When Giacomo Puccini saw Sarah Bernhardt in a production of La Tosca
by French playwright Victorien Sardou, he knew immediately that its
highly dramatic plot, turning on lust, revenge, and betrayal, was made
for opera. When he heard that Verdi was interested in the play, his own
interest in the property deepened. It was Puccini alone who ultimately
brought the project to fruition and transformed Sardou's work into an
operatic tour de force.
Tosca, with a libretto by Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica, was first
presented in Rome at the Teatro Costanzi in January 1900. Since then,
audiences drawn by its intense drama (Puccini himself referred to it as
a melodrama), sumptuous scoring, and two of opera's most famous arias
―Tosca's Vissi d'arte and Cavaradossi's E lucevan le stelle ― have
made Tosca one of the most performed and recorded operas of all time.
This finely made edition is reprinted from the authoritative full-score
edition printed shortly after the opera's premiere.