Real Power
Three one act operas
exploring the condition of women,
reviewed by GIUSEPPE PENNISI
Three
one-act operas on women's
condition were premiered in Rome and Bologna
during the last weeks. In Rome on 29 May 2013, the
Accademica Filarmonica Romana presented the world premiere of a double bill: Fadwa,
text and music by Dmitri Scarlato and La stanza di Lena, text by
Renata Molinari and music by Daniele Carnini. In Bologna on 11 June, Divorzio
all'Italiana by Giorgio Battistelli had its Italian premiere. They are very different
works. The double bill is based on grueling episodes of violence against
women, which had received considerable press coverage: the murder of a
Pakistani girl by
her own father --
both emigrants and long term
residents of Northern Italy --
because she was in love with
a young
Italian; the abduction and the ten years in prison of an Austrian girl
at the hands of a psychopathic monster. Divorzio all'Italiana is
based on the Academy Award movie Divorce Italian Style, a major box
office hit of the nineteen sixties. Very gloomy and tragic, the
double bill was entrusted to young composers from
Azio Corghi school. Very
funny, and
in experienced hands, Divorzio all'Italiana is a rare modern 'comic opera'.
The
first and the second one act opera belong to a new line of
music theater being tried out in Italy with the aim of attracting new audience:
'reality operas' based on current events.
Three such operas were presented in 2011 at
the Lyric Experimental Theatre in Spoleto:
their success was minimal.
Nonetheless, on 15 June 2013, the Spoleto Theater announced two
additional 'reality operas' for September. Fadwa and La stanza
di Lena were performed on one night only
in the 2,000 seat Teatro Olimpico. The production had
been financed, to a large extent, by a 'support group' of
180 women and the staging was
timed to coincide with the Italian ratification of a UN convention
against violence to women. Many politicians were in the audience. A 'sold
out' house, with accolades, applause and
ovations, seemed to bode well for the future. The
real proof will be when and whether other theatres will
take the production.
A scene from the Rome production of 'La stanza di Lena' by Renata
Molinari and Daniele Carnini. Click on the image for higher resolution
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In my
view, Fadwa is a one-hour attempt to make musical theatre on a
rather poor (and
quite pretentious) libretto, with
skilled orchestration but
vocal lines based
almost only on declamation. La stanza di Lena is more promising: a
concise two character plot with
an echo also of German music
of the nineteen thirties. There's vivid
orchestration and vocal contrast
between the tenor and soprano,
evolving into a final grand 'arioso' for
the latter. The Musica d'oggi Ensemble and
the young soloists
selected from among a hundred candidates -- Damiana Mizzi, Arianna
Vendittelli, Martina Belli, Alessandro Luciano,
Gianluca Bocchino and Dario Ciotoli -- were unexceptional.
A scene from Dmitri Scarlato's 'Fadwa' in Rome. Click on the image for higher resolution
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Divorzio
all'Italiana received its world
premiere in 2009 in
Nancy after a commission by
the Opéra National de la Lorraine. It is already a well-travelled opera;
I believe it may reach the UK and
the US. The libretto follows the nineteen sixties film quite
closely. In nearly ninety minutes, there are twenty-three 'musical
sequences' or numbers. Inspired by Giorgio De Chirico's 'metaphysical paintings', the
single sets
shows, with a few props, all the 'ins' and 'outs' of a small and gossipy
Sicilian town of
some fifty years ago where women have the key to real power even
though men think of themselves as being astute womanizers. The protagonist, Don
Fefè, devises a plot to have his own wife
betray him with a former boyfriend. Thus, he kills them but a very
clement court condemns him to only eighteen months in jail (because the
'crime' was caused by an 'honor offense' against him, his family and
the whole town). The very sophisticated orchestral and
vocal score also
has reminiscences of baroque
theatre, since all the characters are sung by
men; the women's roles are
entrusted to baritones and basses and the male roles
mostly to tenors, even
with very high registers). There is 'bel canto' married to Sprechstimme,
recitative,
declamation and the 'terzetti' and 'quartetti' of eighteenth century Italian comic opera.
A scene from the Bologna premiere of Giorgio Battistelli's 'Divorzio
all'Italiana'. Click on the image for
higher resolution
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The British David Pountney was
the stage director; the French
Daniel Kawka the conductor, and
there was a top class cast with
Alfonso Antoniozzi in the role en travesti of the unfaithful wife
(the key protagonist), along with Cristiano Cremonini, Gabriele Ribis,
Marco Bussi, Nicolò Ceriani, Alessandro Spina, Sonia Visentin, Daichi
Fujiki, Maurizio Leoni, Fabrizio Beggi and Carlo Morini.
A scene from the Bologna premiere of Giorgio Battistelli's 'Divorzio
all'Italiana'. Click on the image for
higher resolution
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There
was a lot of laughter and applause. I think that Divorzio all'Italiana
will continue to travel.
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