NAPLES, Italy — At long last, vindication is at hand for an Oscar-winning composer who sought to prove he was just as capable of breathing life into Italy's grand theaters as gritty Hollywood films.
On Friday night, Naples' Teatro San Carlo will stage Ennio Morricone's only opera, ''Partenope,'' three full decades after its composition. It is inspired by the mythical siren who drowned herself after failing to enchant Ulysses, her body washing ashore and becoming a settlement that grew over millennia into the seaside city of Naples.
When Morricone wrote ''Partenope'' in 1995, he was already the world-famous creator of the theme to the Spaghetti Western ''The Good, the Bad and the Ugly'' and haunting soundtracks for epic films such as ''The Untouchables'' and ''Once Upon a Time in America.''
He earned an Oscar for lifetime achievement in 2007, but his compositions never resounded in the hallowed halls of opera houses — viewed in his home country as the elite musical echelon. To his great chagrin, Partenope gathered dust for decades; Morricone died without seeing it performed.
''In the end, he read as a sign of destiny the fact he would not make his debut in the opera world,'' Alessandro De Rosa, a close collaborator who coauthored Morricone's autobiography, said in an interview. ''I'm sure that if he were alive now, he would have taken the challenge and would have dialogued with the orchestra and the director, tirelessly, like a young kid.''
Neapolitan sounds
Director Vanessa Beecroft and conductor Riccardo Frizza had to find their way through the visionary work without the benefit of those notes.
''It would have been wonderful to be able to talk to Morricone about his musical choices … but we had to understand them from what he left us and tried to interpret them in the best way,'' Frizza said.