Mikhail Sadovsky: Difference between revisions

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==Tchaikovsky's Settings of Works by Sadovsky==
==Tchaikovsky's Settings of Works by Sadovsky==
In 1872 Tchaikovsky wrote music for Count Almaviva's couplets "Vous l'ordonnez" in [[Pierre Beaumarchais]]' play ''[[The Barber of Seville]]'' (Le Barbier de Séville) for a production by students at the [[Moscow]] Conservatory. Most sources attribute this Russian translation to Mikhail Sadovsky (1847–1910), although Sadovsky's Russian version of ''The Barber of Seville'' seems to have been premiered at the Maly Theatre in [[Moscow]] in 1883 <ref name="note1"/>, and published for the first time the following year <ref name="note2"/>.  
In 1872, Tchaikovsky wrote music for Count Almaviva's couplets "Vous l'ordonnez" in [[Pierre Beaumarchais]]' play ''[[The Barber of Seville]]'' (Le Barbier de Séville) for a production by students at the [[Moscow]] Conservatory. Most sources attribute this Russian translation to Mikhail Sadovsky (1847–1910), although Sadovsky's Russian version of ''The Barber of Seville'' seems to have been premiered at the Maly Theatre in [[Moscow]] in 1883 <ref name="note1"/> and published for the first time the following year <ref name="note2"/>.  


==External Links==
==External Links==

Revision as of 19:48, 4 November 2022

Mikhail Sadovsky (1847-1910)

Russian actor (b. 12/24 November 1847 in Moscow; d. 26 July/8 August 1910 in Moscow), born Mikhail Provych Sadovsky (Михаил Прович Садовский).

Tchaikovsky's Settings of Works by Sadovsky

In 1872, Tchaikovsky wrote music for Count Almaviva's couplets "Vous l'ordonnez" in Pierre Beaumarchais' play The Barber of Seville (Le Barbier de Séville) for a production by students at the Moscow Conservatory. Most sources attribute this Russian translation to Mikhail Sadovsky (1847–1910), although Sadovsky's Russian version of The Barber of Seville seems to have been premiered at the Maly Theatre in Moscow in 1883 [1] and published for the first time the following year [2].

External Links

Notes and References

  1. See the Maly Theatre website (last accessed 25 April 2017).
  2. Севильский цирюльник. Комедия в 4 действиях. Новый пер. арт. имп. моск. театров М. П. Садовского. Москва: журн. Будильник, 1884.