Britten Theatre, Royal College
of Music
Concepcíon – Kezia Bienek
Gonzalve – Gyula Rab
Torquemada – Peter Aisher
Ramiro – Luke D Williams
Don Iñigo Gomez – Bradley
Travis
L’Enfant – Rose Setten
Le Feu, Le Rossignol –
Natasha Day
La Princesse – He Wu
L’Arithmétique, La Rainette –
Craig Jackson
Maman, La Tasse Chinoise, La
Libellule – Maria Ostroukhova
La Bergère, La Chouette –
Elizabeth Holmes
La Chatte, L’Ecureuil – Katie
Coventry
L’Horloge comtoise, le Chat –
Nicholas Morton
Le Fauteuil – Jerome Knox
L’Arbre – Matthew Buswell
La Chauve-Souris, Une
Pastourelle – Josephine Goddard
Un Pâtre – Amy Williamson
La Thêière – Daniel Farrimond
James Bonas (director)
Ruari Murchison (designs)
Wayne Dowdeswell (lighting)
Gyula Rab (Gonzalve), Kezia Bienek (Concepcion) |
L'Enfant (Rose Setten), La Princesse (He Wu) |
James Bonas’s stagings treat them as independent works, which of course they are; there is no discernible attempt to forge a link between them, but then nor is there any need to do so. With the help of Ruari Murchison’s designs, we thus find ourselves for the first half where we should expect to do so: the shop of a Toledo clockmaker. The clocks that the muleteer, Ramiro, must carry up and down the stairs and the staircase itself are our guiding presence: plot device and environment working well together. Costumes hint at a Frenchman’s view of Spain, reminding us not only of the circumstances of this particular opera but also of the old quip, fair or otherwise, that the best Spanish music has been written by Frenchmen. The characters are sharply directed, enabling the young singers’ considerable acting and vocal abilities to shine to the full.
Concepcion and Ramiro (Luke D Williams) |
Kezia Bienek offered a properly
feminine Concepcíon, housewifely languor and determination to avail herself of
what her visitors can – and cannot – provide alternating as the situation
demanded. Peter Aisher deputised for an indisposed Nick Pritchard as her
husband, Torquemada, though one would hardly have known; he seemed fully at
ease with role and production alike. Gyula Rab’s Gonsalve provided humour – the
very parody of a poet’s self-absorbed conceit – and vocal excellence, well
partnered in those respects by his rival, Bradley Travis’s Don Iñigo Gomez. And
last but certainly not least, Luke D Williams offered a fine assumption of the
muleteer’s role, this Ramiro’s vocal and physical attraction perfectly clear,
whilst he remained properly clueless about the games unfolding around him.
The nocturnal setting for L’Enfant et les Sortilèges contrasted
appealingly with the Spanish sun of its predecessor. There was something
properly dream-like, even trippy, to the stage realisation of Colette’s and, above
all, Ravel’s world. We were free to follow our own interpretations, Freudian or
otherwise, and there was certainly implied menace to an opera that emerged as
far from innocent; at the same time, the production does not seem to impose any
particular view upon us. It evokes, maybe even provokes, but does not
constrain.
The Royal College of Music
Opera Orchestra under Michael Rosewell had proved excellent during its Spanish
hour, and once more did so here, though perhaps there is still more opportunity
for it to shine in L’Enfant. Despite
its smallish size (strings 8.6.4.3.2), it never sounded undernourished; indeed,
it sounded just right for the Britten Theatre. Ravel’s heady blends of wonder
and precision, of Gallic suavity and infectious orientalism, sounded perfectly
fitted to the child’s adventures on stage – though arguably I should have
expressed that the other way round. Again, the cast offered a great deal to
enjoy; I heard not a single weak link. Rose Setten captured admirably the
truculence and receptivity required of the child, Maria Ostroukhova a splendid
complement both in maternal and other roles. Without listing every assumption,
I should especially like to single out He Wu’s Princess: again precise in
musical terms, yet ambiguously inviting with respect to the drama. Is this a
child’s awakening? ‘Probably yet not necessarily', remains the answer – as so often
proves to be the case with Ravel.