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- Mad_scene abstract "A mad scene is an enactment of insanity in an opera or play. It was a popular convention of Italian and French opera in the early decades of the nineteenth century. Mad scenes were often created as a way to offer star singers a chance to show off their abilities, though many of them are also very dramatic. The vocal writing is often exciting and highly demanding, requiring immense skill. Most mad scenes were composed for the soprano voice, but there are examples for the baritone and the tenor.They are most popularly associated with works of the bel canto period, though examples may also be found in earlier works, such as George Frederick Handel's Orlando and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Idomeneo. Almost all mad scenes were composed for either opere serie or opere semiserie; Gaetano Donizetti was probably the most famous exponent of the form.The convention of writing mad scenes largely died out after the bel canto era, as composers sought to inject more realism into their operas. More recently, some composers have returned to the form for dramatic effect, most notably Benjamin Britten in the final act of Peter Grimes.Similar mad scene techniques have also appeared in ballets, such as Giselle.The modern musical theatre has also been influenced by the operatic mad scene, as evidenced in Sweeney Todd and Sunset Boulevard.".
- Mad_scene wikiPageExternalLink top-10-mad-scenes-opera.
- Mad_scene wikiPageID "5655774".
- Mad_scene wikiPageLength "4221".
- Mad_scene wikiPageOutDegree "71".
- Mad_scene wikiPageRevisionID "660505315".
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink A_Midsummer_Nights_Dream_(opera).
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink A_Streetcar_Named_Desire_(opera).
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Alban_Berg.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Ambroise_Thomas.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink André_Previn.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Anna_Bolena.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Artaserse.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Baritone.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Bel_canto.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Benjamin_Britten.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Boris_Godunov_(opera).
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Candide_(operetta).
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Category:Opera_terminology.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Composer.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Dinorah.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink France.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Gaetano_Donizetti.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink George_Frederick_Handel.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink George_Frideric_Handel.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Giacomo_Meyerbeer.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Gilbert_&_Sullivan.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Gilbert_and_Sullivan.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Giselle.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Giuseppe_Verdi.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Hamlet_(opera).
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Hercules_(Handel).
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink I_puritani.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Idomeneo.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Il_dolce_suono.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Il_pirata.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Insanity.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Italy.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Jacques_Offenbach.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Adolph_Hasse.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink John_Corigliano.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink La_Sonnambula.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink La_sonnambula.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Le_pont_des_soupirs.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Leonard_Bernstein.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Linda_di_Chamounix.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Lucia_di_Lammermoor.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Macbeth_(opera).
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Maria_Padilla.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Modest_Mussorgsky.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Nabucco.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Nikolai_Rimsky-Korsakov.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Opera.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Opera_semiseria.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Opera_seria.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Opera_singer.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Orlando_(opera).
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Peter_Grimes.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Pyramus_and_Thisbe.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Ruddigore.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Soprano.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Sunset_Boulevard_(musical).
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Sweeney_Todd:_The_Demon_Barber_of_Fleet_Street.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Sweeney_Todd_(musical).
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Tenor.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink The_Ghosts_of_Versailles.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink The_Grand_Duke.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink The_Tsars_Bride_(opera).
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Torquato_Tasso_(opera).
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Vincenzo_Bellini.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Wolfgang_Amadeus_Mozart.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLink Wozzeck.
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mad Scene".
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLinkText "dishevelled and crazed".
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLinkText "mad scene".
- Mad_scene wikiPageWikiLinkText "operatic mad scene".
- Mad_scene hasPhotoCollection Mad_scene.
- Mad_scene wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Distinguish.
- Mad_scene wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Opera_terms.
- Mad_scene subject Category:Opera_terminology.
- Mad_scene hypernym Enactment.
- Mad_scene type Convention.
- Mad_scene type Thing.
- Mad_scene comment "A mad scene is an enactment of insanity in an opera or play. It was a popular convention of Italian and French opera in the early decades of the nineteenth century. Mad scenes were often created as a way to offer star singers a chance to show off their abilities, though many of them are also very dramatic. The vocal writing is often exciting and highly demanding, requiring immense skill.".
- Mad_scene label "Mad scene".
- Mad_scene differentFrom The_Mad_Scene.
- Mad_scene sameAs Hullumisstseen.
- Mad_scene sameAs Scena_della_pazzia.
- Mad_scene sameAs m.0dyk1y.
- Mad_scene sameAs Mad_scene.
- Mad_scene sameAs Q3249636.
- Mad_scene sameAs Q3249636.
- Mad_scene wasDerivedFrom Mad_scene?oldid=660505315.
- Mad_scene isPrimaryTopicOf Mad_scene.