Alceste was planned in a prodigal collaboration between the businessman John Rich, the famous scenographer Servandoni and the theater author Tobias George Smollett (1721–1771) (who wrote a now lost play with the same title (Alceste), based on the homonymous tragedy of Euripides) and possibly included song lyrics by Handel's frequent collaborator Thomas Morell (1703–1784),[1] which was rehearsed at Covent Garden Theatre but never performed.
Notes by the librettist Thomas Morell suggest that the play may have been canceled due to Handel's incidental music being considered too difficult for the cast.
However, it seems that John Rich may have simply decided that an adaptation of a Euripides drama would be a very risky adventure.
After all, that was a period when the tastes of the London public were as volatile as the explosives that destroyed Servandoni's "Temple of Peace" during the presentation of Handel's Music for "Fireworks" in Green Park.
[2] This incidental music includes an overture and songs for Acts 1 and 4, 19 movements in total.