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Aria Code

Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro: Sleepless in Sevilla

Aria Code

WQXR & The Metropolitan Opera

Music Interviews, Music Commentary, Aria, Music, Arts, Metropolitan, Performing Arts, Code, Wqxr, Opera, Wnyc, Studios

4.82.6K Ratings

🗓️ 4 December 2019

⏱️ 35 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

When your spouse cheats, your mind starts racing with a million questions. For the Countess Almaviva, one of them is: What happened to the spark we had and how can we get it back? The Countess lives inside Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro (Le Nozze di Figaro in Italian) and her philandering husband, the Count Almaviva, is due for a major comeuppance from his wife and her servant. But the Countess isn’t fixed on vengeance; she’s wondering how she can recapture the romance in her marriage.

In this episode, host Rhiannon Giddens and her guests offer relationship advice to the heartsick Countess Almaviva. They focus on her aria “Dove sono,” a quiet moment of reflection when the Countess asks, “Where are the lovely moments?” You’ll hear how Mozart musically brings you inside the Countess’s thoughts, how hard it is to sing that music and why rekindling a romance is something many of us will face. Plus, you’ll hear Susanna Phillips sing the aria onstage at the Metropolitan Opera.

The Guests

Susanna Phillips has sung the role of the Countess more than any other in her career. She isn’t sure whether the Countess will ever be able to forgive her husband’s dalliances, but she may find out this season when she reprises the role at the Met.

Cori Ellison is a dramaturg and a repeat guest on Aria Code. She believes that Mozart had a special gift both for understanding the human condition and sharing those insights through opera.

Dan Savage is a sex and relationship advice columnist and podcaster. Like Mozart, he believes that infidelity is a real part of the human condition. He’s less optimistic about the Count’s ability to be faithful when the curtain closes.

If you’re interested in going a little deeper on cheating and infidelity, our friends at the podcast Death, Sex, and Money have a whole episode about it! You’ll hear from men and women who’ve cheated and been cheated on, and how it made some of them more honest in their relationships. Subscribe to Death, Sex, and Money wherever you get your podcasts.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

In fidelity is so common that if we tell people that it's always the end of the relationship

0:08.6

when there's cheating, we're going to end a lot of relationships that shouldn't end.

0:13.3

From WQXR in the Metropolitan Opera, this is Aria Code.

0:17.0

I'm Rianne Giddens.

0:18.7

She's joyful and smart and really wants to get this guy back.

0:24.1

That's the goal.

0:25.2

Every episode, we pull back the curtain on a single Aria so we can see what's behind the

0:29.3

scenes.

0:30.3

Today, it's one of my personal favorites, Dovi Sono for Mozart's Le Nozziti Figaro or

0:36.6

The Marriage of Figaro.

0:38.0

It's one of those Arias when you feel depressed about something going on in your life and you

0:43.0

start to feel hopeless.

0:45.2

You can sort of indulge yourself in that little pity party and then you can latch onto

0:51.4

this tremendous hope.

0:59.2

So let's say you're married and you have been for quite a while.

1:03.8

Let's say things started out great but now your spouse has been pretty much ignoring you

1:08.5

and flirting like crazy with other people and you're pretty sure they're sleeping around.

1:14.1

So what do you do?

1:15.4

Do you leave?

1:16.4

Do you stick it out?

1:17.9

Do you confront them?

1:20.0

Well, this is exactly the question that Countess Alma Viva faces in Mozart's The Marriage

...

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