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Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART
(1756-1791)
Le Nozze Di Figaro - Opera buffa in four acts
(1786)
Susanna,
maid to the Countess – Reri Grist (soprano); Figaro, manservant to
the Count - Walter Berry (bass-baritone); Count Almaviva - Ingvar
Wixell (baritone); Countess Almaviva - Claire Watson (soprano); Cherubino,
a young buck around the palace – Edith Mathis (soprano); Marcellina,
a mature lady owed a debt by Figaro – Margarethe Bence (mezzo); Don
Basilio, a music master and schemer – David Thaw (tenor); Don Bartolo
- Zoltan Keleman (bass); Barbarina - Deirdre Aselford (soprano).
Chorus of the Vienna State Opera
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra/Karl Böhm
rec. live, Salzburg Festival, 1966
Stage direction - Günther Rennert
Set and Costume Design - Ludwig Heinrich
Video Director - Herman Lanske
Sound Format: PCM Mono, DD 5.1. Picture Format: 4:3. DVD Format NTSC
2 x DVD 9
Subtitle Languages: Italian (original language), English, German,
French, Spanish, Chinese
ARTHAUS MUSIK
107 057 [2 DVDs: 180:00] |
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Mozart’s Le Nozze Di Figaro is widely regarded as among
the greatest operas ever penned. Designated opera buffa,
it is based on the second of Beaumarchais’s trilogy of plays
set around Count Almaviva. It is a superb marriage of composer
and librettist, in this case Lorenzo Da Ponte, a man surely
unique in the annals of music. Propitiously, he arrived in Vienna
at the turn of 1781-82. This was a year before the Emperor restored
Italian Opera to the Imperial Theatre, the Burgtheater. He was
appointed Poet to the Imperial Theatres by the Emperor
and thus had easy access to his august and all powerful employer.
In relatively liberal Paris, Beaumarchais’s play was, for many
years, considered too licentious and socially revolutionary
for the stage. It was viewed similarly in Vienna even after
the more liberal Emperor Joseph II had come to power on the
death of his mother. Da Ponte, used his access to the Emperor
and managed to get his permission for Mozart’s Le nozze di
Figaro to go ahead on the basis of it being
an opera and not the already banned play. This necessitated
the more political and revolutionary aspects of the play being
toned down. This had consequences for an inflammatory Act 5
monologue which was replaced with Figaro’s Act 4 warning about
women which greatly pleased the Emperor. Mozart composed the
music in six weeks despite a flare-up of the kidney condition
that was to kill him five years later at the very young age
of thirty-five.
Opera festivals abound in what might be called the closed season
for the great theatre addresses for the genre. None come bigger,
or more expensive, than the Salzburg Festival that runs for
five weeks from the end of July each year with an earlier Whitsun
or Easter offspring. Salzburg was the birthplace of Mozart and
since the inception of the Festival, around 1920 by Richard
Strauss, his librettist Hofmannsthal and Max Reinhardt, the
great native composer’s operatic works have never been less
than a regular feature. None of those operatic works has clocked
up more productions and performances than Le Nozze Di Figaro.
The Festival and the work tempt the most prestigious producers
and conductors. Famous conductors associated with the Festival
include Toscanini, Bruno Walter and Karajan. Karl Böhm stands
alongside these giants with a claim to having a particular empathy
with Mozart’s music. Certainly his Le nozze di Figaro
and Cosi fan Tutte at Salzburg are renowned. Böhm’s conducting,
alongside Günther Rennert’s production, Ludwig Heinrich sets
and opulent costumes as presented in this film, even in the
limitations of mono sound and black and white presentation,
show why that is so.
In 1966, as now, the Salzburg Festival drew the cream of singers,
and this cast includes some of the all time great Mozart interpreters.
In no order, Reri Grist’s Susanna, petite and pert in manner,
true in vocal characterisation and excellent in diction, is
a particular delight. Her act four recit and aria is a wonderful
postlude to an outstanding contribution (DVD 2 CH. 27). As her
eponymous paramour, Walter Berry is quite some revolutionary.
It would take a very strong count Almaviva to master him. His
singing is full-toned with his rounded bass baritone flexible
and expressive in Figaro’s arias (e.g. DVD 1 CH.6 and 17). His
acting is convincing. This is particularly so in the concluding
act in the garden (DVD 2 CHs.18031) where the various confusions
bring Figaro and his bride and the put-upon Countess full justification
for the plotting that has gone before.
Of the Almavivas and their entourage, Claire Watson’s warm-toned
and womanly Countess comes over well. She finds no difficulty
with the tessitura of her two big arias whilst bringing expression
and feeling to the emotions they convey (DVD 1 CH.18 and DVD
2 CH.10). Ingvar Wixell sings strongly as the Count, albeit
overshadowed a little by his servant in terms of vocal strength.
That lovely Mozartian Edith Mathis, as the young buck Cherubino,
looks a little too feminine of face. She sings her two arias
with great beauty and acts the role convincingly, particularly
after entering Susanna’s room via a window (DVD 1 CH 11-17)
and then having to hide herself as the Count arrives. She graces
both arias with tonal beauty and phrasing too rarely heard these
days. Zoltan Keleman is a rather cocky Don Bartolo, but sings
his aria adequately (DVD 1 CH.8). Margarethe Bence is a rather
fusty-looking Marcellina and like David Thaw’s adequately acted
music-master she does not get their act four aria. Deirdre Aselford
is vocally a little thin as Barbarina but acts her role well,
especially in act four.
Ludwig Heinrich’s classic sets and costumes made me regret the
lack of colour. Karl Böhm’s phrasing and gently sprung rhythms
allow the composer’s music to flow whilst giving the singers
adequate time to phrase with delicacy and character. A little
matter of changing styles is evidenced in the return of a singer
to the stage after exiting at the end of an aria, to take a
bow, or even two. Thankfully this practise has now died out
with soloists criticised for even showing the hint of a smile
as they maintain role during the enthusiastic reception following
a bravura aria. All one would wish nowadays is for audiences
to follow suit and restrict their applause to the end of acts
and at final curtain.
Robert J Farr
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