At about this time last year, the Royal College presented
a ‘Midsummer Night’s Dream’ which easily outclassed many ‘main house’
efforts, and this production of ‘Albert Herring’ was on the same level,
with no weaknesses amongst the cast and a staging which allowed the
music to speak for itself. Sir Thomas Allen is of course no stranger
to this work, having sung the part of Sid at Aldeburgh in 1974 in a
production attended by the composer not long before his death, and with
his commitment to the encouragement and inspiration of young singers
it is no surprise that Allen chose to make his directorial debut with
this perfect ensemble piece.
The set (by Roger Butlin) was elegantly simple, with
the Herring’s shop looking as pristine as Lady Billows’ breakfast room:
the basic framework was wrought-iron pillars resembling a cross between
an East Anglian pier and the sort of railway station that one sees in
black and white movies, enlivened with appropriate touches of colour
from hanging greenery and assorted fruits. Against this pleasingly nostalgic
backdrop, the action proceeded lovingly yet, at times, a little statically:
Allen has said that he would really like to be ‘making an Ealing comedy
where I could really indulge,’ and that love for period detail, gentle
humour and quirkiness is very evident in his production.
It was clearly Allen’s aim to highlight the singing
of a superb young ensemble, and in this he succeeded triumphantly. It
was hard to believe that Claire Surman’s autocratic, slightly mad Lady
Billows was sung by the same soprano who gave us such a dignified, nobly
voiced Daughter of Zion in last season’s ‘Brockes Passion,’ so completely
did this exceptional young singer immerse herself in the part: her Act
1 aria in which she denounces Loxford as a ‘spawning-ground of horror,’
her highly accomplished performance of the taxing ‘speech-song’ at the
Feast, and her convincingly eccentric pronouncements – ‘Consider it
m’duty!’ all made up a truly striking assumption of a difficult role.
Her faithful henchwoman in small-town morality, Florence Pike, was sung
with equal commitment by Wendy Dawn Thompson, who also delivered her
words with great relish – ‘Advert in chemist’s window – indecent...tear
it up!’
The other townsfolk were affectionately presented as
the most eccentric bunch imaginable, yet each one preserved the essential
quality of being a recognizable character; this was especially true
of Andrew Kennedy’s Mayor – here again is a young singer one might barely
recognize in this role after his Oedipus and Lysander, and as with those
parts he sang with ringing tone and animated phrasing. Miriam Ryen’s
Miss Wordsworth and Shannon Chad Foley’s Mr. Gedge owed a little something
to Miss Prism and Canon Chasuble in their impersonations, and both sang
with clarity and confidence; it was especially pleasing to hear how
Ms Ryen’s tone seems to have filled out and become richer and even more
beautiful since her Titania of last year.
Sion Goronwy is one of those singers who cannot fail
to be recognizable, not just because he is immensely tall but because
both his voice and stage presence live up to his size; to his superb
Simone (Gianni Schicchi), Tiresias (Oedipus Rex) and Snug / Lion (MSND)
he here adds another treasurable assumption, that of Superintendent
Budd: his aria ‘Albert Herring’s clean as new-mown hay’ and the recitative
about crime – ‘God preserve me from these disappearing cases!’ were
both incisively sung and phrased, with firm tone and eloquent delivery.
Jared Holt’s sardonically charming Sid, Elizabeth Ife’s sassy, sweetly
sung Nancy, Jennifer Johnston’s all-too-convincingly mournful mother
and the trio of ‘children’ played by Helen Massey, Simona Mihal (obviously
a gifted comedienne) and Jeremy Solly were all cast from strength.
Robert Murray is yet another RCM student who has taken
on a variety of roles and made them his own: he first came to my notice
as the most hilarious MSND Flute I’ve seen, and here he extended his
range to encompass this vulnerable yet ultimately triumphant anti-hero.
He caught exactly the right mixture of pathos, mild rebellion and awkwardness
of the character, especially in his witnessing of the courtship of Sid
and Nancy, and his singing of ‘And I’m more than grateful to you all...’
was as convincingly done as I’ve ever heard it.
Perhaps the finest parts of this opera are the ensembles,
especially the Threnody in which each character laments Albert’s presumed
passing and unfulfilled hopes: they were superbly sung by everyone on
stage and eloquently accompanied by the RCM orchestra under Michael
Rosewell, who directed a beautifully shaded, lovingly detailed account
of this comic opera which was the perfect vehicle for this young ensemble
cast. There are two further performances on Wednesday 4th
and Friday 6th, and I cannot think of another current performance
more worthy of recommendation.
Melanie Eskenazi
Upper
photo L to R = Jennifer Johnston (Mrs. Herring) Robert Murray
(Albert) Claire Surman (Lady Billows) Shannon Chad Foley (Mr. Gedge)
Photo: Chris Christodoulou
Lower photo L to R = Robert Murray (Albert) Claire Surman (Lady Billows)
Wendy Dawn Thomson (Florence)
Photo: Chris Christodoulou