Pan y toros, Francisco Asenjo Barbieri
| Title | Pan y toros |
| English Title | Bread and Games |
| Composer | Francisco Asenjo Barbieri |
| Librettists | José Picón Garcia (1829 – 1873) |
| Language | Spanish, Dutch translation available |
| Genre | Zarzuela (Spanish operetta) in three acts |
| First performance | December 22, 1864, Teatro de la Zarzuela, Madrid |
| Time of action | Spring of 1794 |
| Place of action |
Madrid:
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| Main parts |
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| Prominence of chorus | Considerable |
| Orchestra |
2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones, timpani/percussion, harp, strings |
| Special demands |
Small band of plucked instruments (guitars, mandolins etc.) in act I; also in act I a bassoon-player on stage; a boy-soprano, children’s choir (if not available to be replaced by women’s voices). |
| Full score and orchestral parts | Available |
| Level | Taxing for some soloists. Choral share not very difficult. |
| Length | About 2½ hours, interval included |
| Music |
Musically the work is Spanish operetta at its best. Brilliant use of authentic folklore (rondalla, bolero, seguidilla etc.). Wonderful combination of Spanish music and Italianate opera. |
| Story |
The libretto is highly characteristic of nineteenth-century opera, but fortunately there is a prominent comic note too: the wordly abbot Ciruela, his actress-friend La Tirana and the three bullfighters contribute many amusing scenes. Moreover, there are some delightful scoundrels, such as the sanctimonious monk parading a “footprint of Our Lord”, the blind beggar with perfect eyesight, the fraudulent district-governor, the incompetent general, and above all the intriguer doña Pepita, the prime-minister’s mistress, a truly magnificent vixen. |
| Costumes | Town’s people, soldiers, policemen, ladies, gentlemen |
| Note |
A rich and rewarding work. Also eminently suitable for amateurs. |
| Pictures | |
| Link |
< Orphée aux Enfers | Track | Patience >

