Unlike Cuzzoni, Faustina never returned to England. During the years 1728–1732, she was again much in evidence on the stages of major Italian cities, especially Venice. In 1730, she married the German composer,
Johann Adolf Hasse, and the following year the couple were summoned to the court of
Augustus the Strong at Dresden, where Faustina enjoyed a great success in her husband's opera
Cleofide. They were described by the famous librettist
Metastasio as "truly an exquisite couple". Hasse remained at the Saxon court for more than thirty years, and his wife sang in at least fifteen of the operas he composed between
Caio Fabricio in 1734 and
Ciro riconosciuto (1751). Faustina was, however, permitted to make many long trips to Italy, appearing again in Naples, Venice, Parma and elsewhere in operas by
Pergolesi,
Porpora and
Vinci, alongside those of her husband. Though she retired from the theatre in 1751, Faustina kept her salary and title of
virtuosa da camera to the Elector until the death of Augustus' successor,
Frederick Augustus II in 1763. At this point, she and her husband moved to Vienna, before removing finally to Venice in 1773.
Mozart gave her a visit in 1769. They had two daughters, both trained singers. On a visit in 1772,
Charles Burney described Faustina as "a short, brown, sensible, and lively old woman ... with good remains … of that beauty for which she was so much celebrated in her youth." Unlike her rival Cuzzoni, who died in poverty, Faustina had a happy and prosperous old age. She is buried together with his husband in the church of
San Marcuola. ==Bordoni as an artist==