Outside Jerusalem, Rinaldo, the knight, stands alongside his troops in preparation for battle. When Argante, the Saracen king, and Armida, his sorceress queen, kidnap Rinaldo's beloved, he must overcome a series of battles and trials to save her — trials including mermaids, spirits, and dragons!
This opera, full of sorcery, seductions, and secret disguises — composed in 1711, Handel's first for the London stage — catapulted the composer to stardom. Portland Opera brings it to you for the first time, with new costumes and sets designed especially for the intimate Newmark Theatre. Portland Baroque Orchestra joins us again in the pit, repeating their wildly successful 2009 collaboration with us on La Calisto.
Sung in Italian with English projections above the stage.
Run time for RINALDO is approximately 3 hours.
Please note: This production of RINALDO will include the use of strobe lights.
Cast
| Rinaldo | Caitlin Mathes |
| Almirena | Sharin Apostolou |
| Armida | Lindsay Ohse |
| Eustazio | Hannah Penn |
| Goffredo | Matthew Grills |
| Argante | André Chiang |
| Mago / Herald | Nicholas Nelson |
| Conductor | Gary Thor Wedow |
| Stage Director | Chas Rader-Shieber |
| Scenery / Costume Designer | Jacob A. Climer |
| Lighting Designer | Mike Inwood |
Featuring Portland Baroque Orchestra in the Newmark Theatre.
ACT I
Jerusalem is besieged by the army of Goffredo (the historical Godfrey of Bouillon), accompanied by his brother Eustazio and his daughter Almirena. Goffredo promises the knight Rinaldo that he will bestow Almirena’s hand on him when the city is taken. Argante, king of Jerusalem, now appears to ask Goffredo for a three-day truce, to which the Christian leader agrees.
Armida, Argante’s lover, is queen of Damascus and a powerful sorceress. Spirits have revealed to her that the besiegers’ victory will depend on the support of Rinaldo: she will therefore undertake to remove him from the field. To this end she abducts Almirena. Eustazio advises Rinaldo to seek the counsel of the Christian Sorcerer.
ACT II
Eustazio, Rinaldo and Goffredo have taken ship to go to the Sorcerer. As they are nearing their destination a boat appears with a disguised Armida on board. She invites Rinaldo to join her, saying she will take him to Almirena. Despite the opposition of Goffredo and Eustazio, he follows her.
In Armida’s enchanted palace, Almirena laments her fate. Argante declares his love for her, promising to prove it by helping her to escape.
Rinaldo is brought before Armida, and asks her to restore Almirena to him. Armida becomes enamored of the knight, but he rejects her advances. In order to seduce him, Armida takes on the form of Almirena, but once she reappears in her own guise Rinaldo flees. Still hoping to trick him, Armida transforms herself into Almirena once more. Now Argante appears: taken in by the deception, he promises “Almirena” he will free her from the bonds of cruel Armida. The latter, furious, returns to her own form, and declares that Argante can no longer count on her magic powers to defend Jerusalem. Argante runs off.
ACT III
Goffredo and Eustazio reach the Sorcerer’s cave, at the foot of the mountain on whose summit is situated Armida’s magic palace, defended by monsters. The Sorcerer presents them with magic wands, which enable them to overcome the monsters and reach Armida’s garden, where the latter is about to kill Almirena in order to be revenged on Rinaldo. The magic wands make Armida and the monsters disappear. Almirena, Rinaldo, Goffredo and Eustazio sing of their joy, and then decide to attack Jerusalem the next day. Argante and Armida are reconciled and make common cause against their enemies, but are defeated by Goffredo’s troops. Rinaldo can now marry Almirena. Armida and Argante are converted to Christianity and declare they too will marry, whereupon Goffredo grants them their freedom.
“This Opera is a Native of Your Majesty’s Dominions and was consequently born your Subject.” — Aaron Hill, in his preface to the English-language libretto of Rinaldo
When Handel arrived in London in 1710, he could hardly have known what a fraught political landscape he was alighting in—nor how the intense philosophical wranglings of the fractious governmental classes were being fought by proxy in London’s theaters. Italian opera became a political football, and Handel an unintentional participant in Whiggish polity.
All a twenty-something Handel wanted to do was write an opera, get paid, and expand his fame and influence. Why he chose England is, at first, unclear, but after securing a post as Kapellmeister for the Hanover Court (by Georg Ludwig, who would later become George I of England), he took a leave of absence and arrived in England, ambitious, young and with a reputation for genius which preceded him.
The state of English opera was in disarray in the early 18th century, not having had a convincing indigenous species of the genre since Henry Purcell’s Timon of Athens in 1695. Even this, however, was not an opera in the Italian sense of the word, completely sung. Purcell wrote mostly semi-opera, which interspersed spoken dialogue where Italian opera would have sung recitative. Politics had long been a feature in English theater, and English operas during the Restoration certainly emitted the whiff of commentary from The Siege of Rhodes to King Arthur. It may have been the partisan nature of English operas that led to the suppression of a strong English language operatic form, evolving into the 18th century, effectively opening the door for Italian opera to step right through and take hold. Taste certainly played a role, with London audiences introduced to Italian opera and developing an appreciation for what some Whig critics deemed the effeminate decadence of the art form. Whatever the case, Handel walked into an operatic world ripe for his plucking and quickly secured a commission to write an Italian opera for the Queen’s Theatre.
Aaron Hill, impresario for the Queen’s Theatre, commissioned Handel to write an Italian-style opera (in Italian) to appeal directly to English audiences. In his preface to the English language libretto of Rinaldo (available for sale at all performances!) he explained:
“The deficiencies I found, or thought I found, in such
Italian Operas as have hitherto been introduced among
us were first: that they had been comps’d for tastes
and voices different from those who were to sing and
hear them on the English Stage; and secondly, that
wanting the machines and decorations, which bestow
so great a beauty on their appearance, they have been
heard and seen to considerable disadvantage.”
In Rinaldo, particularly the Rinaldo which Hill devised, taking “a poet’s privilege and [varying] from the scheme of Tasso” as he put it, he created a scenario to suit his every need: The sensuous decadence and novelty of Italian opera then developing into an exciting pastime for wealthy Londoners, coupled with enough wonders (dragon- drawn flaming chariot!) to keep his stage machinery in the Haymarket admirably busy. He secured Giacomo Rossi to versify his plot and the celebrated Mr. “Hendel” to make “Musick [which] spoke so finely for itself, that [he was] purposely silent on the subject…” Rinaldo was wildly successful, enjoying fifteen performances in its initial run, and several remounts (often modified by Handel), as well as a brand new adaptation (again, supervised by Handel) for revival in 1731. Indeed it was Rinaldo that received the most performances of any of Handel’s operas during his lifetime.
But how was it that Aaron Hill, at this time a twentyfour- year-old “litterateur,” became the impresario at the Queen’s Theatre in Haymarket, a Whig stronghold, employed by the Tory Parliamentarian, William Collier? The answer may be found in the rather complicated politics of the time and the rivalry between Whigs and Tories for control of opera in London.
In 1707 the Lord Chamberlain was persuaded to divide the theatrical genres, declaring that the two acting troupes in Drury Lane would merge and perform straight theater in the theater there. The opera, meanwhile, would find a new home in the Queen’s Theatre in Haymarket. The Whigs controlled Parliament in 1707. As all theatrical endeavors at the time, opera was controlled by the government in the person of the Lord Chamberlain. In 1710, the Tories gained the majority in Parliament and made their move. While the patent to the Haymarket theater was not revoked completely, the Tory Vice Chamberlain, Thomas Coke, “a great lover of Musique and promoter of operas,” handed control of day to day operations of the Queen’s Theatre to William Collier, who, too busy for the job, appointed Aaron Hill as his manager.
So, here was young dramatist Aaron Hill, full of ideas about artistic unity (he objected in the strongest terms to the random costuming common at the time, as well as improbable/incoherent scenery, inappropriate to plot), in charge of an opera company. This excess of dignity must have been heady! But despite the new Tory management, the patrons of the Queen’s Theatre were still Whigs and the aristocratic and wealthy. Many Whig commentators opposed Italian opera for its “Roman Catholicism, arbitrary monarchy and corruption.” They also objected to its perceived lack of any purpose besides … pleasure. The battle for the heart of opera, according to historian Paul Monod, “took place primarily within the Whig party” and “Handel’s early operas became closely linked to issues of Whig self-definition and efforts to impose new standards on public art.”
Hill was ambitious and bright, and knew that he would have to placate the Whiggish critics arrayed against him. To those objecting to Italian opera on ideological grounds, Hill fought fire with fire, undermining objections by creating a story sure to appeal to those fearful of “foreign foppery.” Hill used for the basis of Rinaldo, Torquato Tasso’s poem, Gerusalem liberata, which had already received treatment for the English theater by playwright John Dennis, a notable loather of opera, which he characterized as a “mere sensual Pleasure, which says nothing either to enlighten our Understanding or convert the Will.” By manipulating Tasso’s plot and adding his own details, Hill attempted to circumvent the objections of Dennis and his ilk. His opera was sufficiently martial, Christian and democratic to please Whigs without offending Tories. Handel’s music ensured popular success.
Handel is credited with writing Rinaldo in two weeks. Rossi complained that he could barely keep up with the lightning-quick genius of Handel. Handel’s speed was a product of pragmatism. He didn’t have much time in England before he must return to take up his duties in Hanover, and he prosaically borrowed much of the lush and tuneful score from himself, liberally lacing it with arias from his other works. This worked somewhat to his detriment in the minds of some critics, particularly when the arias he selected don’t seem to entirely match the situation at hand—one glaring example is Argante’s entrance aria in Act I, when the great king, accompanied by all martial pomp, sings of the “hissing snakes and howls of Scylla.” Winton Dean and John Knapp, coauthors of Handel’s Operas (1704-1726), estimate that as much as two thirds of the opera was recycled and adapted from his other works. No matter. The opera opened on February 24, 1711 to instant popular success. It was performed 47 times before it was retired in 1716, only to rematerialize in 1731. Many of these performances saw the score tinkered with by the composer for the convenience of a given cast. Rinaldo secured a very cordial relationship in the Haymarket for Handel, who for a number of years wrote an opera every nine months for the Queen’s (or King’s, depending upon who graced the throne) Theatre.
Rinaldo was not universally pleasing, however. Champions of English opera Joseph Addison (who had attempted an English libretto) and Richard Steele tried to ridicule the opera to its death in their publication, The Spectator, objecting particularly to its splashy special effects and castrato singers. They created a tempest in a teapot, but did not affect the economic triumph of Rinaldo or the position of Handel as the “Orpheus of his Age.” Eleven short days after Rinaldo’s opening, Aaron Hill was ousted as impresario at the Queen’s Theatre. The spectacular effects and costumes had proved an excessive burden for the theater’s receipts, and Hill found himself on the hook for payment. He was soon embroiled in a nasty legal battle with various London craftsmen, but he did accomplish a rather remarkable feat. He introduced England to the “great and good” Mr. Handel, and the English embraced him utterly. The feeling seems to have been mutual, as Handel returned to England in 1712 and would end his days there.
How to explain the success of German composer in a fiercely patriotic England? Perhaps The Musical Times of 1893 offers the best explanation when it said:
“Handel had the adaptability which often is a precious
companion of genius…No alien musician ever more
quickly saw what the people of this country required
or so promptly qualified himself to supply it. A German
among Germans, and an Italian among the Italians,
Handel was an Englishman among the English and, if
anything, bettered his model.”
— Alexis Hamilton
“He is the greatest composer that ever lived. I would uncover my head and kneel before his tomb.” — Ludwig van Beethoven
![]() | Born in Halle-in-Saxon, Germany, George Frideric Handel became the most celebrated English composer of all time. In London, when England had lost its coherent operatic voice, Handel was able to provide that cosmopolitan city with music equal to its status as a world power. During his lifetime, his music was considered not merely great but the greatest. Handel’s appeal is timeless, populist and immediate, even at the distance of 300 years. As Samuel Barber put it, “Handel is so great and so simple that no one but a professional musician is unable to understand him.”
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| Caitlin Mathes — RinaldoMezzo SopranoPortland Opera Resident Artist |
![]() | Caitlin Mathes — RinaldoMezzo SopranoPortland Opera Resident Artist
Ms. Mathes has appeared as a young artist with Opera New Jersey, Opera Theatre of St. Louis, and Chautauqua Opera, and was a participant of the Opera Theatre and Music Festival of Lucca and Spoleto. She received her Bachelors of Music from Ithaca College and her Masters of Music and Artist Diploma from Cincinnati Conservatory of Music.
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| Sharin Apostolou — AlmirenaSopranoFormer Portland Opera Resident Artist |
![]() | Sharin Apostolou — AlmirenaSopranoFormer Portland Opera Resident Artist Sharin Apostolou came to the attention of the operatic world and to critical acclaim after stepping in at the last minute on opening night, replacing an ailing colleague in the title role of Handel’s Rodelinda at Portland Opera. Ms. Apostolou was lauded by The Oregonian for “her lovely, high, clear voice, and her coloratura -- the dazzlingly fast music that says "Don't mess with me" – was exuberant…she covered the musical terrain without fear,” and by Crosscut Seattle for, “[taking] on an impossibly daunting role with fearless flair, unraveling a sweet lyric coloratura voice of real promise.” Sharin Apostolou’s 2010-2011 engagements include her Asian debut with the Macao International Music Festival as Belinda in Dido and Aeneas, her Avery Fisher Hall debut in two concerts with the National Chorale: Handel’s Alexander’s Feast paired with Mozart’s Requiem, and Handel’s Messiah; and a return to Portland Opera singing Le Feu, La Princesse and Le Rossignol in Ravel’s L‘enfant et les Sortilèges. The summer of 2009 saw Ms. Apostolou’s debut with Vermont’s Green Mountain Opera festival as Barbarina in Le Nozze di Figaro and Adina in L’elisir d’amore where she “proved a brilliant Adina. Not only was her sound beautiful, she used it dramatically for just the right effect. In short, she used her voice expressively and effectively, which is what it's all about.” (Times Argus). Also in the 2009-2010 season, Ms. Apostolou joined the European tour of Mitch Sebastian’s The Opera Show, as well as performed her first Belinda in Dido and Aeneas with Opera Manhattan and Romilda in Xerses with Pocket Opera New York. The summer of 2010 brought her to the Caramoor Festival under the baton of Will Crutchfield as Clotilde in Norma, as well as a performer in many of the festival’s Bel Canto at Caramoor concert series. A frequent performer of early music, Ms. Apostolou also sang the title role in Cavalli’s La Calisto with the Portland Opera and the Portland Baroque Orchestra, during which she “sparkled, using a clear and supple soprano to dash off numerous impeccable runs,” (Opera Magazine) and “sang with eloquence and shining focus” (Opera News). Ms. Apostolou recently sang the US premier of Johan Christian Bach’s Vaux Hall Songs with the New England Baroque Soloists, performed excerpts from both Purcell’s Harmonia Sacra and Vivaldi’s Bajazet with the Portland Opera and covered both Virtù and Valletto in L'incoronazione di Poppea at Central City Opera. Ms. Apostolou made her European debut with the International Chamber Ensemble as part of the Operafestival di Roma in a Pergolesi double bill; the soprano soloist in Stabat Mater and Serpina in Pergolesi's La serva padrona. A favorite of Portland Opera, Ms. Apostolou has also performed Ms. Wordsworth in Albert Herring, Clorinda in La Cenerentola, Frasquita in Carmen, The High Priestess in Aida, Annina in La Traviata, and Countess Ceprano in Rigoletto, while she covered Violetta, Gilda, The Governess in The Turn of the Screw, and Marzelline in Fidelio. In 2007 at Central City Opera, she sang Noémie in the youth performance of Cendrillon, and Isabelle/Madeline in The Face on the Barroom Floor, and covered Annina in The Saint of Bleecker Street under the direction of Catherine Malfitano. She also toured as Carolina in Torroba’s Luisa Fernanda with the Tulsa Opera Studio. Ms. Apostolou was a 2010 International Grand Finalist in the Competizione Dell’Opera hosted by the Semper Oper in Dresden, Germany and subsequently performed several concerts of arias with the Bremer Philharmoniker. On the American concert stage, she has appeared with the Oregon Symphony as the soprano soloist in Vaughan Williams’ Serenade to Music, the First Fairy in Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and as Annina in excerpts from La Traviata. She’s also sung Ms. Silverpeal in The Impresario with both the Portland Chamber Orchestra and the Walla Walla Symphony, in The Pittsburgh Ballet Theater’s A Midsummer’s Night Dream, in the Fiddlesticks concerts with the Pittsburgh Symphony and in the world premier of The Lost Childhood with American Opera Projects led by Steven Osgood. Ms. Apostolou was a 2010 Jensen Foundation Award Winner, received the Young Artist of the Year award from Central City Opera, a first place and audience prizewinner at both the Oregon and San Diego Districts, as well as an encouragement award winner at the Northwest and Western regional Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions. She has also received awards from the Irene Dalis Competition of Opera San Jose, and The Eleanor Lieber Competition of Portland Opera. Ms. Apostolou completed her Master of Music degree at the Manhattan School of Music, where she was seen in a variety of roles including Blanche de la Force in Dialogues des Carmélites, Zemire in Spohr’s Zemire und Azor, Nora in Vaughan Williams’ Riders to the Sea, and Vera in Hoiby’s A Month in the Country. Ms. Apostolou holds a bachelor of fine arts from Carnegie Mellon University. http://www.sharinapostolou.com/live/
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| Lindsay Ohse — ArmidaSopranoPortland Opera Resident Artist |
![]() | Lindsay Ohse — ArmidaSopranoPortland Opera Resident Artist
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| Hannah Penn — EustazioMezzo SopranoFormer Portland Opera Resident Artist |
![]() | Hannah Penn — EustazioMezzo SopranoFormer Portland Opera Resident Artist
An active recitalist, Ms. Penn collaborates biannually with Portland Opera’s principal coach Robert Ainsley. She has participated in the Steans Institute’s Vocal Chamber Music program, where she performed works by Jake Heggie under the composer’s direction. Ms. Penn studied German Lied for three years with renowned collaborative pianist Leonard Hokanson. She has performed in a staged recital of Hugo Wolf's Italienisches Liederbuch under the direction of the great lieder singer Hakan Hagegård, and in a masterclass on Schubert Lieder given by James Levine at Carnegie Hall. Ms. Penn also enjoys a full concert schedule, having been featured with orchestras around the country, including the Oregon Symphony (Beethoven’s 9th Symphony), the Florida Philharmonic (Mozart’s Requiem and C Minor Mass), the Sacramento Choral Society and Orchestra (Corigliano’s Fern Hill), and the Bloomington Early Music Festival (Messiah). |
| Matthew Grills — GoffredoTenorPortland Opera Resident Artist |
![]() | Matthew Grills — GoffredoTenorPortland Opera Resident Artist
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| André Chiang - ArganteBaritonePortland Opera Resident Artist |
![]() | André Chiang — ArganteBaritonePortland Opera Resident Artist |
| Nicholas Nelson - Mago/HeraldBass BaritonePortland Opera Resident Artist |
![]() | Nicholas Nelson - Mago/HeraldBass BaritonePortland Opera Resident Artist |
| Gary WedowConductorPortland Opera Debut |
![]() | Gary WedowConductorPortland Opera Debut Conductor Gary Thor Wedow has established an enviable reputation for dramatically exciting and historically informed performances with opera companies, festivals and choral organizations throughout North America. Hailed for ‘hot music making’ by the Baltimore Sun and ‘convincingly elegant period style’ in Opera News, his most recent successes include Gluck’s Orphée and Die Zauberflöte for the Seattle Opera, Le donne curiose for Wolf Trap Opera and Agrippina for Boston Lyric Opera. Maestro Wedow has been closely associated with New York City Opera for many years; most recently he led their Don Giovanni in the Christopher Alden production and this May he will conduct the New York premiere of Telemann’s Orpheus. Highlights of next season include La finta giardiniera for the Merola Opera Program, Rinaldo for Portland Opera with the Portland Baroque Orchestra, Die Fledermaus for Virginia Opera and a return to Seattle Opera for a double bill of La voix humaine and Suor Angelica. |
| Chas Rader-ShieberDirectorPortland Opera Debut |
![]() | Chas Rader-ShieberDirectorPortland Opera Debut Known both for his bold and inventive productions and for his acute musical instincts, Chas Rader-Shieber has established himself as one of the most innovative opera directors of his generation. Reviewing his staging of Janáček's The Cunning Little Vixen, Toronto’s Classical 96.3 FM praised Mr. Rader-Shieber’s “daring and visionary approach to staging” and declared him “a force to be reckoned with in the opera world.” Mr. Rader-Shieber’s repertoire encompasses a broad range of works from Mozart to Benjamin Britten, but he has made a particular specialty of Baroque opera. http://www.rader-shieber.com/index.htm
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RINALDO Production Footage
The footage in these videos was captured during a dress rehearsal.
Ornamentation in RINALDO
Guest conductor Gary Wedow and soprano Sharin Apostolou demonstrate baroque ornamentation in Handel's RINALDO.
Meet the RINALDO continuo players
Portland Baroque Orchestra continuo players join the singers for Portland Opera's RINALDO during a recent rehearsal. Continuo players create the accompaniment for the recitatives for baroque opera by playing the written bass notes and improvising the harmonies.
Opera Insights: RINALDO
Watch these videos to explore RINALDO with Bob Kingston, Portland Opera's Resident Historian & Lecturer.
Where does the story of RINALDO come from?
What to expect at a Baroque opera:
How do performances of Baroque opera differ today?
Who were the Castrati?
Music from RINALDO
Listen to the popular aria "Lascia ch’io pianga" in this clip from the movie "Farinelli."
Suggested Recording:
HANDEL: RINALDO
Featured Artists: Vivica Genaux, Miah Persson, Lawrence Zazzo, Inga Kalna, James Rutherford, Christophe Dumaux, Dominique Visse
Conductor: René Jacobs
Label: Harmonia Mundi
In this video you can listen to a sample of the suggested recording. You can also listen to excerpts from the recording on Amazon.com.