TY - JOUR
T1 - Opera Salaries in Eighteenth-Century London
AU - Milhous, Judith
AU - Hume, Robert D.
N1 - Funding Information:
*Research for this article was carried out under a generous grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. For assistance of various sorts we are grateful to Winton Dean, Draper, Henry Marie Horwitz, Lowell Lindgren, Charles W. Mann, Jr., and Curtis Price.
Copyright:
Copyright 2016 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 1993
Y1 - 1993
N2 - Until the last fifteen years, very few salaries have been known for Italian opera singers or ballet dancers in eighteenth-century London. Two major new sources are presented here for the first time: Chancery testimony concerning salaries in the 1780s, and a series of manuscript annotations giving salaries of principals for eight seasons between 1796 and 1808. Added to recent discoveries concerning the first decade of the century, the Royal Academy of Music in the 1720s, and Chancery testimony about the pay scale in the 1760s, this information makes an overview possible. The top and bottom of the salary scale (£1, 500 to £100) remained surprisingly stable from the 17 20s to the 1790s. During the last third of the century ballet emerges from relative insignificance and attains virtual parity in cost and status with opera itself. The star system was established as early as 1708, and the size of the theater was always a key determinant in limiting salaries. The huge new opera house of 1791, coupled with Napoleonic-era inflation, quickly increased salaries at the top end of the scale, culminating in the £5, 250 paid to Catalani in 1808. The gap between top and bottom salaries was always enormous, but in the later years of this survey the gap was widening substantially.
AB - Until the last fifteen years, very few salaries have been known for Italian opera singers or ballet dancers in eighteenth-century London. Two major new sources are presented here for the first time: Chancery testimony concerning salaries in the 1780s, and a series of manuscript annotations giving salaries of principals for eight seasons between 1796 and 1808. Added to recent discoveries concerning the first decade of the century, the Royal Academy of Music in the 1720s, and Chancery testimony about the pay scale in the 1760s, this information makes an overview possible. The top and bottom of the salary scale (£1, 500 to £100) remained surprisingly stable from the 17 20s to the 1790s. During the last third of the century ballet emerges from relative insignificance and attains virtual parity in cost and status with opera itself. The star system was established as early as 1708, and the size of the theater was always a key determinant in limiting salaries. The huge new opera house of 1791, coupled with Napoleonic-era inflation, quickly increased salaries at the top end of the scale, culminating in the £5, 250 paid to Catalani in 1808. The gap between top and bottom salaries was always enormous, but in the later years of this survey the gap was widening substantially.
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U2 - 10.2307/831805
DO - 10.2307/831805
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84968301211
SN - 0003-0139
VL - 46
SP - 26
EP - 83
JO - Journal of the American Musicological Society
JF - Journal of the American Musicological Society
IS - 1
ER -