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TOSCA

Tosca is an opera in three acts by Giacomo Puccini, with a libretto by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa. Based on the 1887 French play La Tosca by Victorien Sardou, it premiered on January 14, 1900, at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome. It is typically categorized as verismo, though it emphasizes melodic beauty and dramatic psychology. It remains one of Puccini's best-known and most frequently performed works.

Set in Rome and its environs in 1800 during the Napoleonic era, the plot follows Floria Tosca,

Roles: Floria Tosca (soprano), Mario Cavaradossi (tenor), Baron Scarpia (baritone). Supporting roles include the Sacristan and

Musical highlights include the arias Vissi d'arte and E lucevan le stelle, and the dramatic Te Deum

Tosca has become a staple of the international operatic repertoire, staged by major companies around the world

a
celebrated
singer,
her
lover
Mario
Cavaradossi,
and
the
chief
of
police,
Baron
Scarpia.
Scarpia
opposes
their
romance,
uses
Cavaradossi
as
bait
to
seize
him,
and
Tosca
must
navigate
jealousy,
political
danger,
and
moral
crisis.
The
final
acts
involve
Scarpia's
murder,
Cavaradossi's
execution,
and
Tosca's
suicide
by
jumping
from
a
fortress
parapet.
Spoletta,
among
others.
and
execution
scene.
Puccini's
score
blends
lyrical
melody
with
dramatic
orchestration
and
employs
recurring
motifs
to
illuminate
character
and
fate,
aligning
with
the
verismo
tradition
while
showcasing
operatic
expressiveness.
and
widely
recorded.
Its
intense
drama,
memorable
music,
and
ethical
and
political
themes
have
secured
its
enduring
influence
in
opera
and
in
broader
cultural
contexts.