The worn metaphor about the London buses is applicable here too.
                After a wake of some weeks I happened to watch two Mozart operas
                    on consecutive evenings and, like the buses, they had both
                    been modernized past recognition. Transportation is the main
                    object of the buses and transportation in time seems to be
                    the overriding purpose with opera direction at the moment.
                    I don’t like to be an old Grumpy but I can’t avoid feeling
                    that some directors struggle at all costs to transport their
                    productions in all directions except the most obvious one:
                    to the time where they belong. I have enjoyed many productions
                    of this kind, both live and on DVD, many have been very inventive,
                    entertaining and – in some cases at least – perspective building.
                    Still, one serious objection remains: more often than not
                    one loses the purpose and intention of the original. I am
                    sure that it is all done with the aim of making a mossy story
                    comprehensible to today’s audiences since the music is of
                    a calibre that would make it a shame if it sank into oblivion.
                    Naturally this intention is laudable but the question remains:
                    how much more intelligible will the story and the conflicts
                    become by transporting it to the present time? Certainly
                    it clarifies eternal questions by putting them into the context
                    of our own times and society … but I still have my doubts. 
                 
                 
                
                 
                Take the opera under consideration, Le nozze di Figaro, written
                    in 1786 and supposed to have some part in the outbreak of
                    the French Revolution a few years later. Beaumarchais’s play,
                    which was the basis for da Ponte’s libretto, was political
                    hot-stuff. Da Ponte removed much of its revolutionary tendency.
                    However the core conflict of the opera is that Count Almaviva
                    wants to reintroduce the ancient right of the feudal lord
                    to lie with the bride on the wedding night of his servants.
                    Enacted in modern times this will jar with most viewers,
                    who are well aware of promiscuity across the social layers
                    but would not normally associate this with historic tradition.
                    Played in 18th century setting this could serve
                    as a history lesson coupled with hearing the music alongside
                    sets and costumes that belong together. For jaded opera-goers
                    who have seen dozens of different production and know the
                    pre-conditions it poses no problems and it can be refreshing
                    once in a while. I don’t object to the practice in general – if
                    there is a rationale behind it. 
                                  
                 
                This Figaro is sometimes heavily laboured in an over-the-top
                    way. It is also full of amusing details and we had many good
                    laughs, my wife and I, even though at the end we said almost
                    unanimously: “I can’t imagine this as the only version in
                    the DVD collection”. Many illogical somersaults rub shoulders
                    with brilliant ideas, crystal clear fresh observations mingle
                    with hard-to-understand “quick-wittedness”. Director Christoph
                    Marthaler sets the action in what I only afterwards realised
                    was “a somewhat surreal marriage bureau in which there are
                    weddings almost continually”.  There are myriads of ideas
                    that make you wonder: Don Basilio seems to be a nervous wreck
                    from the beginning. This must be contagious because both
                    Marcellina and Bartolo are seriously affected towards the
                    end. There is a rostrum where some solos are performed like
                    lectures – an interesting contradiction since these solos
                    are in effect personal utterances, even internal monologues;
                    here they become public speeches. A miniature staircase is
                    placed on the floor and the actors frequently walk over it,
                    like hens. 
                                  
                 
                A stroke of genius is undoubtedly the introduction of a “recitativist”.
                    The director and the conductor considered it impossible to
                    retain the traditional harpsichordist or forte-pianist for
                    the dry recitatives. Instead they employed Jürg Kienberger
                    to be almost omnipresent on stage, accompanying or sometimes
                    only faintly indicating chords or just a single note. He
                    plays synth or any of a variety of instruments, including
                    in one recitative two bottles, partly filled with water,
                    in which he blew the requisite tone and then drank some of
                    the contents to achieve a new tone. Skilful in the bargain!
                    He also played a glass harmonica on two occasions as interludes.
                    In both cases these relate to Mozart songs roughly contemporaneous
                    with the opera. In one of them he also sang in tremendously
                    surefooted high falsetto. 
                                  
                 
                Instead of making grievous cuts, which happens far too often
                    in “adapted” productions,
                    Marthaler and Cambreling have opted for the complete score.
                    They have included all the recitatives and have also inserted
                    the often rejected fourth act arias for Marcellina and Basilio.
                    Sylvain Cambreling, an experienced opera conductor, secures
                    fine playing from his orchestra. All through the performance
                    he chooses adroit tempos. There are no eccentricities here,
                    only an ideal basis for the singers to make the most of their
                    arias and ensembles. And they do. Just as on the other Mozart
                    DVD I mentioned initially, (Harnoncourt’s La finta giardiniera)
                    (see review), this production has a cast that both
                    vocally and visually are ideal for their parts. And they
                    are good actors! Lorenzo Regazzo as Figaro is a find: lively,
                    young-looking and equipped with a strong, steady bass-voice,
                    full of expression. All his arias are vocal high-points.
                    Peter Mattei’s lanky figure and aristocratic bearing make
                    him an ideal Count Almaviva. There are few baritones around
                    on the international circuit today who can equal his singing.
                    His baritone possesses great beauty and power when needed
                    and it is so well-equalized. It is also well contrasted with
                    Figaro’s blacker bass, which matters less on DVD than on
                    CD, where casting similar voices can sometimes cause problems.
                    Roland Bracht’s magnificently booming voice and expressive
                    acting also makes him a Bartolo to reckon with. 
                                  
                 
                On the distaff side Christiane Oelze sings The Countess’s two arias
                    with dignity and great beauty and she is suitably sad for
                    most of the time. Heidi Grant Murphy is a glittering Susanna,
                    singing a lovely fourth act aria. Cherubino is notoriously
                    difficult to cast, requiring a gloriously-voiced singer who
                    must also be able to pass reasonably well as a teenage boy.
                    Christine Schäfer is definitely the most boyish Cherubino
                    I have ever encountered and it is indeed difficult to believe
                    that this isn’t a boy. To underline this wizardry in role-identification
                    she/he looks like Harry Potter – but sings like an angel. 
                                  
                 
                The minor parts are also excellently cast with Helene Schneiderman
                    grabbing her few opportunities to show off. This she does
                    most conspicuously in her aria, where she bathes in the spotlight.
                    Burkhard Ulrich the Don Basilio, on the other hand, sings
                    his aria with microphone. The rest of the cast are also well
                    into their characters. 
                                  
                 
                On musical grounds then there is no cause for complaint.
                    The production was also fresh and entertaining, but some
                    of the questions
                    of principle that I have posed still remain. I don’t mind
                    new thinking and fresh ideas but I don’t buy everything just
                    because it is new or fashionable.
                                  
                 
                I hope this review has whet the appetite or deterred readers, depending
                    on attitudes. Those who feel they can stomach a production
                    along these lines can safely invest. Sound and pictures are
                    first class, as is almost always the case nowadays.
                                  
                 
                    Göran Forsling
                 
                     
                 
                 
                BUY NOW 
              
  AmazonUK   AmazonUS  
                 
              
           | 
           
             
           |