The Teatro Regio (Royal Theatre) was inaugurated on 26 December 1740 with
Francesco Feo's
Arsace. It was a sumptuously built facility, seating 1,500 and with 139 boxes located on five tiers plus a gallery. However, the theatre was closed on royal order in 1792 and it became a warehouse. With the French occupation of Turin during the
Napoleonic War the theatre was renamed the
Teatro Nazionale and finally, after
Napoleon's ascent to Emperor, renamed again as the
Teatro Imperiale. Napoleon's fall in 1814 saw the theatre returned to its original name, the
Regio. In the following years the opera house went through several periods of financial crisis and it was taken over by the city in 1870. Other theatres were built and presented seasons of opera in Turin. Among them was the restored
Teatro Carignano in 1824. It too was acquired by the municipality in 1932 and, after the destruction by fire of the Teatro Regio in 1936, the Carignano was to serve as the main venue for opera in the city until the Regio reopened in 1973. Even before it burnt down, discussions about whether to rebuild the Regio or create a brand new theatre preoccupied Turin in the early twentieth century. Two plans were presented and the one selected expanded the
seating capacity to 2,415 by removing the fourth and fifth levels of boxes and creating a huge amphitheatre. Work was completed in 1905 but the theatre closed during the
First World War and re-opened in 1919. Until February 1936, seasons of opera were presented until fire destroyed all but the facade of the Teatro Regio. It remained closed for thirty-seven years.
Arturo Toscanini was the conductor of the Turin Opera from 1895 to 1898, during which time several productions of the works of
Wagner were given Italian premieres. ==Rebuilt Teatro Regio after 1973==