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The Marriage of Figaro Refund Policy OPERA Tickets
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The Marriage of Figaro Tickets
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All The Marriage of Figaro sales are final. No refunds or exchanges
will be honored. Be sure to order only what you need. Upgrades are available
for a premium.
In the event that a The Marriage of Figaro event cancels a refund will be given.
If a new date is scheduled there will be no refunds. Usually the event will
reschedule and your tickets will be good for the new date. If an event
cancels 30 days will be given before refunds begin to see if a new date is
announced. If no new The Marriage of Figaro event is rescheduled a full refund
at this point is given.
If you have any questions about a refund feel free to call 281-447-1579. If
for some reason you can not make the new date, Northsidetickets.com will
offer to resell your tickets. Northsidetickets does not accept
responsability of paying for these tickets until they have resold.
Northsidetickets offers this service to help keep our customers happy.
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Le nozze di Figaro ossia la folle giornata (Trans: The Marriage [lit. Wedding] of Figaro or the Crazy Day), K. 492, is an opera buffa (comic opera) composed in 1786 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, with libretto by Lorenzo da Ponte, based on a stage comedy by Pierre Beaumarchais, Le mariage de Figaro (1784). Although the play by Beaumarchais was at first banned in Vienna due to the mockery of the upper class, the opera became one of Mozart's most successful works. It is now commonly regarded as a cornerstone of the standard operatic repertoire. The overture is especially famous and is often played as a concert piece.//The opera was the first of several celebrated collaborations between Mozart and da Ponte; they went on to create Don Giovanni and Così fan tutte. It was Mozart who brought a copy of Beaumarchais's play to da Ponte, who turned it into a libretto in 6 weeks. Da Ponte translated it into Italian, then the common language of opera, and removed the pointed satirical elements of the story. Only after convincing Emperor Joseph II that the inflammatory scenes from the play (including a soliloquy by Figaro, in which he contemplates his past history, and wonders whether the Count is really intrinsically superior to himself) had been removed was permission given to perform the opera. Figaro premiered at the Burgtheater, Vienna, on May 1, 1786.The overture to the Marriage of Figaro does not use any of the music from the opera itself, unlike many operatic overtures. The music of Figaro's Act One finale aria, Non piú andrai, is used as the regimental slow march of the Coldstream Guards of the British Army. Mozart "recycled" the music of the Agnus Dei of his "Krönungsmesse" KV317(Coronation Mass), for the Countess' Dove sono, in G major instead of the original F major). The same motif was used in his early bassoon concerto
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