Handel and the Divas
The Handel House Museum
London
United Kingdom
Wed, 15th October 2008 - Sun, 16th November 2008
Our next major exhibition, Handel and the Divas, will look at the lives and careers of the women who brought Handel’s operas and oratorios to life. The exhibition will include portraits, scores, objects, and of course, the music they sang.Handel and the Divas will explore the arrival of the Italian singers who travelled to London to join his company. From the career-defining success of Margherita Durastanti as Handel’s first Agrippina, to the on-stage battle between Francesca Cuzzoni and Faustina Bordoni (The Rival Queens) that led to audience riots when they performed together, the exhibition will show the important role these women played in Handel’s choice of subject and the development of his musical style.
Later in his career, with the public appetite for Italian Opera waning, Handel turned to a group of British singing actresses to embody the female roles in his hugely successful oratorios. Susannah Cibber, recovering from a sensational London scandal by avoiding the public eye in Dublin when Handel arrived to premiere Messiah, was the first to sing He was despised. A year later she was back on the stage of the Theatre Royal Drury Lane, her indiscretion forgiven if not forgotten. One of her Theatre Royal co-stars, Kitty Clive already had a flourishing career as an actress when Handel selected her to create the role of Delilah in Samson.
These were the first great Opera Divas. Each has her own unique and fascinating tale to tell, illuminating the life and times of an 18th-Century prima donna, her loves and scandals, rivalries and collaborations, successes and failures. Uniting them all is the sublime music Handel wrote for them, which continues to provide inspiration and delight to audiences and divas alike. The exhibition will bring together loans from the British Museum, the Garrick Club and other important 18th-century collections. It will be accompanied by a diverse and exciting programme of live music events, exploring the repertoire created by Handel and his Divas.
Address
The Handel House Museum
25 Brook Street
Mayfair
London W1K 4HB
Mayfair
London W1K 4HB
Other Information
LOCATION
Handel House is at 25 Brook Street, Mayfair, just off Bond Street, between Grosvenor Square and Hanover Square.
Please note that the entrance to the Museum is round the back of Brook Street in Lancashire Court
TRAVEL
Tube: Bond Street (Jubilee and Central lines) - walk down South Molton Street;
Oxford Circus (Victoria, Central and Bakerloo lines) - Regent Street, Hanover Street then Brook Street.
Bus: Numerous buses serve Oxford Street, Bond Street and Regent Street, stopping within a few minutes' walk of the Museum.
Rail: Closest mainline railway stations are Charing Cross, Victoria and Marylebone.
NOTES
As the Museum contains original 18th century floors which can be uneven, visitors are advised to wear sensible shoes when visiting. Stilettos damage the floor, and leather-soled shoes are unsuitable
Handel House is at 25 Brook Street, Mayfair, just off Bond Street, between Grosvenor Square and Hanover Square.
Please note that the entrance to the Museum is round the back of Brook Street in Lancashire Court
TRAVEL
Tube: Bond Street (Jubilee and Central lines) - walk down South Molton Street;
Oxford Circus (Victoria, Central and Bakerloo lines) - Regent Street, Hanover Street then Brook Street.
Bus: Numerous buses serve Oxford Street, Bond Street and Regent Street, stopping within a few minutes' walk of the Museum.
Rail: Closest mainline railway stations are Charing Cross, Victoria and Marylebone.
NOTES
As the Museum contains original 18th century floors which can be uneven, visitors are advised to wear sensible shoes when visiting. Stilettos damage the floor, and leather-soled shoes are unsuitable


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