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Handel: Semele - Pretty Yende, Niamh O'Sullivan (Photo: Vincent Pontet) |
Handel: Semele; Pretty Yende, Ben Bliss, Alice Coote, Brindley Sherratt, director: Oliver Mears, conductor: Christian Curnyn; Royal Opera House
Reviewed 15 July 2025
A disappointing account of the title role alongside a misguided attempt at updating and relevance, mean Oliver Mear's heavy handed production never quite comes alive
Handel's later oratorios suggest that he was thinking dramatically, but whether he ever considered the works on stage is a moot point. We have little or no record of his thinking on these matters, no long correspondences with his librettists. But oratorios like Semele, Hercules and Susanna suggest he was thinking beyond a simple biblical story. The libretto to Jephtha owes as much to Greek drama as it does to the Bible, and how we would love to have a sample of Handel's discussions with librettist Thomas Morell about that. And then Theodora, though a religious subject, was based on a romantic novel!
But there is no doubt that these works present problems on the modern operatic stage. There are moments when Handel forgets about the on-going drama and concentrates on something more abstract. The large-scale choruses in both Semele and Susanna contrast strongly with the lighter character of the rest of the drama.
When Handel's Semele was first performed, his contemporaries viewed it as a possible satire on the relationship between King George II and his mistress, Lady Yarmouth, and I imagine that Congreve's original libretto, written for John Eccles in 1706 had a similar intent. There is a lightness to much of Handel's writing in Semele and the most successful stagings of the work that I have seen have not taken themselves too seriously.
At Covent Garden, having giving us an intensely serious version of Handel's Jephtha with a radical subversion of the ending in 2023 [see my review], Oliver Mears returned to Handelian oratorio with Semele given a similarly highly serious makeover. We caught the performance at the Royal Opera House on 15 July 2025, when Christian Curnyn conducted with Pretty Yende as Semele, Ben Bliss as Jupiter, Alice Coote as Juno, Brindley Sherratt as Cadmus and Somnus, Carlo Vistoli as Athamas, Niamh O'Sullivan as Ino, and Marianna Hovanisyan as Iris. Designs were by Annemarie Woods with movement by Sarah Fahie. This was a co-production with Théâtre des Champs-Élysées where the production debuted earlier this year with the same cast (and where the pictures were taken).
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Handel: Semele - Brindley Sherratt (Photo: Vincent Pontet) |
This was a highly serious take on the story, and though there were comic moments, Mears' intentions were to tell a remarkably disturbing story. Set loosely in the 1960s, the story took place in the very grand mansion inhabited by Jove and Juno (Ben Bliss and Alice Coote), where Cadmus (Brindley Sherratt) and his people are now servants. Jove's intentions are distinctly controlling, and his transactional relationship with Semele (Pretty Yende) ends in her incineration, done in a way that Mears suggests is a cycle, gone through endlessly. Many of Juno's scenes were comic, how could they not be, but there was little comedy or pastoral delight in the relations between Semele and Jupiter. At the end, as the assembled 'populace' watched Semele's incineration, Ino (Niamh O'Sullivan) became highly disturbed whilst Athmas (Carlo Vistoli) went mad.