Madame Butterfly, by Giacomo Puccini: A Summary of the Plot

A look at one of opera’s best-loved works

John Welford
ILLUMINATION

--

Photo by Quincena Musical. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license

This is one of the best-known and loved of all operas, both for its superb music and its plot, a tragedy of broken faith in which the whole audience longs to scream out to Butterfly, “Don’t trust him!”

The opera had several sources, including “Madame Chrysantheme”, a novel by Pierre Loti dating from 1887, and a short story (1898) by the American writer John Luther Long that was turned into a play by David Belasco. Puccini’s opera was itself the inspiration for “Miss Saigon”, the musical that premiered in 1989.

At its first performance, at La Scala, Milan, on 17th February 1904, the opera was not the success that the composer hoped for. However, by splitting the original two acts into three and making some other changes, Puccini ensured that this would become one of his greatest successes, and a “standard” in the repertory of opera companies across the world.

Act 1 — A villa in the naval port of Nagasaki, Japan

Lieutenant Pinkerton, U.S. Navy, seeks the advice of a marriage broker, having been told that his posting in Japan will be a long one. The marriage broker assures him that any marriage will only be binding as long as he consents to…

--

--

John Welford
ILLUMINATION

I am a retired librarian, living in a village in Leicestershire. I write fiction and poetry, plus articles on literature, history, and much more besides.