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ACT
I. Mantua, 1500s. At his palace, the Duke lightheartedly
boasts to his courtiers of amorous conquests, escorting Countess
Ceprano, his latest prize, to a private chamber as his hunchback
jester, Rigoletto, makes fun of her husband. Marullo announces
that Rigoletto is suspected of keeping a mistress, and Ceprano
plots with the courtiers to punish the hated buffoon. Attention is
diverted when Monterone, an elderly nobleman, enters to denounce
the Duke for seducing his daughter. Ridiculed by Rigoletto and
placed under arrest, Monterone pronounces a curse on both the Duke
and his jester.
On his way home that night, Rigoletto broods on Monterone's curse.
Rejecting the services offered by Sparafucile, a professional
assassin, he notes that the word can be as deadly as the dagger.
Greeted by his daughter, Gilda, whom he keeps hidden from the
world, he reminisces about his late wife, then warns the
governess, Giovanna, to admit no one. But as Rigoletto leaves, the
Duke slips into the garden, tossing a purse to Giovanna to keep
her quiet. The nobleman declares his love to Gilda, who has
noticed him in church. He tells her he is a poor student named
Gualtier Maldè, but at the sound of footsteps he rushes away.
Tenderly repeating his name, Gilda retires. Meanwhile, the
courtiers stop Rigoletto outside his house and ask him to help
abduct Ceprano's wife, who lives across the way. The jester is
duped into wearing a blindfold and holding a ladder against his
own garden wall. The courtiers break into his home and carry off
Gilda. Rigoletto, hearing her cry for help, tears off his
blindfold and rushes into the house, discovering only her scarf.
He remembers Monterone's curse.
ACT II. In his palace, the Duke is distraught over the disappearance of Gilda.
When his courtiers return, saying it is they who have taken her
and that she is now in his bedchamber, he joyfully rushes off to
the conquest. Soon Rigoletto enters, warily looking for Gilda; the
courtiers bar his way, though they are astonished to learn the
girl is not his mistress but his daughter. The jester reviles
them, then embraces the disheveled Gilda as she runs in to tell of
her courtship and abduction. As Monterone is led to the dungeon,
Rigoletto vows to avenge them both.
ACT III. At night, outside Sparafucile's run-down inn on the outskirts of town,
Rigoletto and Gilda watch as the Duke flirts with the assassin's
sister and accomplice, Maddalena. Rigoletto sends his daughter off
to disguise herself as a boy for her escape to Verona, then pays
Sparafucile to murder the Duke. As a storm rages, Gilda returns to
hear Maddalena persuade her brother to kill not the Duke but the
next visitor to the inn instead. Resolving to sacrifice herself
for the Duke, despite his betrayal, Gilda enters the inn and is
stabbed. Rigoletto comes back to claim the body and gloats over
the sack Sparafucile gives him, only to hear his supposed victim
singing in the distance. Frantically cutting open the sack, he
finds Gilda, who dies asking forgiveness. Monterone's curse is
fulfilled.
Source: Metopera Website |