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The Independent, 19 November 2010 |
Edward Seckerson |
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Ciléa: Adriana Lecouvreur, Royal Opera House, 18 November 2010 |
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Adriana sensitively exhumed
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Kaufmann and Gheorghiu were not the only star attractions of this early and
clearly expensive Christmas gift from the Royal Opera. Cilea’s Frenchified
melodrama hasn’t been seen in the house since 1906 and the dusty wing space
of Charles Edwards’ extraordinary set looked like it might actually have
been excavated from the theatre as it once was at the turn of the last
century. Adriana Lecouvreur is about actors – and one shining star in
particular – and David McVicar and his wonderful design team have given us a
fully operational and minutely detailed 18th century theatre within a
high-tec 21st century shell: a wondrous wooden structure festooned with
ropes and pulleys and flying cloths and multiple trap doors which we can
view from every perspective as it turns through 180 degrees.
Adriana
speaks of her theatre as “the altar of illusion” and the trick here – an
obvious one but no less effective for it – is that the world beyond this
omnipresent stage is merely an extension of it and that all the characters
enacting this steamy tale of rivalry and status are just as incredible
offstage as they are on. At one point they actually become an extension of
us the audience as McVicar enjoys his now familiar signature ballet – an
ingenious piece of musical dramaturgy during which the intrigue in the
glitzy audience (them not us) completely upstages and disrupts the
twinkle-toeing drama it is mirroring onstage.
Mark Elder attends
Cilea’s fragrant and gilded score with great finesse and expensive tone
while the star turns on both stages do not disappoint. Alessandro Corbelli
is that rare thing: a veteran superstar. He’s small and unassuming but will
steal every scene given half the chance. Angela Gheorghiu has one of the
finest natural instruments in the world and if only she would risk exploring
the dramatic possibilities beyond her stock operatic “emoting” she could
still be great. As it is, she sounded wonderful. And claws were bared and
fur flew in the confrontations with her rival, the Princesse de Bouillon –
played with catty relish by Michaela Schuster.
But the
evening’s rarest pleasure was in hearing Jonas Kaufmann do what few of
today’s tenors can do – finesse the sound and produce wonderful colour mixes
around the passaggio to produce full bodied pianissimi, not some weedy
falsetto which is so often masquerades as an excuse for mezza voce. He has
it all: he looks dashing, he sounds dashing, and his abundant musicality
puts him into an entirely “other” league.
His extraordinary
diminuendo from the cry of “Morte!” at Adriana’s passing was one such
instance. How many tenors today would even attempt it? And what an
inspired coup McVicar sprung here as the motley acting troupe slowly
processed to the edge of “their” stage to remove their hats and gently bow
to their departed heroine. That’s what theatre’s about – and this was in
effect a double-dose.
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Photo: ROH, Catherine Ashmore |
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