
Ruggero Leoncavallo (1857 - 1919)
Neapolitan by birth, Leoncavallo studied music in Naples and literature at Bologna, and seemed about to make a career as a librettist. His operatic ambitions found their only really successful result in Pagliacci, for which he wrote both words and music.
Operas
  Pagliacci, a story of love and jealousy in a troupe of commedia  dell’arte actors, has achieved a permanent place in operatic repertoire; it  is often coupled with Mascagni’s Cavalleria rusticana. Leoncavallo’s  first opera, Chatterton, won no favour, while his version of La  Bohème was soon eclipsed by that of Puccini.






















