27.11.11

The Latest Opera from Reviewer's at The Arts Desk

By Steve Alexander


From a quirky festival on the Irish coast to a group of Guidhall students to the ENO, the experts at The Arts Desk have been taking a look at the latest opera.

Despite boasting several strong singers, the traditional staging of the English National Opera's production of Tchaikovsky's grand opera 'Eugene Onegin' was rather inept at communicating the truth of Pushkin's great verse novel. The video and image team could not amply distract from the long pauses between scenes that hampered the dramatic action.

Otto Nicolai's 19th century comic opera, 'Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor', provided some good roles for student singers. It was demonstrated by the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in their current production. There were plenty of positives here as all the parts were well sung, Clive Timms's conducting was cheery and Tom Rogers's costumes were fun.

The overture and the moonlight chorus were the highlights musically although there were some negatives. There was a distinct lack of laughter in the audience and director Harry Fehr's characterisation was baggy.

Alexandra Coghlan was full of praise for the Wexford Festival Opera's 60th anniversary season. This celebrated festival concentrates on neglected, often unheard-of operas, rather than dealing in classics you might expect to find at the royal opera. Housed in the unassuming but state-of-the-art Wexford Opera House, and delivering three full-scale operas a year, it's a jewel of a festival.

With Ambroise Thomas's 'bel canto' piece 'La cour de Climne' coming across as a well-balanced confection with a pleasing feminist plot, marital love was the theme this year. Providing the most interesting but also the most inconsistent show was Roman Statkowski's family tragedy Maria. Despite its fragile plot, one of Donizetti's lesser-known operas, Gianni di Parigi, was given as much comic energy as possible.




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