Les fêtes vénitiennes
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For the 1719 painting by Antoine Watteau of this title, see Fêtes Vénitiennes.
Les festes vénitiennes ("Venetian Festivities"), also spelled Les fêtes vénitiennes,[1] is an opéra-ballet by the French composer André Campra. It consists of a prologue (later sometimes omitted, abridged or replaced) and three entrées (four or five in subsequent versions). All versions of the libretto are by Antoine Danchet. It was first performed on 17 June 1710 by the Académie royale de musique in the Salle du Palais-Royal in Paris. According to the usage of the time, it was originally simply billed as a "ballet",[2] but it is one of the most important and successful instances of the new genre later classified by scholars as opéra-ballet, which had become popular in Paris around the end of the 17th century.[3]