


Arturo Toscanini conducted on that night, as "La bohème" went on to become an integral part of the opera repertory, both in Italy and worldwide. “La bohème” premiered at the “Teatro Regio” in Turin on the 1st of February, 1896.

It defends and discusses the amalgamation of the characters Mimì and Francine into “Mimì,” one of the main protagonists of the opera. The officially published libretto also contains a note offering a summary of the adaptation. Much of Act 1 and Act 4 are retained from the novel, while prime actions in Act 2 and 3 are formulated by the librettists’. Puccini stood firm and went on with his own version. While composing the opera, he even had a brief dispute with Leoncavallo, a contemporary music composer regarding the libretto. The original source, Murger’s novel, also narrated the life of young Parisian bohemians, which Puccini retains throughout. The opera is also coming from a book “Scènes de la vie de bohème,” or “Scenes from Bohemian Life” by Henri Murger. It is accompanied by an Italian libretto, which is written by Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica. The opera was crafted in 4 acts by Giacomo Puccini between the period of 1893 to 1895. “La bohème” portrays a 19th-century love story of a poor French couple, a poet, and a seamstress.
