The opera premiered at the
Teatro Nuovo in Naples on 24 August 1836. The initial performance was not well-received due to the vocal decline of
Giuseppe Fioravanti, the performer of the baritone role. However, the revision prepared by Donizetti for subsequent performances was a marked success. This success prompted the composer to expand the opera from one act to two acts. The two-act version of
Betly was first presented on 29 September 1837 at the
Teatro del Fondo, Naples.
Palermo in 1837,
Florence in 1838,
Bologna in 1845,
Venice in 1851, and
Messina in 1859. The opera was also performed in
Lisbon in 1837, in
Madrid in 1842, and in
Barcelona in 1844. It was transformed into a Spanish
zarzuela,
Propósito de mujer, by Emilio Álvarez in 1864 and presented the same year in Madrid. The first American performance of the complete opera took place on 25 October 1861 in
Philadelphia, fragments of the opera were heard in concerts already in 1840s. One notable performance in London was on 9 January 1838, with
Frederick Lablache singing the baritone role; the English adaptation of
Betly was presented there for the first time in 1841. The French adaptation, prepared by
Hippolyte-Julien-Joseph Lucas after the death of the composer, with additional music written by Adolphe Adam, premiered in Paris in 1853, The opera was staged sporadically in the 20th and 21st centuries: in
Bergamo in 1948, 1993, and 2014; in
Fermo in 1988; in
Lugo in 1990; in
Lugano in 1933; and 1995; and in Berlin (the German premiere) in 2015 in a semi-staged performance by
Berliner Operngruppe. In "a double-bill of the same opera by different composers",
Le Chalet by Adam was performed before
Betly on the same evening at the Stadttheater
Solothurn in October 2023 during the 2023-24 season. == Roles ==