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            Giacomo PUCCINI 
              (1858-1924)  
              Tosca - Opera in three acts (1900)  
                
              Floria Tosca, a diva - Fiorenza Cedolins (soprano); Mario Cavaradossi, 
              a painter, her lover and a revolutionary - Marcelo Alvarez (tenor); 
              Baron Scarpia, Rome’s feared Chief of Police - Ruggero Raimondi 
              (bass-baritone); Cesare Angelotti, a revolutionary escaped from 
              prison - Marco Spotti (baritone); The sacristan - Fabio Previati 
              (tenor); Spoletta, a henchman of Scarpia - Enrico Facini (baritone); 
              Sciarrone, another of Scarpia’s henchmen - Giuliano Pelizon 
              (baritone)  
              A.Li.Ve childen’s choir; Orchestra and chorus of the Arena 
              di Verona/Daniel Oren;  
              rec. live, Arena di Verona, July 2006  
              Director, Set, Costumes and Lighting: Hugo de Ana  
              Directed for TV and Video: Loreena Kaufmann  
              Sound formats: PCM Stereo, DTS-HD Master Audio; Picture Format: 
              16:9  
              Subtitles: Italian (original language), English, German, French, 
              Spanish  
                
              ARTHAUS MUSIC  108 031   
              [119:00]   
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                   Opera on a big open-air stage has many challenges for 
                  all concerned, particularly the stage Director and Set Designer. 
                  Both roles are undertaken by Hugo de Ana in this production. 
                  Then there are the challenges for the singers in a vast arena 
                  such as Verona. How to act with nuance rather than grand gesture, 
                  but get the emotion and circumstance across to those sat well 
                  away from the stage. It’s a problem for the TV director 
                  too. It might be considered that the conductor has the easiest 
                  task, just let the orchestra off its leash and fill the typical 
                  acoustically near perfect Roman arena with the opulent textures 
                  Puccini composed. It’s heaven help the singers if the 
                  conductor does that. Rather - and Daniel Oren achieves this 
                  to near perfection in this performance - it’s the conductor’s 
                  role to give momentum to the performance, to do justice to this 
                  composer’s opulent melody and textures, and, above all, 
                  to let the thousands in the audience hear the singers and their 
                  words. Whether these words came over at the rear of Verona Arena, 
                  as well they might if the Roman theatre at Orange is anything 
                  to go by, I do not know, but they certainly are clear enough 
                  and well balanced here with the advantage of strategically placed 
                  microphones catching the sound in all its sonority and detail.  
                   
                   
                  It is some time since I have reviewed a Verona performance (see 
                  review 
                  1 and review 
                  2), not so those from the vast stage of the Sferisterio Festival. 
                  On that vast stage, old-stager and master Designer and Producer 
                  Pier Luigi Pizzi has mastered the technique in a way that Hugo 
                  de Ana doesn’t quite match here. Restricting the width 
                  of the acting stage is fine, but there are undeniable losses. 
                  This felt particularly in the grandeur of the processional entry 
                  and Te Deum in Act One which sets the scene for Scarpia 
                  exhibiting his lust for Tosca herself. In Act Two, with the 
                  revealed massive sculpture of a head dominating the stage, the 
                  intimacy of Scarpia’s apartments actually comes over better. 
                  It is up the face of that sculpture, via steps, that Tosca climbs 
                  to fling herself to eternity, although we lose sight of her 
                  before that final act as the set is blacked out. This is not 
                  wholly inappropriate as there is no real feel of the normal 
                  Act Three set on the battlements of the castle prison while 
                  the shepherd boys had earlier gone fishing. That latter aspect 
                  was a little grating in a production, costumed in period, which, 
                  despite not wholly conquering the challenge of the stage dimensions, 
                  had previously made sense.  
                     
                  Of all operatic dramas, Tosca thrives or dies with the 
                  performance of the three principals. As actors, all three in 
                  this production excel, as do those in the minor parts. This 
                  helps to create a cohesive dramatic whole, something that is 
                  not often achieved in this opera on stage or captured on film. 
                  Vocally, the vastly experienced Scarpia of Ruggero Raimondi 
                  is the weakest, simply because in the twenty plus years since 
                  his first recording of the role, his voice has become somewhat 
                  threadbare in tone. Thankfully, this lack of colour and sonority 
                  is not associated with any loosening or the incursion of wobbles 
                  as he puts pressure on his voice. However, his bearing and the 
                  visual impact of his acted characterisation of the venal sadist 
                  Scarpia, who suffers from a complete lack of any evident mercy 
                  or humanity more than compensate. As Mario Cavaradossi, Marcelo 
                  Alvarez, who only added the role to his repertoire a couple 
                  of months before, at London’s Royal Opera House, is outstanding. 
                  Alvarez has a beautiful lyric voice that can encompass the dramatic 
                  demands of the role in Act Two whilst singing with eloquence 
                  and notable grace in his two big arias (Chs. 4 and 30). Even 
                  lovelier is the gentility of his phrasing and vocal nuance in 
                  the duet with Tosca O dolci mani mansuete e pure: Cavaradossi 
                  realises that it is with the hands he is caressing that Tosca 
                  had stabbed Scarpia to death and which had been covered with 
                  the hated police chief’s blood (Ch.32). He then glories 
                  in the thought of freedom with her (Ch.33).  
                     
                  The ghost of Callas hangs heavily on the role of Tosca. Only 
                  Act Two of the memorable 1964 Covent Garden production by Zeffirelli 
                  was filmed. She was then in poor voice and no match for Fiorenza 
                  Cedolins’ beautiful lyric and expressive vocal capacity 
                  in this performance. But in 1964 Callas didn’t act Tosca, 
                  she lived the role on stage and invested, gravelly chest notes 
                  and squally high ones notwithstanding, memories that stay in 
                  legend for those who slept on the street for several nights 
                  to get a ticket. I would be risking ridicule if I suggested 
                  Cedolins’ histrionic assumption was in the Callas class. 
                  However, the fact that I dare raise the spectre indicates something 
                  of my feelings towards her performance here, both during and 
                  after its conclusion. She has the figure du part; her 
                  voice is beautiful, expressive and clear. She has lower notes 
                  that are pure and aid her expression of emotion to add to an 
                  acted portrayal that is full of detail of facial glance and 
                  bodily conviction. Those in the far-off seats at Verona may 
                  not have seen the detail that is available to the camera of 
                  Loreena Kaufmann, but we can and should glory in it. Add Fiorenza 
                  Cedolins’ Act Two prayer (CH.24), gloriously expressed 
                  and delivered in a manner that the whole audience appreciated 
                  and I find her interpretation and singing betters any other 
                  I have so far seen on DVD. I await the release on the medium 
                  of the recently filmed and transmitted performance from Covent 
                  Garden featuring Kaufmann, Terfel and Gheorghiu conducted by 
                  Pappano to see if it matches this, which in my view currently 
                  leads a congested field including those performances filmed 
                  in the actual Rome locations of the libretto.  
                     
                  Of the lesser roles I would gladly have heard more of the blood-stained 
                  Cesare Angelotti of Marco Spotti and the fine acting of Fabio 
                  Previati as a dithering obsequious sacristan.  
                     
                  The presentation of this Verona performance is poor. There’s 
                  no booklet. The only information is on the reverse of the cover 
                  to be read through the blue of the case and on the back cover. 
                  Certainly inferior to other Arthaus Blu-ray issues; it deserves 
                  better, though it must be said that it is at superbudget price. 
                   
                     
                  Robert J Farr  
                     
                
                         
                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
             
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