The Encyclopedia of Classic Opera · Thursday, July 2, 2026
No CCCXLVII · Established MMXXVI
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Librettist · Catalogued Works

Gaetano Sertor

2 opera libretti catalogued, listed by date of premiere.

Gaetano Sertor is credited as the librettist of 2 operas currently catalogued by OperaPedia, . The work of a librettist is rarely visible to the casual operagoer in the way that the work of a composer or a great singer is visible, but the libretto is the structural underpinning of every evening at the opera: it determines the arc of the drama, the placement of the great set-pieces, and the rhythmic and prosodic raw material from which the composer fashions the vocal line.

Working principally with Francesco Bianchi, Gaetano Sertor contributed to a body of work that has remained in the repertory through multiple generations of revival and reappraisal. The collaboration of librettist and composer is one of the central professional relationships in operatic history; surviving correspondence and rehearsal records consistently show that the most enduring works emerged from partnerships in which both figures were prepared to revise their initial conceptions in the light of what the other had brought. Among the works in our catalogue attributed to Gaetano Sertor are Arbace (with Francesco Bianchi) and La morte di Cesare (with Francesco Bianchi). Each appears here as a full editorial entry with synopsis and production history.

The texts written by Gaetano Sertor are predominantly in the original languages of the period. The dominant era for these collaborations is the Unknown tradition, which sets out distinctive expectations of the librettist: in Unknown opera, the libretto is expected to balance recitative against set-piece aria, to provide the chorus with moments of dramatic weight, and to give the principal singers the opportunity to demonstrate the range of their art across a variety of emotional registers.

Below, the complete list of operas attributed in our records to Gaetano Sertor as librettist is presented in chronological order of premiere. Readers wishing to pursue the broader question of operatic poetry (the conventions of recitative, the rules of versification, the negotiation between librettist and censor) will find further context in our reference essays linked from the homepage. The librettist's craft is one of the most consistently underestimated elements of operatic art, and these entries are intended in part to begin redressing that imbalance.


Complete Catalogue of Libretti by Gaetano Sertor

An Intermission