, circa 1735, by artist
Canaletto Da Ponte moved to
Gorizia (Görz), then part of Austria, where he lived as a writer, attaching himself to the leading noblemen and cultural patrons of the city. In 1781 he believed (falsely) that he had an invitation from his friend
Caterino Mazzolà, the poet of the
Saxon court, to take up a post at
Dresden, only to be disabused when he arrived there. Mazzolà however offered him work at the theatre translating libretti and recommended that he seek to develop writing skills. He also gave him a letter of introduction to the composer
Antonio Salieri. In 1784, he met his friend
Casanova once again in Vienna, and with his newly made fortune, financed him and received his counsels. With the help of Salieri, Da Ponte applied for and obtained the post of librettist to the Italian Theatre in Vienna. Here he also found a patron in the banker Raimund Wetzlar von Plankenstern, benefactor of
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart whom he would meet in 1783. As court poet and librettist in Vienna, he collaborated with Mozart, Salieri and
Vicente Martín y Soler. 's portrait. Da Ponte wrote numbers of his libretti, including 1786 comedy opera
The Marriage of Figaro. Da Ponte wrote the libretti for Mozart's most popular Italian operas,
The Marriage of Figaro (1786),
Don Giovanni (1787), and
Così fan tutte (1790), and Soler's
Una cosa rara, as well as the text on which the cantata
Per la ricuperata salute di Ofelia (collaboratively composed in 1785 by Salieri, Mozart and Cornetti) is based. All of Da Ponte's works were adaptations of pre-existing plots, as was common among librettists of the time, with the exceptions of ''
L'arbore di Diana with Soler, and Così fan tutte'', which he began with Salieri, but completed with Mozart. However the quality of his elaboration gave them new life. In the case of
Figaro, Da Ponte included a preface to the libretto that hints at his technique and objectives in libretto writing, as well as his close working with the composer: I have not made a translation [of
Beaumarchais], but rather an imitation, or let us say an extract. ... I was compelled to reduce the sixteen original characters to eleven, two of which can be played by a single actor and to omit, in addition to one whole act, many effective scenes. ... In spite, however, of all the zeal and care on the part of both the composer and myself to be brief, the opera will not be one of the shortest. ... Our excuse will be the variety of development of this drama, ... to paint faithfully and in full colour the divers passions that are aroused, and ... to offer a new type of spectacle. ... 's portrait. Casanova was placed under arrest and is featured in Da Ponte's memoirs. Only one address of Da Ponte's during his stay in Vienna is known: in 1788 he lived in the house Heidenschuß 316 (today the street area between Freyung and Hof), which belonged to the Viennese archbishop. There he rented a three-room apartment for 200 Gulden. With the death of Austrian
Emperor Joseph II, brother of
Marie-Antoinette, in 1790, Da Ponte lost his patron and position as court theater poet. He was formally dismissed from the Imperial Service in 1791, due to intrigues, receiving no support from the new Emperor,
Leopold. At this time, he was still banished from Venice (until the end of 1794), so he would travel elsewhere. In Trieste he met Nancy Grahl, the English daughter of a Jewish chemist (whom he would never marry but with whom he eventually would have four children). In August 1792, he set off for Paris via Prague and Dresden armed with a letter of recommendation to
Queen Marie Antoinette that her brother, the late Emperor Joseph II, had given Da Ponte before his death. On the road to Paris, on learning about the worsening political situation in France and the arrest of the king and queen, he decided to head for London instead, accompanied by his companion Grahl and their then two children. During this time, he met for the last time
Casanova in Vienna, looking for his old friend to settle a debt but after seeing Casanova's poor situation, he decided to not recall the debt. Casanova still accompanied him on his way to Dresden while he was serving as Secretary to
Count Waldstein, the patron of
Ludwig van Beethoven, and advised him to not go to Paris but London. Da Ponte would later comment in his memoirs on Casanova's arrest at the
Piombi prison in the
Doge's Palace in Venice. After a precarious start in England, exercising a number of jobs including that of grocer and Italian teacher, he became librettist at the King's Theatre, London, in 1803. He remained based in London, undertaking various theatrical and publishing activities until 1805, when debt and bankruptcy caused him to flee to the United States with Grahl and their children. ==American career (1805-1838)==