Fiordiligi – Elizabeth Llewellyn
Dorabella – Julia Riley
Ferrando – Andrew Staples
Guglielmo – Dawid Kimberg
Despina – Joana Sears
Alfonso – Nicholas Garrett
Harry Fehr (director)
Alex Eales (designs)
Colin Grenfell (lighting)
Opera Holland Park Chorus
City of London Sinfonia
Alex Eales (designs)
Colin Grenfell (lighting)
Opera Holland Park Chorus
City of London Sinfonia
Thomas Kemp (conductor)
Are my expectations too high when
it comes to Mozart’s operas in general, and to Così fan tutte in general? Probably. Should they be? Certainly. For
the problem remains, as I have doubtless said far too many times before, Mozart’s
music, and not just his operas, requires but one thing: perfection. It is the
most unsparing music of all, with nowhere, but nowhere, to hide. Every note
must be considered and sounded both in itself and in connection to every other.
Place a wrong or even slightly excessive accent upon a single note and the fault
will be glaringly magnified; misjudge a tempo, which is not to say that there
is only one ‘correct’ tempo, and the entire apple-cart will be upset. However,
conduct Così fan tutte like Sir Colin Davis – or rather, as Sir Colin Davis – and it is an experience that will
remain with an audience for the rest of its life, opening doors one had never
expected to be there in the first place.
Yes, the comparison is odious, but Thomas Kemp is no Colin Davis.
I have heard worse, most obviously from the aggressively ‘authenticke’ brigade; Kemp did not seem actively to be trying to make Mozart’s music sound
unpleasant. Nevertheless, on this evidence, he is not a conductor who could claim
any particular or even general sympathy with Mozart. The opening bars of the
Overture were taken far too fast; thereafter, far too many numbers never hit
upon the just tempo. (It is worth repeating at this point that I do not for a
moment think there is one ‘correct’ tempo; the trick is to make whatever is
chosen sound right, to perform with conviction, sympathy, understanding, and of
course, a sense of connection to a greater whole.) ‘Smanie implacibilie’ was
breathless in quite the wrong way. Other sections of the score dragged, not so
much because they were slow – I doubt that anything was as ravishingly,
heart-stoppingly lingering as Davis would so often nowadays present it – but because
the tempo seemed arbitrary, applied from without, with little connection to
anything else, above all with little or no sense of harmonic motion.
The City of London
Sinfonia played decently, though the
strings could tend somewhat towards the anonymous. (At least they lacked the
acerbic nature of a ‘period’ orchestra.) For the most part, as so often in
Mozart, it was the woodwind section that most delighted; there was some fine
work indeed here from a number of principals. The kettledrums, however, were
often bizarrely prominent, not helped by the employment of hard sticks. Karl
Böhm would have rolled in his grave.
Had they been supported by a more
sympathetic conductor, the cast of young singers would doubtless have appeared
in a stronger light. As it was, there was nothing really to which one could
object, but there remained a sense that things might have been better. (Perhaps
that will dissipate during the run; first nights are rarely the best time to
catch singers in particular.) Elizabeth
Llewellyn, whom I admired greatly last year at Holland Park as the Countess,
delivered what was probably the strongest performance overall, as Fiordiligi.
The beauty of her tone-production could not be gainsaid, though her diction was
sometimes, for instance in ‘Per pietà’, occluded. Julia Riley’s Dorabella sometimes
lacked focus, though when that was achieved, showed considerable promise. Hers
was a forthright portrayal, doubtless in part so as to achieve greater contrast
with Fiordiligi, but was it sometimes excessively so? There second act duet
between the two veered dangerously close to crudity on Dorabella’s part. Andrew
Staples’s tone is very much of the ‘English tenor’ variety. I was not always
convinced that this served Ferrando so well, but it is a very difficult role to
get right; in other cases, often one ends up thinking the music sounds too
close to Puccini. ‘Un’ aura amoroso’ was beautifully sung, though there were
times elsewhere when greater presence might have been achieved. Dawid Kimberg’s
Guglielmo was blustering, swaggering even, able to call upon considerable vocal
reserves. Joana Seara offered a lively
Despina, though her tuning sometimes went a little awry. Nicholas Garrett, 2010’s Don Giovanni, presented an intelligent portrayal of Don Alfonso.
What of the production? It was, for
the most part, difficult to say anything much about it at all. I do not doubt
that it would have pleased self-proclaimed ‘traditionalists’, since the
costumes were all impeccably, almost aggressively, ‘period’ – if hardly
Neapolitan. Of course, Così is in no sense whatsoever ‘about’
eighteenth-century Naples, but the
logic of the literalist position is that it must be. It was difficult to detect
in Harry Fehr's production any idea of what Così might be about, any attempt to probe beneath its painfully
beautiful surfaces, or even to celebrate the pain upon the surface. We had a ‘period’
set, ‘period’ costumes, and that was really just about it. There was a nod to directorial
cliché in placing an audience on stage, supposedly ‘reacting’ to the events
witnessed, but have we not seen that sort of thing far too many times before?
Such framing can be interesting, even refreshing: I think, for instance, of
Nicholas Hytner’s production of Handel’s Serse
for ENO. However, if the intention were to highlight the artificiality of the
drama – the artificiality is absolutely necessary to permit Mozart’s agonising
psychological explorations – then it failed to come across; it appeared instead
rather more as an attempt to generate stage ‘business’ in the absence of any
other ideas. That is, until, part way through the second act, Fehr
suddenly decided to add a few more, which jarred hopelessly given the
uninvolving nature of what we had seen hitherto. Ferrando was laughed at by members
of the ‘audience’: it might have been movingly cruel, yet here simply came
across as an intrusion upon the music. Fiordiligi took off her dress, put on a
soldier’s uniform – a very odd, quasi-literalist interpretation of her attempt
to persuade herself to find her (erstwhile) lover – and then had that taken off
by Ferrando. (No need to worry: there was plenty beneath the dress and the
uniform.) Such ‘action’ merely came across as a realisation, too late in the day,
that nothing much had happened. This is, of course, an extremely difficult
opera to direct, yet Fehr barely seemed to have tried.