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Giacomo PUCCINI (1858-1924)
Madama Butterfly - Opera in two acts (1904)
Madama Butterfly - Raffaella Angeletti (soprano); Pinkerton - Massimiliano Pisapia (tenor); Suzuki - Annunziata Vestri (mezzo); Sharpless - Claudio Sgura (baritone); Goro - Thomas Morris (tenor); Il Bonze - Enrico Iori (bass); Kate Pinkerton - Nino Batatunashvili (soprano)
Fondazione Orchestra Regionale Delle Marche/Daniele Callegari
rec. live, Arena Sferisterio, Macerata, Italy, 2009
Stage Director, Sets and Costumes: Pier Luigi Pizzi
Video Director: Tiziano Mancini
Picture Format: 16:9, HD 1080P, Sound formats: BD: DTS-HD MA 5.1, PCM Stereo
Subtitles: Italian (original language), English, German, French, Spanish, Chinese, Korean
Booklet notes in English, German, French
UNITEL/C MAJOR 706304
[137:00]
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Opera at Macerata, which is located between the rivers Potenza
and Chienti in Italy’s Marche region, has several significant
advantages over other summer opera festivals in that country.
Unlike other venues, such as Torre del Lago, Bergamo
and Pesaro, its activities are not restricted to presenting
the operas of a composer who lived there, or was born nearby.
It sports two venues: the lovely Teatro Lauro Rossi, as it happens
named after a composer born in the town and whose operatic oeuvre
is becoming more recognised and the open air Sferisterio Arena.
The mighty curved Arena Sferisterio was built in 1829 and seats
over three thousand. The Arena was once the venue for a handball
game called pallone al bracciale involving ricochets
off its long wall, a feature that has presented some directors
with too great a challenge. The year of this performance, 2009,
was the forty-fifth season of operas in Macerata.
In recent years the Macerata season has had its difficulties.
Following the appointment of the vastly experienced Pier Luigi
Pizzi as its director, it has returned to past glories. He sees
the vast space of the stage area as a challenge and varies its
use to suit the work being presented. In Donizetti’s Maria
Stuarda he used the long wall to advantage. In this Madama
Butterfly, a more intimate opera, he focuses on the central
stage for the main action, using only the width to show the
arrival of individuals or the passing of processions.
The set is focused on a small traditional Japanese home with
its sliding windows allowing for rapid change of scene and space.
In front of the house is an area of raised decking and there
are long walkway approaches from each side. In other words it
is a traditional set in the best meaning of the words, completely
unlike that from Torre del lago in its fiftieth anniversary
year when I could not place the venue and Butterfly had to live
in the open air. Pizzi not only directs, but is responsible
for the sets and traditional costumes to produce a fully integrated
whole. In his composition Puccini was keen to convey Japanese
culture via his music and went to a great deal of trouble to
hear and integrate ethnic tunes into his creation. Daniele Callegari
on the rostrum of the orchestra, who are placed in front of
the stage and lower down, does full justice to the Japanese
motifs as well as the lyrical and dramatic moments.
Despite taking care to represent the Japanese ambience, Puccini
seemed not to take on board the age of Butterfly in David Belasco’s
play that he had seen in London when visiting for the premiere
of his Tosca in that city in 1900. The libretto, the
third of a great trio created for him by Giuseppe Giacosa and
Luigi Illica, clearly states Butterfly’s age at fifteen. Realistically,
no light-toned soprano can sing the music he wrote for the part
that needs a strong lyric soprano moving towards a spinto-sized
voice; such voices rarely come associated with young faces and
figures. In the title role of this production Raffaella Angeletti
sings with bright forward lyric tone and with all the necessary
heft to ride the dense orchestral colour that Puccini demands.
Medium to tall and angular, her facial features are a little
too old - for which she compensates by her convincing acting
and expressive singing. Her un bel di, vedramo (CH.17)
is well phrased and articulated whilst she brings a breadth
of tonal colour to the dramatic last scene as Butterfly realises
that Pinkerton has married and has come, with his wife, to take
their child to a better life in America. The
caddish Pinkerton of Massimiliano Pisapia benefits considerably
by his smart white high-collared navy uniform. It disguises
his rather plump figure and unappealing features. His tenor
is strong, but without much grace of phrasing. The director
highlights Pinkerton’s true character from the beginning when
he has him pass dollar bills to all and sundry to facilitate
the supposed marriage to Butterfly. This Pinkerton has few,
if any, redeeming moral standards; he knows what he is doing
and intends to do with his child bride, on the wedding night
and in the future. Sharpless, the American Consul and the fall
guy who has to try clear up the mess of the relationship is
sung by Claudio Segura with strong expressive tone. His tall
and physically imposing physique is a great benefit to his well
thought out and realised characterisation. Annunziata Vestri's
acting as Suzuki is a little understated at first, but comes
into her own as she faces her duties in the final scene and
particularly in the ultimate harrowing dénouement.
All the minor roles play a full and involved part in the realisation
of Pier Luigi Pizzi’s vision of this work with the Goro of Thomas
Morris scurrying about and Enrico Iori an imposing Bonze. The
chorus and orchestra under Daniele Callegari are a tower of
strength, whilst the video director is sensitive in his choice
of angles whilst using close-ups with circumspection. The sets,
production and video direction disguise the challenges posed
by the venue and which are superbly overcome in this naturalistic
production.
The singing and orchestral sound is clear and well balanced
with the audience applause muted by their distance from the
stage action in this open-air performance. The picture definition
is first class.
Robert J Farr
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