When Casanova Met Mozart
The world's most notorious lover lived in Prague at the same time as the composer, but the mystery remains: did they collaborate on a famous opera?
- By Tony Perrottet
- Smithsonian.com, March 22, 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
There is strong circumstantial evidence to support Meissner’s report: We know that da Ponte was not in Prague in October, when the last-minute changes were made to the libretto, but Casanova was. However, the account took a more substantial form in the early 1900s, when researchers discovered notes amongst Casanova’s papers from Castle Duchcov that appeared to show him working on a key scene in Don Giovanni.
While the manuscript of Casanova’s memoir now resides in Paris, his personal papers have ended up in the Czech state archive, a hulking edifice in a bleak, Communist-era landscape far from Prague’s charming Old Town. My taxi-driver got lost several times before we located it. Once inside, a security guard directed me to a shabby antechamber, where I had to call the archivists on an antique black telephone. An unshaven clerk in a hooded jacket first helped me fill out the endless application forms in Czech, before finally I was taken to a windowless, neon-lit research room to meet the head archivist, Marie Tarantová.
Despite the Cold War protocol, everyone was very helpful. Tarantová explained that when the Communists nationalized Czech aristocratic property in 1948, the state inherited a vast cache of Casanova’s writings that had been kept by the Waldstein family, who once owned Castle Duchcov. “We have Casanova’s letters, poems, philosophical works, geometry works, plans for a tobacco factory, even treatises on the manufacture of soap,” she said, of the wildly prolific author. “There are 19 cases. It’s impossible to know everything that’s in there. I’ve never counted the number of pages!”
Soon Tarantová laid before me the two pages of notes covered in Casanova’s elegant, distinctive script; in them, he has reworked the lines of Act II, scene X, of Don Giovanni, where the Don and his servant Leporello have been discovered in a ruse that involved swapping clothes and identities. “Nobody knows if he was really involved in writing the libretto or was just toying with it for his own amusement,” said Tarantova. According to biographer Ian Kelly, “the close interest and precise knowledge of the newly performed text argues in favor of (Casanova) having been involved in its creation.” With da Ponte away, it is quite feasible that Mozart would have called on the 62-year-old Italian writer, whose reputation as a seducer was known throughout the courts of Europe, to help with the text. Casanova was also in the audience when the opera premiered on October 29. “Although there is no definitive proof that he worked on the libretto,” sums up the American Casanovist Tom Vitelli, “I think Meissner’s account is likely true, at least to some extent.”
On my final evening, I attended a performance at the majestic Estates Theater, where Don Giovanni still plays in repertory. The gilded edifice is one of the last intact 18th century opera houses in Europe, and was used as a set for Amadeus and the Beethoven biopic Immortal Beloved. A small bronze plaque in the orchestra pit marks the spot where Mozart stood to conduct that night in 1787. (Its interior has changed in only one respect: the red-and-gold color scheme was changed to blue-and-gold after the Velvet Revolution of 1989 – red was associated with the hated Communist regime.)
At this historic performance – which was a huge success, prompting a standing ovation – Casanova sat in a box seat in the wings. When later asked by a friend whether he had seen the opera, Casanova allegedly laughed, “Seen it? I practically lived it!” The very next year, he began to write his own romantic memoirs in Castle Duchcov.
A contributing writer to the magazine, Tony Perrottet is the author of Napoleon’s Privates and The Sinner’s Grand Tour: A Journey through the Underbelly of Europe; www.sinnersgrandtour.com
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Comments (3)
Suave.My lipps were wetting all the time while reaing. The only doubt, like many others was of his meeting with Mozart on his visit to Prague for Mozart's performance of Don Giovanni. In 1783, Casanova went to Vienna penyless. Then he wondered torugh Austria Holland and france, back to Vienna again becaming secretary to the Venetion Ambassador Foscarini, who died shortly after. Goig then to Teplic Bohemia) where he met his last Employer Count Waldshtain, becoming to his 40,000 volumes of books, librararin (after 1784,5,6?)- and here I get lost, so please help. What it might happen is that when he past Prague while leaving Paris (85-6), is seeing the performance of "The Mariage of Figaro", but Mozart then wasn't present. I guess, in many contradictions in the dates he writes is quite possible that it is just an enhancing way of mentioning his meeting with Mozart (after the fame of Mozart, after his death1791,) but at this point I am puzzled myself and wish for real to learn about the fact did realy Casanova met Mozart.
Posted by Charles Luben Jankov on April 24,2012 | 10:47 AM
Lovely article, but there is one glaring, inexcusable error that could have easily been researched.
Lorenzo DaPonte wrote three operas with Mozart, "Le Nozze di Figaro" of 1786, followed by "Don Giovanni" in 1787, then "Cosi fan Tutte" of 1789, NOT "The Magic Flute". "The Magic Flute" was written by Emmanuel Schikaneder, and premiered just seven weeks before Mozart's untimely death.
Other than that, good job.
Posted by carter joseph on March 26,2012 | 01:21 PM
Good article, however, it should be pointed out to Mr. Kelly (he wrote this in his book too) that the third opera DaPonte wrote with Mozart was "Cosi Fan Tutte," not "the Magic Flute" (that was done by Emanuel Schikaneder).
Posted by Victoria on March 26,2012 | 10:39 AM