Buoso's Ghost

Ching, Michael

Product Number
8558*
E. C. Schirmer Music Company
Grouped product items
Product Name Qty
Buoso's Ghost (Piano/Vocal Score) - 8558
$27.00
Buoso's Ghost (Additional Full Score) - 8558A
$160.00
More Information
Product Number8558*
Composer/ArrangerChing, Michael
Text AuthorChing, Michael
Voicing & Instruments2 Sopranos, 3 Tenors, 5 Baritones, 2 Mezzo-Sopranos, Bass/Bass Baritone
Instrumentation2 Flutes, Oboe, 2 B-flat Clarinet, Bassoon, 2 Horns in F, 2 B-flat Trumpets, Trombone, Harp, Keyboard (Piano and Synthesizer), Percussion, Timpani, Strings
Rental DeptFull score and parts available for rental. Click here to request a quote or order.
DifficultyModerately Difficult
Text LanguageEnglish
Popular Opera SearchesMost Performed, Comic Opera, Duration: 30-60 min, One Act/Chamber Opera
Duration45'
Reviews

Buoso's Ghost soared .... [it] offered highly charged acting atop a deft, tuneful score.... Ching, General/Artistic Director of Opera Memphis, studied with Robert Ward and Carlisle Floyd, and the unashamed flow of natural, singing melody ... reflects the profile of his teachers.
-Chicago Sun-Times

Composer and librettist Ching ... borrows snatches of Puccini tunes and weaves them into his own conservative-eclectic idiom, tossing in bits of American pop ... for merry measure. The vocal writing is expert, the orchestration light enough to allow the singers to project the text clearly. Buoso is charming and unpretentious ....
-Chicago Tribune

[Ching uses] a more modern musical mode, yet avoiding excessive atonality. The score subtly introduces brief tongue-in-cheek quotations from other works, ranging from Mozart to Sondheim, plus one unmistakable interjection of Shostakovich.
-Opera News

Read a recent review by Opera and Beyond.com

PremierJanuary 25, 1997, Opera Memphis
Notable & Recent PerformancesPittsburgh Opera Center at Dusquesne (1996)
Opera Memphis (1997)
Indianapolis Opera (1999)
Chicago Opera Theater (2000)
Triangle Opera (2000)
Texas State University (2005)
McGill University (2005)
Opera New Jersey (2006)
Opera Saratoga (2008)
Amarillo Opera (2010)
Southern Utah University (2010)
Bayview Music Festival (2011)
UNC-Chapel Hill (2014)
SUNY Potsdam (2017)
OperaDelaware (2018)
University of Central Florida (2018)
Capitol City Opera (2019)
Michigan Opera Theatre (2020)
California State University Fullerton (2022)
Florida Grand Opera (2023)
PublisherE. C. Schirmer Music Company
Roles:
LAURETTASoprano
RINUCCIOTenor
SCHICCHIBaritone
FRAIR I*Tenor (Comprimario)
FRIAR II*Baritone (Comprimario)
NELLASoprano
LA CIESCAMezzo Soprano
ZITAMezzo Soprano or Contralto
GHERARDOTenor
MARCOBaritone
BETTOBaritone
SIMONE Bass or Bass Baritone
THE MAGISTRATE* Baritone (Supporting)
SUPERNUMERARIES
THE MAGISTRATE'S GUARDS/RETAINERS, GHERARDINO (Child)
THE LATE UNCLE BUOSO
*character not in Gianni Schicchi

Synopsis:
Opera in one act. A comic sequel to Gianni Schicchi by Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924), Buoso’s Ghost begins with the final bars of Gianni Schicchi. As the sequel begins, we see Lauretta and Rinnuccio, arm in arm, planning their future. Feeling the proud father, Schicchi, looks on. The couple go off to buy their wedding ring. Alone, Schicchi straightens up the house. He sees some food and wine that the relatives have brought and sits down for a snack. But he discovers that the food and drink have all been poisoned by the relations.

He is interrupted by a knock at the door. Two brothers have come to collect on Buoso Donati’s will. Schicchi shows them the “revised” document and they leave in shock. Alone, Schicchi imagines the relatives making their plans to poison old Uncle Buoso.

We hear the relatives approaching. Quickly Schicchi scribbles a note and tucks it into Buoso’s nightshirt. They have come screaming for blood. Just as they are about to beat Schicchi senseless, a magistrate arrives to try the case.

The relatives immediately assume an air of mourning. Then they angrily accuse Schicchi of murdering uncle Buoso. Schicchi beseeches them for mercy. He sneaks up to each one and tells them that he knows that they have poisoned Buoso's food and drink. They are stunned and worried. They quickly switch gears. Each group of relatives offers Schicchi a bribe if he will blame somebody else, but Schicchi makes no promises.

The magistrate brings everyone back to order. When Old Simone refuses to accuse Schicchi, then the magistrate does it himself. Schicchi defends himself, keeping the relatives on pins and needles. Finally, sobbing he goes over to Uncle Buoso's body and falls on the corpse. He pulls out the note and reads it: Uncle Buoso has committed suicide. All are shocked at this horrible sin. The magistrate is miffed that he can’t condemn Schicchi and leaves.

Alone, the relatives realize that Schicchi has outwitted them again. Jokingly, Betto says that they will get the money back in the long run because Rinnuccio and Lauretta are getting married. They realize they can just kill Schicchi now and inherit everything.

Overhearing this, Schicchi prepares. He hides behind the body and blows out the candles. He summons the ghost of Buoso Donati and scares the family from the house.

In an echo of the end of the Puccini opera, Schicchi comes downstage and asks the audience to forgive the upstart composer for writing the sequel.