Salvatore Allegra (13 July 1898, Palermo, Italy – 9 December 1993, Florence, Italy) was an Italian composer.
Salvatore Allegra | |
---|---|
Born | Palermo, Italy | 13 July 1898
Died | 9 December 1993 Florence, Italy | (aged 95)
Occupation | Composer |
Allegra was born in Palermo. He composed a number of operettas in the 1920s, including Il gatto in cantina (1930), which is still performed sometimes,[1] passing then to operas, such as the dark "verista" drama Ave Maria,[2] which was first staged at La Scala in 1934, which was followed by I Viandanti (1936), Il Medico suo malgrado (1938) and Romulus (1952).[3]
He completed and edited some last works of the late Ruggero Leoncavallo, including the one-act opera Edipo Re (1920) and the operetta Le maschere nude (1925).
After the war he composed a number of musical scores for films, among which Amori e veleni (1950) with Amedeo Nazzari and directed by Giorgio Simonelli. He died in Florence.
Selected filmography
edit- Lohengrin (1936)
- Marcella (1937)
- Abandonment (1940)
- The Actor Who Disappeared (1941)
- A Little Wife (1943)
- Love and Poison (1950)
- Nobody's Children (1951)
- Who is Without Sin (1952)
- Lieutenant Giorgio (1952)
- Final Pardon (1952)
References
edit- ^ Final rehearsal by the cast of the Italo-Australian Theatre Company for the production Il Gatto in Cantina, 1961, retrieved 11 September 2021
- ^ "CONDUCTORIS ENGINEER". News. Vol. XXVIII, no. 4, 226. South Australia. 6 February 1937. p. 2. Retrieved 11 September 2021 – via National Library of Australia. "...It was written by a friend. Salvatore Allegra, a young composer, and it has not been heard outside Italy. The title is "Ave Maria" and it is a modern love story..."
- ^ "Romulus 1953-54 | Archivio Storico del Teatro dell'Opera di Roma".