when the king was deposed in 1806. Giovanni Emanuele did not share his father's conservative views and support for the Bourbon rulers of Sicily and Naples which caused considerable friction between them. In 1799 and in the hope of modifying the young man's revolutionary sympathies, his father had sent him to the Eastern Rite seminary in Palermo. However, the seminary brought him into contact with other young men who shared his views and reinforced them. After yet another serious quarrel with his father, he ran away at the age of 18 intending study law at the university in Naples. Unable to make a living there and deeply in debt, he went back to Sicily and worked as an actor and set designer for a traveling theatre troupe. He also began writing plays.[5][1] During his various peregrinations with the theatre troupe, which also included multiple sojourns in Naples, he met Giacoma Schultz, a Sicilan woman of Swiss origin. They married in 1812 and over the next 20 years had five children. Bidera and his young family settled in Naples in the late 1820s where he published a treatise on acting and found a congenial atmosphere in a musical circle called I Trascendentali. Several of his plays had also been published in Naples and Felice Romani encouraged him to try his hand at writing librettos. He provided a new libretto for the 1832 revival in Genoa of Saverio Mercadante's opera Gabriella di Vergy and contributed the synopsis for Salvadore Cammarano's libretto to Persiani's Ines de Castro. Bidera and Cammarano were subsequently involved in a year-long battle with the Neapolitan censors before the opera finally premiered in 1835. For Donizetti, he provided the complete librettos for Gemma di Vergy which premiered in 1834 and Marino Faliero which premiered the following year.[2][1][5] The success of the Donizetti operas led to Bidera being appointed as a house librettist at the Teatro San Carlo where between 1835 and 1838 he wrote the librettos for operas by Carlo Coccia, Giuseppe Lillo, and Giuseppe Balducci. After his work at the Teatro San Carlo, he produced the librettos for a number of other operas by now-forgotten composers, but which had performances in Naples, Milan, and Venice. During his time in Naples, he also published Il colera in Napoli, a collection of vignettes from the 1836 cholera epidemic there and Passeggiata per Napoli e contorni, a two-volume description of the city, its surroundings, and the customs of its people.[6][5] Suspected of involvement in the 1848 uprisings in Naples, Bidera was required by police order to leave the city. Leaving his family behind in Naples, he retired to Palermo in 1850. He opened an acting school there and devoted himself to research in philosophy and linguistics, writing occasional pieces for the Sicilian journals L'Armonia and Il Poligrafo. In 1854 he published Teatro edito ed inedito, a collection of ten plays, some of which had been previously published. It marked the first time that his surname was given as "Bideri" in his published writings.[5][1] The book began with a four-line autobiographical poem: Bidera died in Palermo at the age of 73, leaving an unfinished science fiction novel entitled Storia ideale di 40 secoli (Ideal History of 40 Centuries).[5][1] Shortly after his death, the composer and writer Marco Marcelliano Marcello wrote in the Gazzetta musicale di Milano:
In the 1870s Bidera's grandson Ferdinando re-published some of Bidera's more obscure works. The first was a bizarre tract written in 1853 on musical and dramatic eurythmy and its relation to the laws of physics. It took the form of a series of letters written by Bidera to a "mademoiselle Sofia". The second, under the title Triade, contained an essay on the philosophy of Pythagoras, originally published in Il Poligrafo in 1856 and included others on Plato and Timaeus of Locri which had appeared in Bidera's Quaranta secoli, racconti su le Due Sicilie del Pelasgo Matn-Eer, originally published in 1849.[5] DescendantsBidera and his wife had five children. The eldest was Pietro Atanasio, born in 1813. Bidera continued the family tradition of naming the eldest son after the paternal grandfather despite the fact that he never reconciled with his father and never saw him again after he ran away in 1802. Pietro Atanasio was followed by Amalia (who died at the age of 12), Francesca, Luigi, and Francesco. Pietro Atanasio initially worked as a tax officer for the government of Ferdinand II, but was dismissed from that post around the time his father was exiled from Naples. After that he devoted himself to republishing his father's works and later founded and ran La Pubblicità Universale, a commercial newspaper published in five languages with an associated advertising agency. His son Ferdinando Bideri (1851–1930) founded the famous publishing house, known today as Gruppo Editoriale Bideri . Francesco (1833–1894) worked in Naples as an artist, sculptor, cameo engraver, and furniture designer. He also played the mandolin and served as a music teacher to Margherita of Savoy who wanted to learn the instrument. He published several transcriptions of opera arias for mandolin and piano, including pieces from the two Donizetti operas for which his father had written the librettos.[1][8] WorksOpera librettos
Plays
Notes
References
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