mercoledì 3 giugno 2015

Lucia' in the Madhouse in Music and Vision 6 aprile



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Ensemble

'Lucia' in the Madhouse

GIUSEPPE PENNISI attends
a memorial to Luca Ronconi


Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor is one of the world's most often performed operas. The reader may peruse the large number of reviews in this magazine. Since 1835, the opera has never left the repertory of major as well as minor theatres. So why present a new production in Rome on 31 March 2015 as a 'gala evening' with the Head of State, the Minister of Economy and Finance, the Mayor and many other authorities as well as general audience (like me) filling the stalls, the boxes and the circles? The performance was a memorial to Luca Ronconi, a very well-known Italian stage director of international repute. After a long illness, Ronconi died on 21 February 2015, just as he was about to start rehearsing for Lucia. Although he was a prolific opera director, this would have been his first staging of Donizetti's masterpiece. His longtime direct collaborators Ugo Tessitore (staging), Gianni Mantovanini (lighting), Gabriele Mayer (costumes) and Margherita Palli (sets) completed Ronconi's work on the basis of the project he had prepared. In a situation like this, it is always hard to say how much of the dramaturgy of the production is Ronconi's brainchild, and how much is the fruit of his collaborators.
Marco Caria as Enrico with members of the chorus in 'Lucia di Lammermoor' at Teatro dell'Opera di Roma. Photo © 2015 Yasuko Kageyama
Marco Caria as Enrico with members of the chorus in 'Lucia di Lammermoor' at Teatro dell'Opera di Roma.
Photo © 2015 Yasuko Kageyama. Click on the image for higher resolution
The basic concept is Ronconi's: over the last few years, he had turned from colossal mise en scène to intimate, introspective drama. When Lucia was a new opera, it was regarded as the apogee of high Romantic sensibilities. The clear plot, which trims away much of Walter Scott's details, possessed the stark tautness of a Poe horror tale. A clear indication is that the French novelist Gustave Flaubert employed it as an important point of reference in the downward course of Madame Bovary, the quintessential victim of Romantic illusion. The opera poses impervious vocal demands on the cast. Also, its orchestral writing depicts the lakes, castles, parks, fountains and more significantly the misty, foggy and stormy landscape of Scotland.
The basic idea of this production is that the protagonist is psychopathic from the very beginning and thus her pathology grows into making her a killer and then into committing suicide. Black and white are the dominant colors. There are no lakes, castles, parks, fountains or, more significantly, Scottish landscapes. The single set looks like a madhouse, where quite a few crazy men and women are chained into cages. The fixtures and furniture look like the Swedish firm IKEA's mass production. This is a hard setting for the heart breaking duet Verranno a Te sull'Aure or for the Edgardo solos in D major confronted with the funeral chorus in B major, and even more for the unusual but splendid moderato cabaletta. The acting left a lot to be desired. Nonetheless, the normally quite conservative Roman audience acclaimed the production. I think it was mostly a gesture of affection for Ronconi.
Luckily, the musical aspects were of quite high standard. Many 'cuts' had been opened up, in the role of Raimondo and also in the 'madness scene'. Roberto Abbado kept quite a good balance between pit and stage, even though in the first act he tended to have the orchestral sections a bit slower than those featuring singers. The two protagonists — Jessica Pratt and Stefano Secco — are at the level of the mythical Fanny Tacchinardi-Persian and Gilbert Duprez.
Stefano Secco as Edgardo and Jessica Pratt in the title role of 'Lucia di Lammermoor' at Teatro dell'Opera di Roma. Photo © 2015 Yasuko Kageyama
Stefano Secco as Edgardo and Jessica Pratt in the title role of 'Lucia di Lammermoor' at Teatro dell'Opera di Roma.
Photo © 2015 Yasuko Kageyama. Click on the image for higher resolution
Great care had been taken in selecting the others — Carlo Cigni, Simge Büyükedes and Andrea Giovannini.
Andrea Giovannini (top) as Normanno with members of the chorus in 'Lucia di Lammermoor' at Teatro dell'Opera di Roma. Photo © 2015 Yasuko Kageyama
Andrea Giovannini (top) as Normanno with members of the chorus in 'Lucia di Lammermoor' at Teatro dell'Opera di Roma. Photo © 2015 Yasuko Kageyama. Click on the image for higher resolution
Roberto Gabbiani's chorus was excellent. Ovations and accolades were, in my view, well deserved by the conductor, soloists and chorus, and trailed the rest of the production.
Copyright © 6 April 2015 Giuseppe Pennisi,
Rome,
Italy
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