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Verdi: Aida - English National Opera - Gwyn Hughes Jones, Robert Winslade Anderson, Eleanor Dennis (photo Tristram Kenton) |
Reviewed by Robert Hugill on Sep 29 2017 Star rating:
A spectacular new production which benefits from some superb singing
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Gwyn Hughes Jones, Latonia Moore (photo Tristram Kenton) |
In addition to the large chorus, there was a skills ensemble based on the female-led theatre company Mimbre, with Lina Johanssen as movement director, Basil Twist as silk effects choreographer and Elaine Tyler-Hall responsible for chorus movement.
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Michelle DeYoung (photo Tristram Kenton) |
Pye and his team did not shy away from the fact that movement was a big feature of this opera. Aida is in many ways one of Verdi's most French-influenced operas with its interaction of personal tragedy, public triumph, intimate scenes and large scale dance sequences. The Act One scene in the temple was truly spectacular, and the Act Two triumph scene was finely orchestrated giving us a series of vivid tableaux, based around a ceremony for bringing home the bodies after the war. But in this scene Pye could not disguise the weak dramaturgy of the long dance sequence, and given that it is routine to cut Verdi's ballet sequences in Don Carlos, and never to perform the French version of Il Trovatore, I do wonder at directors including all of the dance movements in this scene.
And what of the singing? Well the cast was finely balanced, and probably as good as you are going to get in late Verdi today. Latonia Moore made a simply spectacular Aida.
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Musa Ngqungwana, Latonia Moore (photo Tristram Kenton) |
All three singers were not helped by the decision to use the scrim for the all important intimate scenes in Acts One and Two. Granted, the settings looked striking in an abstract way, but McDermott and Pye simple failed to create real context for these scenes and fell into the trap, common in Aida productions, of seeming to be more concerned for the logistics of the two spectacular (but dramatically less important) scenes. Michelle DeYoung's Amneris simply failed to register strongly enough here, and it took Hughes Jones some time to develop dramatic momentum. It was only Latonia Moore who showed how it was done, popping out in front of the scrim singing her aria and really making us care for this woman.
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Robert Winslade Anderson, Michelle DeYoung (photo Tristram Kenton) |
Overall the production seemed a bit unfocussed, yet spectacular, and I hope it gets a revival so that McDermott and Pye can tweak things a little. One aspect puzzled me, with the neo-British Raj style military costuming for the men, having the Egyptians as mainly white, whilst Aida and her father were singers of colour, rather led me to expect a greater exploration of the possibilities of Aida's relevance to colonialism, but this never happened.
Matthew Best made a strong, if understated Pharaoh, and Robert Winslade Anderson made a good impression as Ramfis, a role that he was not expected to sing until 11 October. Eleanor Dennis and David Webb completed the cast as the High Priestess and messenger.
The chorus was on very strong form, not just singing lustily but going some way towards making us care about these people, particularly in the section of the Triumph scene where the bodies of the slain were brought back and remembered. The skills ensemble went far beyond entertaining, and were central to the look of the piece. It was a very modern solution, but having Aida without a dance troupe of some sort is a non-starter, and her the skills ensemble made the transition into being part of the drama.
The opera was sung in Edmund Tracey's translation which was originally created for the 1979 ENO production (directed by John Copley, spectacular sets by Stefanos Lazaridis). It has not aged well, and came over as rather plain and unpoetic.
Keri-Lynn Wilson once again impressed in the Italian repertory, drawing fine and sophisticated playing from the ENO Orchestra, whilst never losing the grandeur of the piece. I liked her pacing, quite brisk at times and not very indulgent, yet flexible enough in the crucial scenes so that you felt Latonia Moore and Gwyn Hughes Jones seemed to have all the time in the world.
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Verdi: Aida - English National Opera - Gwyn Hughes Jones (photo Tristram Kenton) |
At the end of October a new Aida (Morenike Fadayami) and Amneris (Dana Beth Miller) take over, and it will certainly be interesting to see and hear how the production develops.
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