Giuseppe VERDI (1813-1901)
Rigoletto - Melodramma in three acts (1851)
Duke of Mantua, a licentious nobleman - Francesco Demuro (tenor); Rigoletto,
his jester - Leo Nucci (baritone); Gilda, Rigoletto’s daughter
- Nino Machaidze (soprano); Sparafucile, a villain available for hire
as an assassin - Marco Spotti (bass); Maddalena, his sister - Stefanie
Irányi (mezzo); Giovanna, Gilda’s Duenna - Katarina Nikolic
(mezzo); Count Monterone - Roberto Tagliavini (bass); Marullo, a courtier
- Orazio Mori (baritone); Matteo Borsa, a courtier - Mauro Buffoli (tenor);
Count Ceprano - Ezio Maria Tisi (baritone); Contess Ceprano - Scilla
Cristiano (soprano)
Orchestra and Chorus of the Teatro Regio, Parma/Massimo Zanetti
Stage Director: Stefano Vizioli
Set and Costume original Designer: Pierluigi Samaritani; revised: Alessandro
Ciammarughi
Video Director: Andrea Bevilacqua
rec. live, Parma Verdi Festival, 16, 20, 22 October 2008
Sound Formats: DTS-HD MA 5.1; PCM Stereo; Filmed in HD 1080i; Aspect
ratio: 16:9
Booklet languages: English, German, French
Subtitles: Italian (original language), English, German, French, Spanish,
Chinese, Korean, Japanese
Also available in DVD format
C MAJOR 723304
[131:00 +10:00]
Here is
Tutto Verdi 16 (all Verdi but missing
two titles).
Rigoletto is the second most popular of Verdi’s
operas, coming after
La Traviata, his next but one operatic staging.
Both operas come in the all-time top ten world-wide, each being premiered
at La Fenice, Venice, in March 1851 and 1853 respectively.
Rigoletto is based on Victor Hugo’s play
Le Roi s’amuse.
In a letter to Piave his librettist Verdi described it as “the
greatest drama of modern times”. He saw the character of Tribolet,
to become Rigoletto, as a character worthy of Shakespeare, and there
was no greater compliment that Verdi could pen. It did not reach the
stage without hassle. The censor objected to a king being involved,
to the general immorality of the story, and such minutiae as Rigoletto
being a hunchback and the body of Gilda being on stage in a sack. Verdi
compromised whilst maintaining the principles of the play. The compromise
involved a change from a Royal Court to that of an independent Duke.
Most importantly the changes maintained the historical period most suitable
for the impact of Monterone’s curse on Rigoletto’s mind
and being. It is with the words
Ah! La maladezione! with which
Rigoletto concludes act 1 as he realises his daughter Gilda has been
abducted. This is also his final cry at the conclusion of the opera
as he realises she is dead. This phrase, and Rigoletto’s reaction
to it, has to be telling in any production. A curse in the present day
has little if any meaning. Its significance is best realised in the
contextual relationship of the words uttered by a jester at Court. Equally
important is that any the production should realistically convey the
nature of Rigoletto’s day job; this alongside his role of protective
loving father to a daughter who knows nothing of the rather nasty nature
of his work, its environment, nor of her family.
Rigoletto comes tenth in the all-time list of performed operas
and second in respect of the Verdi canon after
La Traviata. Those
two operas, along with
Il Trovatore, premiered between the two,
are considered the gems of Verdi’s middle period and are immensely
popular. With his preceding two works,
Luisa Miller and
Stiffelio,
Verdi had honed his capacity to represent characters and their situations,
adding to the dramatic impact of the whole as well as to the challenges
to interpreters of the roles. The challenges are even greater in the
trio of middle period operas. Consequently, I had expected the performances
in this Tutto Verdi series, of largely provincial performances from
Parma, to be beaten to pulp by recorded rivals from the great opera
houses. I was pleasantly surprised to be able to award the imprimatur
of
Recording of the Month to
Stiffelio on the basis of
casting and production despite competition from La Scala and Covent
Garden productions. I now find myself in a similar situation with this
performance and staging of
Rigoletto. Yes, the performance from
Dresden in 2008 featuring Juan Diego Florez and Diane Damrau is better
sung, but the production and costumes are plain silly (see
review).
That from Zurich in 2006, and like the present issue also featuring
Leo Nucci in the title role, mixes time periods in an unconvincing manner
and destroys the mood created in the opening scene in period costume
(see
review).
This 2008 Parma production, in sets and costumes by Pierluigi Samaritani,
seems intent on doing visual justice to Verdi’s masterful creation.
The lighting enables movement between scenes to be presented with ease
and fluency by the video director, and stage promise becomes reality
under the hands of director Stefano Vizioli. The opening scene is in
colourful period costume and fully represents the licentious nature
of the Mantuan Court. Even the full frontal nude exposure of Monterone’s
daughter is appropriate rather than salacious (CH.6). The smooth movement
between scenes, all in recognisably appropriate period and location
settings, adds to the mood that is within Verdi’s creation. Everything
is brought to recognisable fruition as to period and drama.
Whilst the visuals are important and appreciated, the singing and the
musical performance must match. I have not always been an admirer of
Leo Nucci. I have on occasion found his tone rather thin and wiry, in
Verdi in particular. In this performance he does not show his sixty-five
years. As an actor he has always had the capacity to represent a character
and creep under the skin. No character is more complex than Rigoletto:
caustic jester, and loving but over-protective father of a young daughter
who he seeks to keep unaware of his day job and particularly from the
eyes of his employer. In this performance Nucci manages to convey, by
his acting, physical and vocal, all the necessary facets. In this he
creates the best account of the role since I saw the Greek Kostas Paskalis
in 1968 with the young Pavarotti as the Duke. Only for a few moments
at the end of a magnificent
Cortigiani vil razza danata (CH.22)
does Nucci momentarily show signs of vocal pressure. However, after
a rendition such as he gives I forgive all, and even the very slight
unsteadiness at the end might be considered appropriate for a bereft
and ageing father. Somehow or other he found the energy and vocal prowess
to reprise, with his Gilda, the concluding verses of
Tutte le feste
(CH.24). This brought the enthusiastic audience to its feet.
The opera is not a one-singer piece. In this instance, Rigoletto’s
daughter Gilda is sung with beautiful tone and a lovely trill in
Caro
nome (CH.14). All this is allied to consummate acting and a most
appropriate and appealing stage presence. If the young Francesco Demuro
as the Duke is not quite of that standard, he does not fall far short.
He is no corpulent tenor; rather he has the
figure du part to
die for, likewise his lithe movement and curly locks. His singing is
ardent and well characterised. Just occasionally I feel he squeezes
the tone at the top of his voice a little. That said, he sings the opening
act two double aria with graceful phrasing (CHs.17-18) and does likewise
with that most famous of all tenor aria
La donna e mobile (CH.27).
All the minor parts are sung well with the Parma chorus in vibrant voice.
The conductor, if not in the very top class in bringing out every last
nuance of the drama, is more than adequate.
Robert J Farr