Showing posts with label james conlon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label james conlon. Show all posts

THEATER REVIEW: THE TURK IN ITALY

Fiorilla (Nino Machaidze) in The Turk in Italy. Photo by Robert Millard.
In the buffo

By Ed Rampell

L.A. Opera’s The Turk in Italy is sort of Gioachino Rossini meets the Marx Brothers and Elvis’ 1965 movie Harum Scarum, a delightfully frothy comic concoction combining madcap merriment, mayhem and music. One half expects Chico to unmask himself during the second act’s costumed ball and ask, “Why a Turk?” Soon after the curtain lifts the amused audience witnesses one of the oldest circus clown routine, which your plot spoiler adverse reviewer won’t reveal. This comedy of ill manners is about – what else? – sex, and has more dosey doe partner changing than square dances or Woody Allen movies.

Indeed, in this opera buffo there’s not just a threesome, but a ménage a quatre (and then some), as Selim (Italian bass-baritone Simone Alberghini as the titular Turk), accompanied by a bodyguard who resembles the Green Hornet (but don’t worry, Seth Rogen isn’t making his opera debut here), arrives in Naples and woos Donna Fiorilla (sizzling soprano Nino Machaidze). This young beauty, however, is already cheating on her much older, wealthy husband, Don Geronio (Italian baritone Paolo Gavanelli, who hilariously steals scenes with the merry mania of a comic kleptomaniac), with the youthful, aptly named Don Narciso (portrayed by Russian tenor Maxim Mironov as a kind of Neapolitan Fonzie). Further complicating moral matters is the reunion of Selim with his former slave and lover, the fortuneteller Zaida (sultry mezzo-soprano Kate Lindsey).

Plotwise it would be enough to write that “complications and sheer hilarity ensue,” except for the addition -- and interjection -- of a sixth major character, the prosaic Prosdocimo (baritone Thomas Allen), a writer, who humorously gives new meaning to the cliché of “the artist suffering for his art.” Although identified as a “Poet,” Prosdocimo is actually seeking subject matter for a new comic opera or comedy, and more precisely seems to be a librettist or playwright. In any case, Prosdocimo appears to be the alter ego (or doppelganger) of Rossini (and/or of Felice Romani, who wrote The Turk in Italy's libretto and, according to Performances Magazine, apparently plagiarized librettist Caterino Mazzola). In any case, Prosdocimo is not merely content to observe and then write about what he has experienced amidst the carousers. The not-so-humble scribe stirs the plot pot in a self-serving way, solely to get a better story.

The Turk in Italy premiered in 1814 at Milan’s renowned La Scala, yet this zany sex farce is redolent with meaning for contemporary audiences. The curtain rises on an encampment of people identified as “Gypsies,” and my concern over the stereotyping of the much maligned Roma as vagabond thieves, etc., dissipated shortly afterward, as they vanish from the stage and story, serving mainly to introduce Zaida, a Turkish astrologer.

As its title indicates, Rossini’s opera suggests something much in the news since 9/11: The so-called “clash of civilizations” (and their malcontents) between the Christian West and Muslim Middle East. Of course, this is all treated with jest by Rossini, that barber of civility. When Selim informs Don Geronio that men seeking another’s wife have a way of dealing with this in Turkey -- by buying said wife, as if she’s a mere commodity -- Geronio responds to this oddity by informing the foreigner that Italian men, in turn, have their own way of reacting to such requests: punching the wannabe buyer in the face! Of course, comical Gavanelli milks the scene for every laugh it’s worth – much to the aud’s delight.

Rossini and Romani’s lighthearted depiction of the eternal war between the sexes is more than a bawdy romp. Beneath the frivolous surface are serious issues, such as the fact that one-size-fits-all monogamy is, in fact, not natural for all humans (just check the divorce rate.) In The Turk in Italy polygamy battles fidelity; the eponymous polyamorous Turk must surrender his harem -- and of course Fiorella must pay for enjoying sex and multiple partners. Call it the “Jezebel sin-drome.” However, since Turk is a comedy, this opera buffo doesn’t have the grim tragic finale of Giuseppe Verdi’s Rigoletto or Georges Bizet’s Carmen. Although as infidelity gives way to “domestic bliss,” some ardent feminists, sexual revolutionaries, etc., might consider this a fate worse than death.

Nevertheless, a good time was had by all at the Dorothy Chandler, and Rossini’s buoyant score, which leaps to life under the twirling baton of conductor James Conlon, is enough to lift the spirits of a suicidal manic depressive about to jump off the Golden Gate. There are no sumptuous sets to "ooh" and "ahh" at here, but scenery and lighting designers Herbert Maurauer and Reinhard Traub have collaborated to render some clever sets and effects with what appear to be scrims, projections and the like. At one point black clad chorusmen (no, not stagehands!) appear onstage to rig up a giant screen or curtain. Kristin Shaw Minges’ choreography is lovely, and at times, appropriately sexually provocative.

My only reservation concerns the direction of the German Christof Loy and Axel Weidauer, and their deploying of “Regietheater” in order to update Rossini’s early 19th century frolick. They set the story in relatively (if indeterminate) modern times, but this does absolutely nothing to better serve Rossini’s saga. This rendition would have appealed even more if Maurer’s sets and costumes were allowed to take us back to Rossini’s era. Indeed, the production’s best effect is a fabled mode of transport staright out of Aladdin. Re-setting William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet in 20th century Manhattan and replacing Verona’s balconies with New York’s fire escapes in West Side Story was a stroke of genius, but Loy and Weidauer are no Leonard Bernsteins, and Rossini is in no position to take issue with the liberties they’ve taken with his creation. Their unfortunate switcheroo does not enhance what is otherwise Rossini’s euphoric night at the opera buffo.


The Turk in Italy runs through March 13 at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 N. Grand Ave., Downtown Los Angeles. For more information: (213)972-8001;
www.laopera.com












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THEATER REVIEW: RIGOLETTO

Duke of Mantua (Gianluca Terranova) and Countess Ceprano (Valentina Fleer) in Rigoletto. Photo by Robert Millard.
The hunchback of Mantua’s dames and dukes 

By Ed Rampell

I had a hunch that L.A. Opera’s production of Rigoletto, the tale about the titular hunchbacked harlequin, would be hunky-dory. Indeed, composer Giuseppe Verdi called it “my best opera” and it is one of the most superb shows I’ve seen at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. Verily, this vivid version of the 1851 classic about the comedian with a hump is a humdinger that will leave audiences humming Verdi’s virtuoso melodies.

Verdi’s sonorous score rendered under the commanding baton of James Conlon is, but of course, nothing short of superb. The colorful costumes designed by Constance Hoffman transport audiences back in time to 16th century Italy. The sets of medieval Mantua wrought by skilled scenery designer Michael Yeargan on a slanted stage that enhances perspective bear a striking resemblance to the haunting paintings by Italian surrealist Giorgio De Chirico -- all that seems missing are the Greek-born painter’s trademark locomotives about to smash into brick walls. A canny choice: because if De Chirico’s canvases visualize frustration, Rigoletto is largely about thwarted love and lust.

Rigoletto was one of the social outcasts Verdi specialized in. Along with Porgy of the Gershwin Brothers’ Porgy and Bess, Rigoletto is one of opera-dom’s greatest physically deformed characters (although it should be duly noted that operas are full of mentally twisted dramatis personae). Baritone George Gagnidze of Georgia (Stalin’s, not Scarlett’s) brings down the opera house as the tortured court jester, those medieval stand-up comics whose comedy clubs were castles and palaces. The disabled comedian bridles at his lot in life, which is to amuse the Duke of Mantua (Italian tenor Gianluca Terranova depicts the raunchy royal) and his feckless, scheming, mean-spirited courtiers. Rigoletto is the archetypal clown laughing on the outside but crying on the inside.

However, the ribald Rigoletto is also a sultan of insults with a cutting Don Rickles rapier-like wit. He joins all the Duke’s men in belittling Count Ceprano (bass Matthew Anchel), who is cuckolded by the libertine (not so) nobleman, and Count Monterone (bass Daniel Sumegi), whose daughter is likewise seduced by the lady killer Duke. Incensed by Rigoletto’s barbs and mockery the count curses the jester.

The curse of Monterone apparently rewrites the Golden Rule, changing it to: “Do not do unto others what you don’t what others to do unto you.” Rigoletto learns this lesson the hard way, as the rapacious, deceptive Duke turns his sexual attentions towards Rigoletto’s own daughter, Gilda (soprano Sarah Coburn, who L.A. Opera aficionados may remember from 2009’s presentation of Giaochino Rossini’s The Barber of Seville). Stung once too often by Rigoletto’s jibes, the courtiers merrily and maliciously turn the tables on the humpbacked not-so funnyman.

Speaking of sopranos, Rigoletto solicits stiletto-wielding assassin Sparafucile (bassi profundi Andrea Silvestrelli) to do a hit on the fickle Duke, who plays with women’s emotions the way Niccolo Paganini played the violin. Sparafucile acts in league with his sister, the bawdy Maddalena (mezzo soprano Kendall Gladen, who previously appeared in L.A. Opera’s equally grand Carmen by Georges Bizet), to entrap and liquidate the randy Duke. But as male chauvinists have it, frailty, thy name is woman, and all hell breaks loose with one of opera’s most colossal disasters and backfires, as Rigoletto gets his “jest” desserts for ridiculing and humiliating so many for so long. The best laid plans of mice and men…

Back during the 1980s I saw a production of Rigoletto at the Metropolitan Opera, which rather strongly implied that the reason why the hunchback was so zealously overprotective of Gilda was that the deformed father had an incestuous desire to hump his daughter. But there’s none of that Oedipal-like theorizing in this production deftly directed by Mark Lamos. Although Verdi composed the music, the Italian libretto was written by Francesco Maria Piave, based on the play Le roi s’amuse by one of France’s greatest men of letters, none other than Victor Hugo –- who wrote that other masterpiece about a hunchback named Quasimodo.

This opera is a masterpiece and the poignant saga of the man with the hump will leave a lump in your throat.





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THEATER REVIEW: LOHENGRIN



Telramund (James Johnson) and Ben Heppner (Lohengrin) in Lohengrin.

Wagner's woes

By Ed Rampell

L.A. Opera premiered Lohengrin on Nov. 20. No, this is not about Lindsay’s smirk in her mug shots. Rather, it’s another one of Richard Wagner’s works, only this time the opera is performed more conventionally, minus the avant-garde razzmatazz of Achim Freyer’s The Ring of the Nibelungen, which had some opera traditionalists’ panties in a bunch. Like The Ring Cycle Wagner explores a Germanic legend in Lohengrin, based on a medieval myth about a knight in shining armor (at least on one silver-clad leg). The original source saga could be roughly compared to the Sir Lancelot and Guinevere British tales of yore, although Lohengrin, of course, has an Aryan twist.

The production directed by Lydia Steier at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, however, has updated Lohengrin to take place during World War I (after Wagner’s death) in Saxony. In any case, like any good knight, Lohengrin (Canadian tenor Ben Heppner) comes to the rescue of a dazzling damsel in distress, the maidenly Elsa (Finnish soprano Soile Isokoski), who has been accused of a heinous crime. They vow to wed, but on one condition: Elsa must never ask Lohengrin about his family origins, or even his name.

But meet the mezzo -- Dolora Zajick as the scheming Ortrud -- who plays Iago to Elsa’s Othello, stirring the pot of suspicion in a classic case of projection. The U.S.-born mezzo-soprano’s character is married to Friedrich von Telramund (American bass-baritone James Johnson), who is a pretender to the title of “Protector of Brabant” and was originally supposed to marry Elsa, before she fell under a cloud of doubt. All hell breaks loose as Telramund alleges before King Heinrich (Icelandic bass Kristinn Sigmundsson) that Elsa has committed a horrific act, and Lohengrin’s rather magical appearance pits the knight against Telramund.

Wagner’s opera comments on many dimensions, including on true love. One can clearly see that Wagner suffered from unhappy marriages, and Lohengrin’s wedding night scene may be the most epic depiction of coitus interruptus in the entire history of art. Talk about love’s labors lost! The story also explores whether lovers should reveal their true inner selves, who they really are, to their partners; as well as the folly of marrying someone you’ve just met, without getting to know their future spouse first. There may be such a thing as love at first sight, but most of these impulsive marital unions are doomed to failure, as Wagner knew.

Lohengrin also observes the issues of faith versus doubt, paganism versus Christianity, sorcery versus religion, conditional versus unconditional love and miracles. The opera ponders secret societies and utopias, too.

More presciently, Wagner also sheds light on the cult of personality and mob mentality, as well as militarism. At first, the German soldiers wear Pickelhaube helmets with spikes, but by the third act they appear to be wearing Wehrmacht-style headgear like those worn during the Third Reich. The Nazis rather infamously misappropriated Wagner and his music, although the maestro died six years before Adolph Hitler’s birth. Leni Riefenstahl’s 1934 agitprop movie Triumph of the Will, a pseudo-documentary directed by essentially a feature/fiction filmmaker, may consciously or unconsciously incorporate elements of Lohengrin. In addition to the whole hero worship aspect, Triumph of the Will opens with Hitler descending from the skies to the adoring masses below in the gothic town of Nuremburg, just as Lohengrin arrives via a black swan (which, in Triumph of the Will, is der Fuhrer’s airplane).

The L.A. Opera production designed by Dirk Hofacker has its share of special effects not unlike last weekend’s other wizardry work, the latest installment of the Harry Potter franchise. 3-D is much the film vogue nowadays, but by George, Hofacker’s set in this three-act show really is three-dimensional! Hofacker’s bombed out church -- most of the action takes place within or outside of it -- is one of the best sets I’ve ever seen grace the stage of the Dorothy Chandler. And not only is the set solid, but it actually moves, in real time. Take that, Avatar!

Without trying to be insulting, some of the oversized performers also give IMAX a run for its money. Unlike its younger sibling, the cinema, opera cares more about singing ability than it does about the looks of its stars, some of whom wouldn’t exactly be playing romantic leads on the silver screen -- if you catch my drift. The lighting by Mark McCullough, plus the changing skies, with clouds, stars, et al, are likewise glorious. It is not an overstatement to say that L.A. Opera’s sets can be true co-stars, like in Lohengrin.

James Conlon ably conducts the orchestra. Surprisingly, the best piece of music Wagner composed for Lohengrin is the sonorous, stirring, brassy Prelude to Act III, which, for my money rivals "The Ride of the Valkyries" and "Siegfried’s Funeral March" from Gotterdammerung (both in The Ring Cycle) as Wagner’s single greatest piece of music.

Nevertheless, there is enough to delight the eye and ear in Lohengrin to make even the troubled Lindsay Lohan grin.


Lohengrin runs through Dec. 12 at L.A. Opera at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 N. Grand Ave., Downtown Los Angeles. For more information: 213/972-8001;
www.laopera.com







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