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AND HEARD OPERA REVIEW
Second Opinion: Strauss, Ariadne auf Naxos
Soloists, Orchestra of the Royal Opera House. Conductor: Mark Elder.
Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London, 1.7.2008 (RRR)
Prima Donna/Ariadne – Deborah Voigt
Composer – Kristine Jepson
Music Master – Sir Thomas Allen
Dancing Master – Alan Oke
Wigmaker – Jacques Imbrailo
Lackey – Dean Robinson
Officer – Nikola Matišić
Tenor/Bacchus – Robert Dean Smith
Zerbinetta – Gillian Keith
Harlequin – Markus Werba
Scaramuccio – Ji-Min Park
Truffaldino – Jeremy White
Brighella – Haoyin Xue
Naiad – Anita Watson
Dryad – Sarah Castle
Echo – Anna Leese
Major Domo – Alexander Pereira
Production:
Christof Loy (director)
Andrew Sinclair (revival director)
Herbert Murauer (designs)
Jennifer Tipton (lighting)
Beate Vollack (choreographer)
The July 1st closing performance of the Royal Opera House’s
Ariadne auf Naxos, by Richard Strauss, was completely full. Word
must have spread. The singing was uniformly fine – no, better than
fine, in fact, superb – as was most of the acting.
This opera thrives on the juxtaposition of the sublime and the
ridiculous, the sacred and the profane, the high and the low,
self-sacrificing Eros and banal erotica. The humor comes from the
forced contrasts, as a group of vulgar entertainers are inflicted on
the performance of an opera seria depicting the subject of
Strauss’ title. It is a classic play within a play.
I will not recount the plot here, but simply say that the Prologue,
depicting the set up of the opera seria and the conflict
between the serious Composer and the entertainers was well-produced
even in its time transposition to an art deco era. Everyone was
good, especially mezzo Kristine Jepson as the Composer, Major Domo
Christoph Quest and Music Master Thomas Allen.
The second part, the actual Ariadne opera, was a triumph for Gillian
Keith as Zerbinetta, whose foxy acting was every bit as good as her
spectacular coloratura singing. She was humorous and fun to hear and
watch. The excellence of Naiad, Dryad, and Echo (respectively, Anita
Watson, Sarah Castle, and Anna Leese), who accompany Ariadne
throughout, was a measure of the high vocal standards of this
production. Their “Schläft sie?” trio was sublime. Echo was
particularly impressive, as was young Miss Watson, who obviously has
a big future ahead of her.
Strauss ends up apotheosizing what he mocks in the transcendent love
scene of self-surrender at the end. The sublime wins. Robert Dean
Smith as Bacchus was extremely impressive, and
Deborah Voigt
as Ariadne soared. (One only wished that she had not been directed
to keep a uniformly expressionless smile on her face no matter what
the text was saying.) This Ariadne, of course, coming full circle
for Voigt: It was this very production that she was famously sacked
from, for not fitting into that now
infamous little
black dress. One gastric bypass surgery and four
years later, the role suites her just as well, and the dress fits.
[A
short
promotional film with Voigt makes light of the
entire incident.] Conductor Mark Elder (correction: Sir Mark!) and
the Orchestra ably supported the proceedings and conveyed the sense
of transformation.
My only complaint involves the incoherence of some of the production
values in the second part. What happened to the art deco
time-setting that was so carefully put forth the Prologue? I am not
sure what possessed director Christoph Loy to caparison Zerbinetta’s
fellow actors in a kilt, military fatigues, and a black leather
motorcycle outfit. The visual humor from this was confusing and
cheapening. What was it supposed to call attention to? Itself? On
the other hand, Loy created a special moment when Ariadne lowers the
mirror at her dressing table to see Bacchus where once she looked
only at herself. Thankfully he also removed all the visual rubbish
from the closing scene and let the glorious music speak for itself.
The booklet for Ariadne was beautifully produced and substantively
informative, meeting the Royal Opera’s usual high standards in this
regard.
Robert R. Reilly
Mark Berry’s review for MusicWeb can be read
here.
The
American writer Robert R. Reilly is, among many other things,
the music critic for
CRISIS Magazine at InsideCatholic.com and the author of
Surprised by Beauty: A Listener's Guide to
the Recovery of Modern Music (Morley Books, 2002)
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