Showing posts with label Royal Opera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Royal Opera. Show all posts

Monday, 1 September 2014

Royal Opera: Ariadne auf Naxos

[From OPERA, September 2014, pp. 1149-50]

Ariadne auf Naxos
Royal Opera at Covent Garden, June 25
With this revival of Christof Loy’s 2002 Ariadne auf Naxos—the third of three of the Hofmannsthal operas presented in the 2013-14 season—the Royal Opera’s modest celebration of the Strauss year came to a conclusion. The performances also marked something of a celebration for Antonio Pappano, returning to the first production he conducted as the Royal Opera’s music director, not long after having announced the extension of his contract at Covent Garden. 

It remains a smart show, and Loy himself was back to direct this fourth revival, keeping much of the comedy sharp. Yet I wonder how much of a hand he had in directing Karita Mattila, who was singing Ariadne for the first time, but in large part, one felt, simply playing herself. The result was a fascinating performance from the Finnish diva, whose haughtiness in the Prologue was deliciously funny, but who in the Opera never quite shed the Prima Donna character, creating an unusual continuity between the evening’s two parts. But while there was a compelling intensity and charisma, of course, there was little sense of vulnerability and insecurity, or, as a result, of the character’s all-important transformation. Vocally, too, there were rough edges at the top and bottom, and signs of wear and tear could occasionally be heard all through the range. Artistic generosity is what Mattila’s Ariadne offers, not cool serenity and purity of line.

She was well supported by the rest of the cast, not least by a Bacchus from Roberto Saccà whose slight dryness of tone was more than compensated for by rare elegance and stamina. Jane Archibald was impressively on top of Zerbinetta’s notes, too, rattling through ‘Grossmächtige Prinzessin’ with considerable virtuosity, even if the voice might ideally have had a little extra sparkle and ping. Ruxandra Donose was impassioned and impulsive as the composer should be, and sang with spirit and commitment, but her mezzo is maybe a touch small for the role in this house. Sofia Fomina (no mean Zerbinetta herself, by all accounts), Karen Cargill and Kiandra Howarth made an unusually fine trio as Naiad, Dryad and Echo; Ed Lyon and Thomas Allen were well contrasted as a mischievous, mincing Dancing Master and pragmatic, mellow Music Master. Markus Werba’s Harlekin lacked charm, but Christoph Quest brought an authentically Austrian superciliousness to the Major Domo. 


In the pit, Pappano coaxed extremely fine playing from the reduced Royal Opera orchestra, and conducted with pleasing flexibility, keeping the to-ing and fro-ing of the Prologue, in particular, light on its feet. On the first night, though, not all the transitions between the comic and serious were as seamlessly handled as they might have been, and I missed some of the magic in the final pages. One further gripe: the surtitles—more simplistic précis than translation—felt a touch insulting to the intelligence of both the librettist and the audience.

Tuesday, 1 April 2014

Royal Opera: Don Giovanni

From OPERA, April 2014, pp. 469-472

Don Giovanni
Royal Opera at Covent Garden, February 3
A year ago, at the press announcement of the Royal Opera’s 2013-14 season, Kasper Holten admitted that Don Giovanni was a directors’ graveyard. If that’s the case, then there must surely be a particularly insalubrious section in that graveyard—and perhaps an associated corner in purgatory—reserved for those who fail to give Don Giovanni’s own comeuppance the dramatic power it is primed to unleash. However ugly and unimaginative the much-derided Francesca Zambello production that Holten’s replaced was, I found myself strangely missing its climax—vulgar pyrotechnics, wicker pointy finger and all. 

In Holten’s staging, very loosely updated to the early 19th century, we ended up
with Mariusz Kwiecień’s Giovanni standing downstage, struggling with his own demons, as Alexander Tsymbalyuk’s Commendatore stood above—too far above, it goes without saying, to extend an icy hand—in the middle of Es Devlin’s set. That single two-floor set—an intricate, ingenious concoction of cream-coloured panels and doors and staircases leading nowhere—had solidified and finally stopped spinning; Luke Halls’s hyperactive projections eventually melted away, too. Don Giovanni’s fantasies were exposed as exactly that; we no longer believe in a fire-and-brimstone hell, Holten explained in interviews, failing singularly to appreciate the distinction between theology and theatre, so Don Giovanni’s personal hell was solitude and abandonment. His final punishment was one of dissolution and disillusion. The world of his imagination had been littered with the scribbled names
of his 2065 conquests (Holten seems to have been obsessed with the exact figure in a strangely literal-minded way) and populated with cobwebby phantoms, which occasionally materialized, along with the ever-present Commendatore, in the corridors of his mind. But it all disappeared to nothing. 

On paper, like much of this production, this might initially look promising, but this final gambit backfired, fully exposing the essential emptiness of Holten’s own ideas, from which the box-of-tricks set and flashy video could only partly distract. Holten’s controversial liberty with the text of the score—he started the finale at the presto fugato passage, ‘Questo è il fin di chi fa mal’, citing the spurious precedent of the first Vienna production—troubled me less per se than the fact that it reflected his attitude to the spirit of the piece. There was certainly no sense at all of it as opera buffa (the term the Royal Opera’s programme plumped for), or even of it fulfilling the potential of its more forgiving alternative designation as dramma giocoso. Holten robbed it of drama and joy, sure, but, worse than that, he created a world in which most of the characters were superfluous; the Commendatore and his climactic final appearance, for example, became an encumbrance that was simply glossed over. But, for all that, Holten’s interpretation relied more on omission than commission: the result on stage was dreary, and, despite all the eager justifications and explanations, ultimately also bespoke a timidity and lack of conviction, not to mention an unwillingness to listen to the music. 

A further problem was that the projections quickly palled—and they will surely date badly with each revival. The staging of the Champagne Aria, clearly envisaged as a mind-bending high point, with Giovanni standing in the middle of the set surrounded by a swirling vortex, looked like a man drowning in a screensaver. The great Act 2 sextet, with the characters pretending to walk through separate projected corridors, seemed like an unsubtle way of underlining an individuality largely denied the characters elsewhere. With so much busyness, meanwhile, the effect of the ball scene, with elaborate choreography by Holten’s partner, Signe Fabricius, felt like a technical achievement rather than a dramatic one. A particular low point came in ‘Mi tradì’: Véronique Gens was positioned stage right under a helpfully scrawled ‘Elvira’ as clouds and a flapping flock of birds grew out of the top right corner of the set—it added nothing, but suggested that Holten felt that too much sitting around singing was going to be boring. 

Gens herself seemed serenely unaffected by all this, and her performance retained considerable nobility even if the voice had its moments of dryness. Both she and Malin Byström’s Donna Anna looked fabulous in Anja Vang Kragh’s costumes—dramatic inky blotches and spatters were far more striking on these simple period frocks than in the projections—and the Swedish soprano’s creamy timbre contrasted well with Gens’s slightly wirier tone, even if she was stretched at the extremes. Elizabeth Watts’s spunky, flirty Zerlina added a much needed buffo element into a po-faced evening, her palpable desire to be seduced reflecting her keenness to get ahead in the world—the singing was delightfully bright and fresh, too. 

Dawid Kimberg was a solid Masetto and communicated the character’s simplicity and frustrations well. Antonio Poli provided a Don Ottavio of regulation stiff dullness but showed that an appealing, lyrical voice is not enough in Mozart: the young Italian’s technique was insufficient for the attempted piano second verse of ‘Dalla sua pace’, and ‘Il mio tesoro’ was unrefined. Alex Esposito’s Leporello is familiar from the last outing of the Zambello production. Here, in rough wool suit and hat, he gave a perfectly respectable repeat performance. The charm wore thin, though, and he tended towards over-emphasis in striving too hard for comic effect once the audience laughter had dried up—which it did rather quickly. To have Tsymbalyuk, Munich’s recent Boris Godunov, as the Commendatore was a piece of luxury casting, and he didn’t disappoint vocally, even if the role, dramatically speaking, was rendered redundant. 

Holten positions Don Giovanni himself as a bored, worn-out seducer, closer perhaps to Nikolaus Lenau’s character (the basis for Strauss’s tone poem) than to Mozart and Da Ponte’s—and certainly a long way from his compatriot Kierkegaard’s interpretation of him as an irresistible life force. It put Kwiecień in a difficult position, though, and his performance fell back on well-practised disillusioned-barihunk schtick, a sort of weary aggressiveness (the recitative exchanges with Leporello were often shouty and charmless) that was both unsympathetic and, perhaps more importantly, inconsistently engaging. 

It might be explained as reverse psychology of sorts that all the opera’s women should want to succumb all the more keenly to this Don Giovanni’s lack of charm and effort, and Holten had them as both complicit in their own seduction and quick—often unavoidably so, given Mozart’s score—to cry foul. But this had the effect of reducing them to ciphers. In terms of pure singing, however, Kwiecień managed a fair bit of seductiveness, not least in a relaxed, honeyed account of the Serenade, during which Elvira’s maid (Josephine Arden) predictably got her kit off.


There was a solid quality to the orchestral playing, including some fine wind contributions. Nicola Luisotti’s account of the score was sensibly paced and musical but often felt rather unimaginative and stiff. We had the dubious bonus of both a sober harpsichord continuo (Paul Wingfield), and the conductor’s own heavy-handed ‘comic’ touches on the fortepiano, which only emphasized how humourless the whole show was. A decade down the line, I imagine we’ll be no less fed up with Holten’s Don Giovanni than we were with Zambello’s.