Event Comment: A Gr
and Serious Opera; 
the music by 
Sacchini, with additions 
and alterations [by 
Andreozzi and Mazzinghi].  Under 
the direction of Mazzinghi.  
The dresses executed from original drawings of 
Bartolozzi and Tresham, by 
Lupino.  With dances analogous to 
the Opera.  
The Doors to be opened at 6:30.  To begin at 7:30 [same throughout season].  Pit 10s. 6d. Gallery 5s.  
There are a number of green boxes which may be taken on application to 
Lee, at 
the Theatre; 
the entrance to which, 
and to 
the Gallery, will be in 
Oxford-street.  Subscriptions will be received by Messrs 
Wright and Co., 
Henrietta-street, 
Covent-garden (only) where tickets are delivering daily; 
and such Ladies as have not compleated 
their subscriptions to 
their boxes are intreated to send 
their names to 
the office, in order to have 
the tickets prepared, as no person can be admitted without producing a ticket.  
The Nobility 
and Gentry are intreated to give particular orders to 
their coachmen to set down 
and take up with 
their horses' heads towards 
Hyde-park.  
The Doors in 
Blenheim-mews for chairs only.  By Comm
and of 
His Majesty no person can be admitted behind 
the scenes during 
the performance.  "We fear that [
the Pantheon as converted into a 
theatre] will gratify only 
the eye.  It must undergo still more changes before 
the ear will be satisfied.  Whe
ther it is that 
the dome is too high 
and disproportioned to 
the breadth, or that 
the orchestra is sunk too low beneath 
the audience we cannot tell, but 
the sound does not swell 
and spread in equal volume; 
and it is 
the most inaudible in 
the best parts of 
the Theatre: 
the Pit 
and the first 
and second tier of Boxes hear very indistincly...We found this to be 
the complaint of every judge of music in 
the place" (
Morning Chronicle, 18 Feb.).  "
The Pan
theon has opened, 
and is small, 
they say, but 
pretty and simple; all 
the rest ill-conducted, 
and from 
the singers to 
the scene-shifters imperfect; 
the dances long 
and bad, 
and the whole performance so dilatory 
and tedious, that it lasted from eight to half an hour past twelve" (
Walpole [18 Feb. 1791], XIV, 377) [
and see 19 Feb.]