ACT I Disguised as a paladin and masquerading under the assumed name of her brother Ricciardo, Bradamante enters in search of her fiancé, Ruggiero. In the company of her tutor, Melisso, who is similarly disguised as a knight, she has landed on an island ruled by the sorceress Alcina. Together they penetrate to the island's interior, a wilderness surrounded by mountains. Here they encounter Alcina's sister, Morgana, who immediately falls in love with "Ricciardo". The moun¬tain bursts open, revealing Alcina's magnificent palace. The sorceress herself enters on the arm of Ruggiero, whom she genuinely loves and who is entirely in thrall to her charms. She wel¬comes Bradamante and Melisso as her guests. Young Oberto asks the two strangers if they know about his father, Astolfo, who has disappeared on the island. Bradamante tells Melisso in an undertone that Alcina has probably turned Astolfo into a wild beast, a fate that has befallen many another hero. Oberto leaves, and Bradamante tries to confront Ruggiero, but Ruggiero has completely forgotten his fiancée as well as his former bravery in this realm of pleasure and enjoyment. He mocks "Ricciardo" and demands only to see Alcina. Alcina's general, Oronte, arrives. He is furious because he believes that Bradamante / Ricciardo has come to steal away Morgana, with whom he is in love. He challenges Ricciardo to a duel, but Morgana protects her new lover and pertly gives the desperate Oronte his marching orders. Oronte responds by plotting against the lovers. He tells Ruggiero that Alcina turns her former lovers into streams, stones and wild beasts and that a similar fate awaits him now that Alcina has fallen in love with Ricciardo. In a fit of jealousy, Ruggiero accuses the unsuspecting sorceress of being unfaithful, while Alcina for her part assumes that Ruggiero no longer loves her. When Ruggiero, burning with hatred, confronts his ostensible rival, Bradamante angrily reveals her true identity, but Ruggiero is blinded by jealousy and refuses to believe her. Morgana begs Bradamante to flee, claiming that in order to pacify Ruggiero, Alcina is prepared to turn Ricciardo into a wild animal. Convinced that Alcina will spare her own sister's lover, Brada¬mante pretends that she returns Morgana's affections. ACT II While Ruggiero, still in the palace, expresses his yearning for Alcina, Melisso appears to him in the form of his former tutor, Atlante. He upbraids Ruggiero for betraying his ideals and gives him a ring whose magic power immediately restores Ruggiero's reason and transforms the richly appointed palace chamber into a dreadful wasteland. Melisso, who has turned back into his former shape, advises Ruggiero to pretend that he still loves Alcina and secretly to prepare for his escape. Bradamante once again reveals her true identity, but in spite of the fact that his love for her has been rekindled, Ruggiero rejects her because he is afraid that Alcina is again tricking him by appearing in the guise of Bradamante. Close to the palace gardens, Alcina is in the process of turning Ricciardo into a wild animal in order to dispel Ruggiero's suspicions. Morgana stops her, and Ruggiero, who now comes running in, declares that Alcina's intentions are sufficient to calm him down. He says that he forgives Ricciardo. Morgana claims that Ricciardo loves not Alcina but herself. Ruggiero receives permission from Alcina to arm himself and go hunting in order to clear his mind. Before he leaves, he hypocritically assures Alcina of his love. Oberto asks Alcina about his father. He resists her temptations, and so she finally promises that he will soon see his father again. Oronte enters and tells Alcina that Ruggiero, urged on by Ricciardo and Melisso, is trying to escape. Alcina is in despair but she decides to act. Bradamante tells Oberto that Alcina has turned his father into a lion, but he will see him again soon. Ruggiero is finally reconciled with Bradamante, whereupon an enraged Morgana bursts out of her hiding place: she has recognized Ricciardo's true identity, and threatens the couple with Alcina's vengeance. Ruggiero prophesies the imminent end of Alcina's magic realm. In a subterranean vault, Alcina calls on demons to help her, but she is soon forced to realize that her magic wand has lost its power. ACT III In the entrance hall of Alcina's palace, Morgana, disappointed in love, tries to rekindle her relationship with her former lover, Oronte. Although Oronte still loves her, he pretends for the present to be indifferent towards her. Alcina and Ruggiero meet by chance, provoking a confrontation between them. He admits that he wants to leave her, attributing his decision to his martial prowess and his love for Bradamante. Alcina's anguish and her memory of their happi¬ness together leave him unmoved, as do her threats. Melisso has found Ruggiero and Bradamante again and reports that the island is surrounded by warriors and wild animals. Ruggiero is determined to fight, while Bradamante insists that before she leaves she will free the men on whom Alcina has cast a spell. Oronte tells Alcina that her armies have been defeated and that Ruggiero has not fled but is threatening to attack the island. (Oronte secretly sees in these events a justified punishment for Alcina's crimes.) In her despair she admits that she is powerless now that she has been defeated. In a courtyard outside Alcina's palace where wild beasts are padding to and fro in their cages, a joyful Oberto awaits his father's liberation. Alcina takes him to task, but Oberto retorts that she herself promised this reunion. In order to be avenged, Alcina lets a lion out of its cage, gives Oberto her spear, and orders him to kill the animal which is approaching them, a picture of good-natured docility. But Oberto knows that his father is concealed within the lion, and instead of turning on it, he threatens Alcina with her own spear. In a final confrontation with Brada¬mante and Ruggiero, Alcina once again calls on all her powers, but in vain: neither she nor Morgana can prevent Ruggiero from using Alcina's magic ring to shatter the urn that holds the source of her powers. The palace and its surroundings crumble, and the enchanted beings are restored to human form. They celebrate the happy outcome and an end to their sufferings.
Alan Curtis, lauded by Opera as one of our finest conductors of Baroque opera, illumines Handel s masterpiece, Alcina, by casting, as heroine, the brilliant Joyce DiDonato. Since Alcina is historically dared by virtuosic sopranos like Sutherland and Battle, this innovative recording with a mezzo is a must-have not just for Alcina freaks but all who adore sensational vocalism. As Handel did in his time, Curtis arrays our era s finest Baroque singers such as Maite Beaumont and Karina Gauvin in supporting roles around his star. With this electrifying Alcina, first ever studio recording of the rarely heard Ezio and Rolando Villazón s new album, Handel Year 2009 is being exceptionally well feted by Deutsche Grammophon.