Verdi's initial idea for a new opera – for which he had a contract going back over several years – was rejected by the Teatro San Carlo in Naples. He attempted to negotiate his way out of this obligation and, when that failed, Cammarano came up with the idea of adapting the Schiller play, with which Verdi was familiar. The process was set in motion, with Verdi still living and working on initial ideas from Paris, where he had been living for almost two years before moving back to his home town of Busseto in the summer of 1849. It was from there that he wrote the music and traveled to Naples for rehearsals. The first performance was given on 8 December 1849.

Librettist Salvadore Cammarano (based on the play Kabale und Liebe (Intrigue and Love) by the German dramatist Friedrich von Schiller)
Date of composition 1849
Premiered 1849, December 8th in Naples, Metropolitan City of Naples, Italy
First published 1849
Type Opera
Spoken language Italian
Instruments Orchestra
Chorus/Choir
Voice (Baritone) - Miller, a retired soldier
Voice (Soprano) - Luisa, his daughter
Voice (Bass) - Count Walter
Voice (Tenor) - Rodolfo, Count Walter's son
Voice (Contralto) - Federica, Duchess of Ostheim, Walter's niece
Voice (Bass) - Wurm, Walter's steward
Voice (Mezzo-Soprano) - Laura, a village girl
Voice (Tenor) - A peasant
Autotranslations beta Giuseppe Verdi: Luisa Miller
Giuseppe Verdi: Luisa Miller
Giuseppe Verdi: Luisa Miller