ACT I: Seville, 1600s. At
night, outside the Commendatore's palace, Leporello
grumbles about his duties as servant to Don Giovanni, a
dissolute nobleman. Soon the masked Don appears, pursued
by Donna Anna, the Commendatore's daughter, whom he has
tried to seduce. When the Commendatore himself answers
Anna's cries, he is killed in a duel by Giovanni, who
escapes. Anna now returns with her fiance, Don Ottavio.
Finding her father dead, she makes Ottavio swear
vengeance on the assassin.
At dawn, Giovanni flirts with a high-strung traveler
outside a tavern. She turns out to be Donna Elvira, a
woman he once seduced in Burgos, who is on his trail.
Giovanni escapes while Leporello distracts Elvira by
reciting his master's long catalog of conquests. Peasants
arrive, celebrating the nuptials of their friends Zerlina
and Masetto; when Giovanni joins in, he pursues the
bride, angering the groom, who is removed by Leporello.
Alone with Zerlina, the Don applies his charm, but Elvira
interrupts and protectively whisks the girl away. When
Elvira returns to denounce him as a seducer, Giovanni is
stymied further while greeting Anna, now in mourning, and
Ottavio. Declaring Elvira mad, he leads her off. Anna,
having recognized his voice, realizes Giovanni was her
attacker.
Dressing for the wedding feast he has planned for the
peasants, Giovanni exuberantly downs champagne.
Outside the palace, Zerlina begs Masetto to forgive her
apparent infidelity. Masetto hides when the Don appears,
emerging from the shadows as Giovanni corners Zerlina.
The three enter the palace together. Elvira, Anna and
Ottavio arrive in dominoes and masks and are invited to
the feast by Leporello.
During the festivities, Leporello entices Masetto into
the dance as Giovanni draws Zerlina out of the room. When
the girl's cries for help put him on the spot, Giovanni
tries to blame Leporello. But no one is convinced;
Elvira, Anna and Ottavio unmask and confront Giovanni,
who barely escapes Ottavio's drawn sword.
ACT II: Under Elvira's
balcony, Leporello exchanges cloaks with Giovanni to woo
the lady in his master's stead. Leporello leads Elvira
off, leaving the Don free to serenade Elvira's maid. When
Masetto passes with a band of armed peasants bent on
punishing Giovanni, the disguised rake gives them false
directions, then beats up Masetto. Zerlina arrives and
tenderly consoles her betrothed.
In a passageway, Elvira and Leporello are surprised by
Anna, Ottavio, Zerlina and Masetto, who, mistaking
servant for master, threaten Leporello. Frightened, he
unmasks and escapes. When Anna departs, Ottavio affirms
his confidence in their love. Elvira, frustrated at her
second betrayal by the Don, voices her rage.
Leporello catches up with his master in a cemetery, where
a voice warns Giovanni of his doom. This is the statue of
the Commendatore, which the Don proposes Leporello invite
to dinner. When the servant reluctantly stammers an
invitation, the statue accepts.
In her home, Anna, still in mourning, puts off Ottavio's
offer of marriage until her father is avenged.
Leporello is serving Giovanni's dinner when Elvira rushes
in, begging the Don, whom she still loves, to reform. But
he waves her out contemptuously. At the door, her screams
announce the Commendatore's statue. Giovanni boldly
refuses warnings to repent, even in the face of death.
Flames engulf his house, and the sinner is dragged to
hell.
Among the castle ruins, the others plan their future and
recite the moral: such is the fate of a wrongdoer.