Classroom lesson 路 Opera馃嚠馃嚬 Italy

Opera - stories told by singing

Italy invented opera over 400 years ago - and it is still going

Opera performers in costume taking a bow on stage

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Opera is a kind of show where actors sing the whole story instead of speaking it. The music, the costumes, the painted scenery and the singing all work together to tell a story - sometimes a sad one, sometimes a funny one, sometimes a magical one. Opera was invented in Italy more than 400 years ago.

Tell me more

Opera began in the Italian city of Florence around the year 1600. A group of musicians and poets had the idea of bringing ancient Greek storytelling back, but with the words sung to music instead of spoken. The new style spread quickly. Soon every big Italian city had its own opera house - a special theatre just for these singing-stories.

Some of the most famous opera composers - the people who write the music - were Italian. Giuseppe Verdi wrote operas about kings, prisoners and circus performers. Giacomo Puccini wrote about people falling in love in Paris and tiny Japanese gardens. Their tunes are still played today, sometimes in films you might know, even if you've never been to an opera house.

Opera singers train their voices for years to be loud enough to fill a huge hall without using a microphone. There are different kinds of voices: high voices are called sopranos and tenors, lower voices are called altos and basses. A great opera singer can make a glass shake just by holding one note.

Italians love opera so much that some operas are even performed outdoors, in giant ancient Roman stadiums like the one in Verona. Thousands of people sit on stone steps under the stars and listen to the singers - no microphones needed.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might it feel different to hear a story sung instead of spoken?
  2. 02Have you ever heard a piece of music that gave you a strong feeling? What was it?
  3. 03How can a singer be loud enough to fill a giant room without a microphone?
Try this

Classroom activity

Play a famous opera tune to the class (e.g. 'Nessun Dorma' or the 'Toreador Song'). Ask the children to draw what they see in their heads while it plays - the colours, the setting, what is happening. Share drawings and notice how everyone heard the same music but pictured something different.

More about Italy

Other things that make Italy special

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