• In the newly popularized genre of opera during the seventeenth century, the allegorical
    prologue was commonly used as a preface from about 1600 to 1670, with
    no fewer than 98 opera prologues composed throughout Venice during this period.
    These prologues, often sung by allegories and/or characters from myth, set the
    stage for the proceeding drama. In the prologue to Francesco Cavalli’s 1640 opera
    Gli Amori d’Apollo e di Dafne, its characters, the gods of sleep and dreams, set
    the stage for an opera that revolves around a dream. This article explores the act of
    wishing the audience peaceful and pleasant dreams by using oratory as a method
    that the allegorical figures use to sing the audience a lullaby. The purpose of this
    lullaby is to instigate the suspension of disbelief required to allow the story to
    gain the audience’s credibility. This article will show how Cavalli’s opera does so
    uniquely by spatially extending its effects outwards onto the audience rather than
    only onto the characters onstage.