Umberto GIORDANO (1867-1948)
Andrea Chénier - historical drama in four acts (1896)
Andrea Chénier - José Cura; Maddalena di Coigny - Maria Guleghina;
Carlo Gérard - Carlo Guelfi; Bersi - Giacinta Nicotra; La Contessa di
Coigny - Cinzia De Mola; Madelon - Annie Vavrille; Roucher - Carlo Cigni; Il
romanziero - Armando Ariostini; Fouquier-Tinville - Giuseppe Guidi; Mathieu
- Mario Bellanova; Un Incredibile - Pierre Lefebvre; The Abbé - Stefano
Pisani; Schmidt - Atfeh Ziyan; The major-domo - Mauro Marchetto; Dumas - Michele
Castagnaro
Orchestra and Chorus of the Teatro Comunale di Bologna/Carlo Rizzi
Directed by Giancarlo del Monaco
Directed for video by Paola Langobardo
rec. live, Teatro Comunale di Bologna, 2006
Picture format: 16:9 anamorphic
Sound format: PCM stereo, DD 5.1, DTS 5.1
Region code: 0
ARTHAUS MUSIK DVD 107 287 [123:00]
Unless you’ve made a close study of the history of the French Revolution,
the story of Andrea Chenier as penned by Giordano’s librettist
Luigi Illica can be more than a little confusing. Although what we have here
is essentially a simple love triangle, Illica’s predilection for repeatedly
throwing in historical references to long forgotten personalities (Necker? Tallien?
Dumouriez?), political factions (Girondins?) and social phenomena of the period
(merveilleuses?) can easily distract a modern audience from the essential
plot.
Thankfully, this particular production keeps everything as clear and simple
as possible and it will certainly appeal to anyone who found the recently issued
DVD of the Bregenz Festival’s 2011 Andrea Chénier (see
here) just a little bit too off the wall.
Apart from its clarity, the biggest assets are the three leading singers. In
an age when many cleverly promoted vocalists are perceived by the public as
“opera stars” even though they’ve never actually performed
in a full stage production, José Cura is the real thing and undeniably
one of today’s most exciting operatic tenors. I was justifiably taken
with his Turiddu/Canio in Arthaus Musik’s Cav and Pag double
bill from a couple of years back (see
here) and this is another performance in the same league. In the first Act
he commands the stage from a passionately delivered Un di, all' azzuro
onwards. After that neither Maddalena nor the theatre audience can resist his
appeal. Later on, Cura takes full advantage of all the show-stopping opportunities
that have made the opera a favourite with those tenors with the self confidence
(or self regard) to take it on. Radiating immense charisma and intensity, he
has a great stage presence - especially once he has discarded the Act 1 ancien
regime’s sartorial fripperiesin favour of the more fetchingly
heroic costumes of the Revolutionary era.
Some great tenors of the past certainly usedAndrea Chénier as
a vehicle to showcase their own stardom. The stentorian Mario Del Monaco, in
particular, often faces that accusation, though when he is paired with an equally
powerful Maddalena such as Renata Tebaldi (they may be seen together in two
DVD performances - Bel Canto Society BCS-D0003 from 1955 and VAI 4419 from six
years later - and heard on Decca CD set 425 407-2) the results are undeniably
spectacular.
Jose Cura is, though, a generous performer who recognises very sensibly that
the presence of other strong singers on stage will serve only to enhance his
own performance. Fortunately, Maria Guleghina (Maddalena) and Carlo Guelfi (Gerard)
are also very skilled, both vocally and in their acting. The beauty of Guleghina’s
voice is apparent from her first entrance and she lives her part most convincingly,
from her coquettish teasing in the first act to her renunciation of life for
the sake of love in the last: watch how, in their Act 2 duet, she pays close
attention to Cura’s words and gestures and reacts utterly appropriately
and convincingly.
Gerard’s character is a more complex one than Maddalena’s, buffeted
as he is by a range of conflicting emotions from the very start. Carlo Guelfi,
an immensely strong presence on the Bologna stage, expresses that inner complexity
and tension very well and makes his character the opera’s real centrepiece.
In Act 3, his self-questioning monologue is very affectingly done and the revelation
of his long-suppressed feelings in his subsequent duet with Maddalena is - as
it ought to be - a real dramatic highpoint, capped by the soprano’s powerful
La mamma morta.
Supporting roles are very well taken, too. Cinzia De Mola offers us a Countess
di Coigny who would be quite enough on her own to justify the oncoming downfall
of the French aristocracy. Her idea of a ball for her preening, mincing friends
is not just a decorous minuet or two but a cabaret appearance by a naked god
Pan dancing lasciviously with his nymphs in a sort of early version of a bunga-bunga
party.
Giacinta Nicotra makes a strong impression as Maddalena’s loyal servant
Bersi, as does Carlo Cigni as Chénier’s friend Roucher. I also
enjoyed Pierre Lefebvre’s Uriah Heep-like portrayal of the police spy,
while Annie Vavrille, singing the role of the old woman Madelon, makes a positive
and powerful contribution - even if her supposedly 15 years old grandson looks
here rather more like a twenty-something toy-boy.
In fact, my few quibbles focus on the contribution of Giancarlo del Monaco -
the son, incidentally, of the aforementioned tenor Mario Del Monaco, even though
he differentiates himself with a lower-case “d” in “del”.
In this production he combines the functions of stage director, set and costume
designer and, while I like the attractive and often eye-catching costumes, the
set and what happens on it are, at times, a little more questionable.
The busier, more detailed sets work best. Act 1 boasts an impressive mini Hall
of Mirrors in beautifully muted pastels (echoed in the costumes) and Act 3’s
courtroom set, in which scaffolding for the peasant jury is set up in the midst
of a palatial gilded ballroom, is equally striking. The opening of the third
act, set in Gerard’s office, and the final gaol scene are both disappointingly
rather sparse and impressionistically conceived.
Stage direction is generally convincing, although Act 2’s procession of
revolutionary heroes (“You see the last one? Robespierre’s little
brother”) is consigned so far to the rear of the stage that it’s
hard to see exactly what is going on: the Bregenz production works better as
the dignitaries move diagonally across an area nearer the front. Other than
that, I liked the way that the crowd scenes were marshalled - even though it
looks odd to my eyes to see soldiers, rather than horses, drawing the condemned
prisoners’ tumbrels. Perhaps stage logistics or sheer cost precluded using
real animals?
As is often the case these days, stage action occasionally conflicts with the
words that we are hearing. Thus, towards the end of the first act, it seems
nonsense for the countess to angrily exclaim “Who let that lot in? Out
with that rabble!" when the peasant “horde” interrupting her party
consists of just one man carrying in his arms the corpse of a boy. Similarly,
in the opera’s final moments, we hear a gaoler summoning Chénier
and Maddalena to their execution and the couple affirming their eagerness to
go willingly for the sake of their mutual love. You might therefore reasonably
expect to see them climbing into a (no doubt soldier-drawn) tumbrel or at least
just disappearing off into the wings. But what we actually see as the curtain
falls is the lovers determinedly climbing a good 10 or 12 feet vertically up
the bars of their cell that are ranged across the front of the stage. If that
isn’t a belated attempt at a prison break, perhaps it symbolises their
ascent to heaven? It’s also an unnecessary bit of directorial affectation
that left me rather bemused when I ought, rather, to have been emotionally overwhelmed,
both by the emotional drama and by Giordano’s tremendously uplifting final
duet (“In our death, love triumphs!”)
In that duet - and in fact all through the opera, by the way - the singers are
well supported by an orchestra that plays idiomatically and to the manner-born.
They are very well directed, as one would expect, by the experienced Carlo Rizzi.
The television/video directing is also generally fine, although I am surprised
that no-one seemed to notice when, at about 40:13 in Act 2, a poorly chosen
camera angle gives us a glimpse of an actor waiting in the wings. If we really
were in Revolutionary times, the cameraman responsible would, without the slightest
doubt, have been en route for the guillotine before you could even begin
to say merveilleuses.
Rob Maynard
José Cura is the real thing and undeniably one of today’s most
exciting operatic tenors.