Danielle Simon – “Canta la radio!” Italian Opera on the Airwaves, 1925–40

Fellow Shoptalks

Danielle Simon – “Canta la radio!” Italian Opera on the Airwaves, 1925–40

Danielle Simon - "Canta la radio!": Italian opera on the airwaves, 1925-1940

The centrality of opera for early Italian radio cannot be overstated. In 1931, EIAR (the Ente Italiano Audizioni Radiofoniche) broadcast sixty-nine broadcasts of fifty-four complete operas, a rate that would continue to increase over the next several decades. But producers of opera confronted challenges when translating the genre from stage to airwaves, not least of which was the radio’s lack of image. Some viewed the radio as an opportunity to perform new operas featuring otherwise inaccessible interior voices; others saw broadcasts of nineteenth-century opera as nation-building tools for transmitting culture and italianità. This talk will explore the challenges and possibilities opera presented during the early decades of Italian radio broadcasting, at a time when the new medium seemed to offer endless frontiers to explore culture, identity, and the human.

Danielle Simon is the Millicent Mercer Johnsen Rome Prize Fellows in Modern Italian Studies at the American Academy in Rome and a PhD candidate in the Department of Music at the University of California, Berkeley.

The shoptalk will be held in English. You can watch this event live at https://livestream.com/aarome.

Date & time
Wednesday, March 29, 2017
6:30 PM
Location
AAR Lecture Room
McKim, Mead & White Building
Via Angelo Masina, 5
Rome, Italy