Idomeneo
=Idomeneo, re di Creta=Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart composed his first mature opera seria, Idomeneo, re di Creta ossia Ilia e Idamante in 1781, giving a first demonstration of his mastery regarding orchestra colors and strength, the art of accompanied recitatives, the beauty of the melodic lines. Under certain aspects (e.g. the choirs), though, this opera is still an experimental drama, resulting more in a sequence of sets than in a well developed plot. Mozart also had to fight mightily with the mediocre author of the libretto, Giambattista Varesco, not only about specific words, but even about single syllables.
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On a deserted seashore, after the shipwreck, Idomeneo recalls the vow he made to Neptune - to sacrifice, if he arrived safe, the first living creature he meets on shore. Idamante approaches him, but because the two have not seen each other for a long time, recognition is difficult. When Idomeneo realizes the youth is his own child, he orders Idamante never to seek him out again. Grief-stricken by his father's rejection, Idamante runs off. Cretan troops disembarking from Idomeneo's ship are met by their wives, and all praise Neptune.
At the port of Sidon, Idomeneo bids his son farewell and urges him to learn the art of ruling while he is away. Before the ship can sail, however, a storm breaks out, and a sea serpent appears. Recognizing it as a messenger from Neptune, the king offers himself as atonement for having violated his vow to the godThe Plot
ACT I
Island of Crete. Ilia, daughter of King Priam,loves Prince Idamante, son of Idomeneo, but she hesitates to acknowledge her love. Idamante frees the Trojan prisoners. He tells Ilia, who is rejecting his love, that it is not his fault that their fathers were enemies. Trojans and Cretans together welcome the return of peace, but Elettra, jealous of Ilia, does not approve Idamante's clemency toward the enemy prisoners. Arbace, the king's confidant, brings news that Idomeneo has been lost at sea while returning to Crete. Elettra, fearing that Ilia, a Trojan, soon will be Queen of Crete, feels the furies of Hades tormenting her.ACT II
At the king's palace, Idomeneo seeks counsel from Arbace, who says an other victim could be sacrificed if Idamante were sent into exile. Idomeneo orders his son to escort Elettra to her home, Argos. Idomeneo's kind words to Ilia move her to declare that since she has lost everything, he will be her father and Crete her country. As she leaves, Idomeneo realizes that sending Idamante into exile has cost Ilia her happiness as well as his own. Elettra welcomes the idea of going to Argos with Idamante.