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Jacques OFFENBACH
(1819 - 1880)
La belle Hélène [123:00]
Dame Felicity Lott - Helen, Queen of Sparta; Yann Beuron - Paris,
son of King Priam, King of Troy; Michel Sénéchal -
Menelaus, King of Sparta; Laurent Naouri - Agamemnon, King of Argos;
François Le Roux - Calchas, High Priest of Jupiter; Marie-Ange
Todorovitch - Orestes, son of Agamemnon; Eric Huchet - Achilles,
King of Phthiotis; Alain Gabriel - Ajax I, King of Salamis; Laurent
Alvaro - Ajax II, King of Locris; Hjördis Thébault -
Bacchis, Helen’s attendant; Stéphanie d’Oustrac
- Leoena, a courtesan; Magali Léger - Parthoenis, a courtesan;
José Canales - Philocome, Calchas’s attendant;
Les Musiciens du Louvre, Grenoble and Chorus of the Musiciens du
Louvre/Marc Minkowski
Costumes and Stage Direction: Laurent Pelly
Set Design: Chantal Thomas
Lighting Design: Joël Adam
Choreography: Laura Scozzi
rec. live, Théàtre Musical de Paris, Chatelet, 2000
Orphée aux enfers [127:00]
Natalie Dessay - Eurydice; Yann Beuron - Orphée; Jean-Paul
Fouchecourt - Aristée - Pluton; Laurent Naouri - Jupiter;
Martine Olmeda - L’Opinion Publique; Steven Cole - John Styx;
Cassandre Berthon - Cupidon; Etienne Lescroart - Mercure; Virgine
Pochon - Diane; Lydie Pruvot - Junon; Maryline Fallot - Venus; Alketa
Cela - Minerve; Sharman Plesner - Violiniste;
Orchestra and Chorus of the Opéra National de Lyon, Grenoble
Chamber orchestra, Ballet of the Grand-Théatre de Genéve/Mark
Minkowski
Stage Director: Laurent Pelly
Set Design: Chantal Thomas
Costume Design: Michel Dussarat, Laurent Pelly
Lighting: Joël Adam
Choreography: Dominique Boivin
rec. live, Opéra National de Lyon, 1997
Sound format: PCM Stereo, DD 5.1, DTS 5.1
Subtitles: GB, DE, FR, ES, IT
Picture format: 16:9
Region code: 0
Bonus feature [26:00]
ARTHAUS MUSIK 107 506
[123:00 + 153:00]
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A few years ago I reviewed
a CD with highlights from three Offenbach operettas, La belle
Hélène, Orphée aux enfers and La
Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein, all conducted by Marc
Minkowski. I enjoyed the music and the singing very much and
when this twofer appeared I was keen on renewing the acquaintance
… and now complete. I have to admit that I was very frustrated.
No, La belle Hélène wasn’t frustrating
at all, on the contrary I found it completely to my taste. A
bit over the top, perhaps, but so what? Old Offenbach wouldn’t
have minded. In the first scene we find Hélène
in bed - she took sleeping pills during the overture - and now
she is asleep and dreaming. The whole story takes place in her
dream which also is an alibi for whatever weird situations that
happen during the evening. With Felicity Lott electrifying in
the title role - vocally a bit worn perhaps, but her timing
and her expressivity are superb - and with a supporting cast
on the highest artistic level, this is a feast for every lover
of French operetta. The ever reliable François Le Roux
is a splendid Calchas and as Hélène’s aged
husband Menelaus, we see the superb Michel Sénéchal.
Having made his professional debut in 1950 he was still fit
as a fiddle fifty years later, aged 73. Marie-Ange Todorovitch,
another mainstay in the French repertoire, is an Orestes of
one’s dreams. Best of all is Yann Beuron as Paris. He
is flexible, a good actor and sings with lyrical elegance. John
Aler on the Plasson set (CD only) is good but Beuron has that
hard-to-define Frenchness of style that Simoneau, Vanzo, the
young Sénéchal and Burles also possessed. He lacks
the brilliance of Jussi Björling in the Mount Ida aria,
but then nobody else has ever been able to match him. All in
all a lovely performance.
Can anyone tell me why Orphée aux enfers totally
failed to impress me? It’s the same director, practically
the same production team overall, the same conductor, Yann Beuron
again takes the male lead and the incomparable Natalie Dessay
is Eurydice. Laurent Naouri, moreover, is a hilarious Jupiter,
disguised as a fly (!), singing his buzz song. Jean-Paul Fouchecourt,
best known as a baroque singer but with a large and diversified
repertoire, surprises as a true entertainer in the dual role
of Aristée and Pluton and among lesser known artists
Martine Olmeda as L’Opinion Publique and Maryline Fallot
as Venus also stand out for their good singing and acting.
No, it isn’t the singing and the acting - everybody is
perfect in their roles - and chorus, ballet and orchestra are
formidable - but for some reason I found it boring. Some of
the gags were a fun but there was too much shouting and running
about, too much business ... too much of everything. Probably
the fault is mine, probably I am a bore. Anyway I derived very
little pleasure from the performance - in theatrical terms that
is - and my wife, who often is more critical than I am, left
before half-time.
I have seen some rave reviews of both productions and recommend
prospective buyers to sample before buying - if that is possible.
For those who believe they are the same kind of bore as me there
are a couple of alternatives: La belle Hélène
can be bought separately and is well worth the asking price
and Orphée aux enfers is available in a CD version
(EMI) with many, though not all the singers on this DVD set.
The present twofer is only marginally more expensive than La
belle Hélène and Orphée can
be enjoyed without the visuals. Those who are not my kind of
bore can safely invest in this twofer. Whichever option you
choose the singing and playing are superb.
Göran Forsling
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