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AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL OPERA REVIEW
Rossini, Il viaggio a Reims ossia L'Albergo del
Giglio d'Oro:
co-production with Grand Théâtre de Reims et al,
soloists from the Centre Français de Promotion
Lyrique, chorus and orchestra of the Opéra National
de Montpellier, Roberto Fores-Veses conductor.
Montpellier, France. 4.1.2009 (MM)
Kleopatra Papatheologou (front right) as the Marchesa
Melibea.
It is Rossini's last opera in the Italian language,
performed just a few weeks after the coronation of
Charles X, successor to Louis XVIII, as king of
France. The five years of Charles' reign, 1825 to
1830, are the very years Rossini produced his last
three tragedies, all in the French language, and his
last comedy, Le Comte Ory also in French.
Only months before abdicating Charles X rewarded
Rossini for his service to France by naming him to
the Légion d'honneur, not merely an honor as
it brought Rossini a comfortable pension for life
(but that is another story).
Il Viaggio is also called L'albergo
del giglio d'oro, the name of a hotel in
Plombières des bains (a spa town near the Swiss and
German borders) as this is where in 1825 a motley
group of international beautiful people found
themselves for some rest and relaxation before going
on the consecration of Charles X in Reims, about 150
kilometers to the west. Of course terrible tensions
erupt among the guests, and then what we now commonly
refer to as a tragedy occurred -- horses could not be
begged, borrowed or stolen to get these folks to
Reims in time for the coronation.
Improbable as all this is it is not as improbable as
the Il viaggio a Reims that found itself
on the stage of Montpellier's Comedie (opera house)
over the holidays, including one performance with
audiodescription (sign language). One cannot be
sure who actually produced the show, as fourteen
French opera houses and one Hungarian theater as well
have their names on it. The Centre Français de
Promotion Lyrique claims responsibility for the
conception -- the huge cast (fourteen principles)
chosen from among, one assumes, hundreds of young
artists from around the world who auditioned, a
competition for the mise en scene, and some
sort of competitive selection of conductor as well.
There will be some fifty performances over the next
two years of which the five Montpellier performances
marked the second installment, the first having
occurred this past October in Reims (where else?).
Presenting young artists on important stages
(Montpellier is an opéra national) is tricky,
and risky business for critics who may dare to
deprecate young artists.
It got off to a rocky start. The first of the young
singers on the stage seemed typical novices, good,
almost technically proficient voices in varying
degrees of stylistic mastery (physical as well as
vocal), all lacking force as stage personalities --
after all they are young singers. Plus the physical
production was not immediately attractive, the stage
business seemed forced, and naively pretentious, and
the conducting felt ponderous, leaving one yearning
for the verve of a good Pesaro performance [the
Rossini Festival takes places every summer in Pesaro,
Rossini's birthplace].
Things could not get much worse, so they had only to
get better. This happened about thirty minutes into
the performance. Specifically it was when two
finished singers found their way onto the stage. The
Russian Alexey Kudrya, a bona fide tenorino
playing a Russian general, and an Argentine baritone,
Armando Noguera, playing a Spanish admiral tore up
the stage vocally and dramatically in a complex
sextet that among other issues settled who was
courting the Polish widow.
This opera is Rossini at the apex of his operatic
craft, manipulating voices, musical lines and absurd
dramatic situations with ease and confidence. The
poetess Corina, as example, is plugged directly into
Parnassus nearly from the beginning of Il viaggio,
i.e. she improvises verse after verse of endless
heroic images to harp accompaniment. At the opera's
conclusion she is still improvising (always to solo
harp), now on a subject spontaneously proposed at the
celebratory dinner -- Charles X (quel surprise)!
Korean soprano Hye Myung Kang heaped absolute worldly
disinvolvement and other-worldly Rossini style onto
this mock poetry.
She also gracefully maintained her poetic purity in
confronting her suitors, first the young (very young
it seemed) Hungarian bass Istvan Kovacs who
delicately caricatured the absurdity and vocal
suavity of a very young English Lord (hardly the
ridiculous old guy Rossini had in mind). Then the
underhanded advances of the elegant young French
officer Belfiore were ardently argued by English
tenor James Elliott in a duet with Corinna that
deserved and would have earned a ten minute ovation
in Pesaro but received only scattered handclaps in
Montpellier. (Make that an 8 minute Pesaro ovation).
Gerardo Garciacano, a Mexican buffo, delivered Don
Profondo's summation of the rich gifts about to be
presented to Charles X in convincing Rossini vocal
style if not with Rossini physique or volume. But
this was just before Rossini dove into a finale in
which 14 solo voices converged to express despair
that, lacking horses, they would not be at the
coronation after all.
The Rossini genius had not and would not let us
down. By this time we had reconciled ourselves to
the young Spanish conductor, Roberto Fores-Veses who
had brought the pit to a rolling boil that seemed
just right to keep Rossini's cantada cooking
along à la Pesaraise.
While dinner preparations are made the Russian
general settled things with the Polish widow, sung by
Greek soprano Kleopatra Papatheologou, the Russian
tenorino delivering his high notes with the
coglioni that drive perfect Rossinians wild. At
dinner Rossini wove national anthems with national
hymns, the high point was a dizzy Italianate version
of God Save the Queen, the low point, boring
indeed as it was perhaps meant to be (it put everyone
on stage to sleep), was a French chanson à la
Gretry suavely delivered by Belfiore and the
Comtesse de Folleville, sung by English soprano
Elizabeth Bailey.
Nicola Berloffa, a young Italian who has assisted the
major Italian stage directors of the moment, staged
the production, though neither Davide Livermore's
flair, nor Daniele Abbado's polish seems to have
rubbed off on him. Still he kept the rhythm of the
action consistent with Rossini's formidable score,
adding just enough gags to decorate but not overwhelm
the musical storytelling. Finally his staging was a
success, not a small accomplishment for this
cumbersome pastiche, or for any Rossini comedy for
that matter.
The physical production designed by Guia Buzzi was
the only disappointment. The hard white color and
the hard lines of the set, with sliding doors and
guillotine drops and dropping side doors
seemed at odds with Rossinian colors and
sensibilities. The solid primary colors of the
costumes overwhelmed the presences of some of the
young singers, notably the fine voiced innkeeper
Madame Cortese sung by Russian soprano Oxana Shilova.
The basic scenic contraption, a revolving floor
platform mid-stage and many doors flying out and in
did in fact help keep up the musical energy of the
production.
Mme. Buzzi and Mr. Berloffa updated the sets and
costumes to the early twentieth century, making it
possible to have taken a train from Plombières les
Bains to Reims, and understandable that no horses
could be found for such a voyage -- Rossini's little
conceit be damned.
When this production comes to a town near you, do not
avoid it, as you might avoid most exercises for young
artists. It is far more than that. Plus it is
double cast, so to be sure you have not missed the
best singers you will need to see both casts (and
hopefully double your pleasure).
Michael Milenski
Picture © Marc Ginot,
Opéra National de Montpellier
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