The Jew­ish Writer Behind Mozart’s Operas

LORENZO DA PONTE: The Italian writer behind Mozart’s greatest operas: (From Paper Brigade Magazine) bit.ly/3w18R9h
by Howard Jay Smith author of “Meet­ing Mozart: From the Secret Diaries of Loren­zo Da Ponte” – amzn.to/2P9Xfzu
Loren­zo Da Ponte is the sin­gle most impor­tant Jew in the his­to­ry of opera, yet few peo­ple know the name of the writer who made it pos­si­ble for Mozart to be revered today as the great­est opera com­pos­er of all time. With­out Da Ponte’s con­tri­bu­tions as libret­ti — that is to say, the sto­ry and words — Mozart would have nev­er been able to com­pose the three musi­cal scores “Don Gio­van­ni,” “The Mar­riage of Figaro,” or “Cosi Fan Tutte,” that led to his eter­nal fame.
Nonethe­less, for all Da Ponte’s bril­liance in cre­at­ing these works and his efforts to bring opera to ear­ly mod­ern New York City, he was deroga­to­ri­ly referred to as “Mozart’s Jew­ish Priest” behind his back.
Who was Loren­zo Da Ponte? Read on: bit.ly/3w18R9h 
September 21, 2021

Meeting Mozart: A Novel Drawn From the Secret Diaries of Lorenzo Da Ponte is a deftly plotted and richly detailed historical novel that spans generations and involves Mozart, mysteries, masquerades, opera, and spies. It brings to light the incredible life story of Mozart’s librettist, Lorenzo Da Ponte, the Jewish-born priest who created The Marriage of FigaroDon Giovanni, and Cosi Fan Tutte. According to one reviewer, Meeting Mozart is “the musical equivalent of The Da Vinci Code.”

The novel opens in the shadows of a war-torn Jewish ghetto in Italy, with the discovery of Lorenzo Da Ponte’s secret diaries by his descendent, an opera-loving, Jewish/Italian-American G.I. stationed outside Venice. In the diaries, Da Ponte reveals how he had to live as a Converso in order to survive the anti-Semitism of his times. Over the course of his colorful lifetime, Da Ponte is a gambler, a poet, a womanizer, a murder suspect. He is a friend to Casanova, Mozart’s collaborator, an insider at the Hapsburg Court of Vienna, and, eventually, the owner of a deli in New Jersey. An associate of such luminaries as James Fenimore Cooper and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, he also became the first professor of Italian at Columbia University in New York, as well as the first priest to teach there and, more significantly, the first Jew. Throughout his life, he continued to practice his Jewish faith in secret.

In this multi-generational historical saga, Da Ponte’s struggles parallel those of his descendent, Jake Conegliano, and three generations of the Conegliano family in post-war New York. Like his famous relation, Jake must also hide his Jewishness in order to work for the C.I.A. tracking down escaped Nazis, including those who murdered many of his Italian relatives.

Meeting Mozart: A Novel Drawn From the Secret Diaries of Lorenzo Da Ponte is the follow-up to Howard Jay Smith’s award-winning novel, Beethoven in Love; Opus 139. Both books are wonderfully imagined stories set in the world of musical giants. The results are splendid literary novels that incorporate both mystery and historical fiction. Smith takes readers from the stylish streets of Europe’s most important musical cities to a Jewish deli in early modern New York. And he reintroduces us to captivating historical figures as varied as Mozart, Casanova, and Clement Moore in a complex and often-riveting tale about creativity, identity, and purpose.

Praise for Meeting Mozart
“Ever since the release of Amadeus, the concept of writing historical fiction based on the golden age of classical music, has flourished… Frankly speaking, many of them are outstripped by this new riveting book. 5 out of 5 Stars”—CityBookReview.com

“A captivating, classical music-themed tale starring Mozart’s famous collaborator.” —Kirkus Reviews

“Meeting Mozart by Howard Jay Smith is a thrilling historical novel … This beautifully illustrated book is a gift from the award-winning author.” —OnlineBookClub.org

“Howard Jay Smith has written the musical equivalent of The Da Vinci Code.” —Patricia Morrisroe, author, The Woman in the Moonlight

“Smith writes with a wonderful command of language and a deep knowledge of history, music, and opera. An absolute delight to read.” —Nir Kabaretti, conductor of the Santa Barbara Symphony

Meeting Mozart is a journey of transcendence, an exquisitely constructed novel crafted by a compelling storyteller.” —Alan Riche, producer of DuetsMod SquadStarsky & Hutch

“Smith vividly brings to life not only Da Ponte’s challenges in navigating the challenges of life for Jews but also those of his descendants.” —Gaelle Lehrer Kennedy, author, Night in Jerusalem 

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