Crossword clues for operas
operas
- Some musical shows
- Some dramas set to music
- Some are grand, some are light
- Ring quartet
- Ring components
- Price venues
- La Scala performances
- Covent Garden performances
- Bellini creations
- 22 Mozart works
- "Fidelio" and "Orfeo ed Euridice"
- "Einstein on the Beach" and "Nixon in China"
- Zarzuelas, e.g
- Works with libretti
- Works with arias
- Works at the Metropolitan?
- Where spear carriers perform
- Wagner's oeuvre
- This puzzle has plenty of them
- Sutherland vehicles
- Strauss works
- Stage productions that may have surtitles
- Spear carriers' milieux
- Some PBS programs with subtitles
- Some PBS presentations
- Some Lincoln Center productions
- Soaper shows
- Soap ___ (daytime serials)
- Shows featuring arias
- Shows at the Met
- Schedule at the Met
- Saturday afternoon treats
- Ring Cycle components
- Puccini specialties
- Performances at Paris's Palais Garnier
- Musical productions
- Musical drama productions
- Music hall presentations
- Much of Mozart's oeuvre
- Met set
- Met performances
- Martha and Louise
- London Coliseum shows
- Lincoln Square offerings
- Lincoln Center productions
- La Scala stagings
- John Adams productions
- Glass products?
- Dramatic musical works
- Divas' milieus
- Covent Garden productions
- Composition of "Der Ring des Nibelungen"
- Charpentier creations
- Carmen and Rigoletto
- At least a dozen Mozart works
- All-singing productions
- "Tosca" et al
- "Tosca" and "Turandot"
- "Tosca" and "Rigoletto," for two
- "Tosca" and "Aida"
- "The Bartered Bride" and "The Marriage of Figaro"
- "Stiffelio" and "Don Carlos"
- "Ring Cycle" quartet
- "Rinaldo'' and others
- "Otello" and "Pagliacci"
- "Norma" and "Tosca"
- "Norma" and "Carmen"
- "Norma" and "Carmen," e.g
- "Martha" et al
- "Lohengrin" et al
- "Lakmé" and "Lulu"
- "La Traviata" and "Carmen"
- "Jenufa" and "Tosca"
- "Grand" productions
- "Fidelio" and "Otello"
- "Fidelio" and "Falstaff"
- "Eugene Onegin" and "Boris Godunov"
- "Doctor Atomic" et al
- "Daphne" and "Euridice"
- "Carmen" and" Salome"
- "Carmen" and "Otello"
- "Carmen" and "Aida"
- "Anna Nicole" and "Nixon in China"
- "Aida" and "Otello"
- 'Lakme' and 'Lulu'
- 'Faust' and others
- ''Norma'' and ''Turandot''
- ''Macbeth'' and ''Otello''
- ''Jenufa'' and ''Alceste,'' e.g
- "Martha" et al.
- "Rinaldo" and others
- Covent Garden offerings
- Works by 26-Down
- Wagner oeuvres
- "Wozzeck" and "Jenufa"
- Some Mozart art
- La Scala productions
- Janet Baker's specialty
- Met production responsibilities?
- "Norma" and "Don Carlos"
- Met productions
- "Carmen" and "Norma"
- "Falstaff" and "Fidelio"
- Palais Garnier offerings
- "Falstaff" and others
- "LakmГ©" and "Lulu"
- High-culture entertainment
- Performances at 104-Across
- Cultural entertainment
- Donizetti's oeuvre
- They're seen at Venice's La Fenice
- Met expectations?
- They're on the Met schedule
- Meyerbeer output
- Gluck works
- Puccini productions
- Works of Carl Maria von Weber
- Lincoln Center offerings
- Stock of certain companies?
- "Orlando" and "Otello"
- Unlikely fare for philistines
- Leitmotif settings
- Works with librettos
- Sacchini creations
- La Fenice productions
- Puccini products
- "Falstaff" and "Hamlet"
- Donizetti works
- Salieri works
- Gluck creations
- Rossini works
- Met fare
- Verdi works
- "Louise" and "Martha"
- "Tosca" et al.
- Gluck's output
- Teatro San Carlo offerings
- "Peter Grimes" and "Billy Budd"
- Boito works
- "Lohengrin" et al.
- Paer wrote 43 of these
- "Aïda" and "Carmen"
- Vehicles for Price and Bumbry
- "Tosca" and "Carmen"
- Cherubini's "Armida" and "Médée"
- "Manon" and "Orfeo"
- Concerns of the Glyndebourne Festival Society
- "Ernani" and "Orfeo"
- Gluck products
- Vehicles for Moore and McCormack
- Bizet offerings
- Musical dramas are so fantastic when piano is included
- Musical dramas
- Campaigns not getting into corrupted works
- Old queen chopping vegetables works in Covent Garden
- Wagner works
- Theme of this puzzle
- Met shows
- "Norma" and "Martha"
- Met offerings
- La Scala shows
- Musical shows
- Sung dramas
- Musical performances
- Met works
- "Don Giovanni" and "Don Pasquale"
- "Carmen" and "Elektra"
- Puccini works
- Mozart works
- Met requirements?
- Met events
- La Scala offerings
- Glass works
- Verdi output
- Verdi creations
- They require libretti
- Some reasons for glasses
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Drama \Dra"ma\ (dr[aum]"m[.a] or dr[=a]"m[.a]; 277), n. [L. drama, Gr. dra^ma, fr. dra^n to do, act; cf. Lith. daryti.]
-
A composition, in prose or poetry, accommodated to action, and intended to exhibit a picture of human life, or to depict a series of grave or humorous actions of more than ordinary interest, tending toward some striking result. It is commonly designed to be spoken and represented by actors on the stage.
A divine pastoral drama in the Song of Solomon.
--Milton. -
A series of real events invested with a dramatic unity and interest. ``The drama of war.''
--Thackeray.Westward the course of empire takes its way; The four first acts already past, A fifth shall close the drama with the day; Time's noblest offspring is the last.
--Berkeley.The drama and contrivances of God's providence.
--Sharp. -
Dramatic composition and the literature pertaining to or illustrating it; dramatic literature.
Note: The principal species of the drama are tragedy and comedy; inferior species are tragi-comedy, melodrama, operas, burlettas, and farces.
The romantic drama, the kind of drama whose aim is to present a tale or history in scenes, and whose plays (like those of Shakespeare, Marlowe, and others) are stories told in dialogue by actors on the stage.
--J. A. Symonds.
Wiktionary
n. (plural of opera English)
Usage examples of "operas".
The two Figaro operas, the discussion of which opened this book, were composed by different men, and a generation of time separated their production.
Especially was this true of English ballad operas and English transcriptions, or adaptations, of French, German, and Italian operas.
Theatre and was not revived until 1822--a year in which the popularity of Rossini in the British metropolis may be measured by the fact that all but four of the operas brought forward that year were composed by him.
French operas by Rousseau, Monsigny, Dalayrac, and Gretry, which may be said to have composed the staple of the opera-houses of Europe in the last decades of the eighteenth century, were known also in the contemporaneous theatres of Charleston, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and New York.
Some day--soon, it is to be hoped--managers, singers, and public will awake to a realization that, even in the old operas in which beautiful singing is supposed to be the be-all and end-all, the action ought to be kept coherent.
One effect, I fancy, would be to make the elder of the operas sound younger than its companion, because of the greater variety and freshness, as well as dramatic vigor, of its music.
Before Mozart, Le Tellier had used it for a French comic opera, Righini and Gazzaniga for Italian operas, and Gluck for a ballet.
Even the German critics of to-day seem dense in their unwillingness to credit Mozart with a purely amiable purpose in quoting the operas of his rivals, Martin and Sarti.
French, German, English, Italian, Russian, and Polish Faust operas have come into existence, lived their little lives, and died.
Boito has refused to permit the opera or operas which he has written since to be either published or performed because the world once refused to recognize his genius.
From the story drawn from the records of the Bohemian law court, it is plain that to make a compact with the Wild Huntsman was a much more gruesome and ceremonious proceeding than that which took place between Faust and the Evil One in the operas of Gounod and Boito.
He continued in Dresden the plan first put into practice by him in Prague of printing articles about new operas in the newspapers to stimulate public appreciation of their characteristics and beauties.
It was Wagner who created the contradiction which puts his operas in opposition by his substitution of the sacred lance as a dramatic motive for the question.
The first of these operas has long since been forgotten, but Monteverde made a prodigious effect with his.
Among these the more distinguished names are those of Cavalli, who wrote thirty-four operas for Venice alone, Legrenzi and Cesti.