Quite Different
A special 'Otello',
reviewed by GIUSEPPE PENNISI
Otello
has a special place in Verdi's production.
The composer
was seventy-five years old when the opera
was unveiled at La
Scala with tremendous success.
This last work, separated from the others by a long
time gap, was an attempt to break with the past in an effort to compose a new,
more modern,
concept of music drama: a
more fluid type of opera, closer to prose drama in its willingness to admit a
swift succession of emotional
attitudes during a series of dramatic
confrontations. Otello is not an easy opera to stage. Most recently, I reviewed
for this magazine two very different
approaches: the productions in
Bucharest
and Verona ('Gripping and
Engrossing', 12 September 2013 and 'Brilliant
Ideas', 24 November 2013). In both these reviews, I emphasized how difficult it
is to have the two tenors
required, respectively for the title role (a 'heroic tenor'
bordering on a Wagnerian
vocal register) and for the part of Cassio (a lyric
tenor, with nearly a Donizetti timbre),
a soprano
both lyric and dramatic (as in La
traviata), a baritone at
the top of Verdi's expression, a double chorus
and a conductor
(as well as an orchestra)
with the capacity for symphonic
fluidity in a drama where there is only 'action' —
no longer the customary Italian
patterned juxtaposition between 'action' and 'reflection'.
Two major Italian opera houses,
Teatro Massimo of Palermo
and Teatro San Carlo of Naples,
joined resources for a new production which opened in the Sicilian capital on
21 February 2014.
This review is based on that performance.
The production will go to Naples and will be shown worldwide in HD movie
houses. The intention is to compare well with the Metropolitan
Opera HD Otello which inaugurated the 2012-13
'international season'
of the New
York main opera
house. The
Met production featured the highly traditional 1994 Elijah
Moshinsky staging, Johan Botha in the title role, Renée
Fleming as Desdemona
and Semyon Bychkov in the pit (Passionate
Acting, 3 November 2012).
The Palermo-Naples production is quite different from that at the Met,
and especially in the staging. It is not as radical as that recently seen in
Bucharest (where the action was in an immigration camp of the present day). In
Henning Brockhaus' concept (stage sets by
Nicola Rubertelli and costumes by
Patricia Toffolutti), even though the principals
are in Renaissance
attire, none of the others wear clearly specified costumes, time wise. It is
clear that in Cyprus
there has been a war (maybe a Balkan conflict); there are signs of
semi-destroyed buildings. Also the populace and the military garrison seem to
indulge in rather desperate orgies; young
Cassio (Giuseppe Varano) appears a specialist in a large gamut of sexual
positions. Within this context, the devilish Jago (Giovanni Meoni) can build
his evil plot.
Both Otello (Gustavo Porta) and Desdemona (Julianna Di Giacomo) — as well as
Jago's wife
Emilia (Anna Malavasi) fall into the trap.
The staging is, no doubt, a strong
point of the production — which in Naples and in the HD showing will be
simplified and tamed in the orgy scene.
The drama evolves almost as in a black-and-white war destruction movie. This
makes it quite powerful.
However, the huge stage sets entail two intermissions (rather than only one, as
now customary), and this slows the tension.
Other significant aspects are the orchestra (conducted by
Renato Palumbo) and the choruses
(directed by Pietro
Monti and Salvatore Punturo). The orchestra shows the 'modernity' of this late
Verdi work clearly addressed to the future.
The choruses were excellent protagonists of
the first part of Act I and of the sweeping Act III concertato.
Julianna Di Giacomo is a perfect
Desdemona, a role she has often sung
both in her native United
States and in Europe.
She is passionate in
the Act I duet
and moving in the Act IV Willow Song
and Ave
Maria. Next to her Anna Malavasi was an effective
Emilia.
On the opening night
there were some troubles with the men's voices.
Only Giovanni Meoni seemed to fully fit his role (Jago). Although he has
handled Otello's impervious singing
several times, the argentine
Gustavo Porta was in severe difficulties with his opening short aria, Esultate!, and he could
not handle well the phrasing
and the mezza voce
in the duet. It is fair to say that Gustavo Porta improved as the performance
went on and delivered a quite good Niun
mi tema in Act IV. Giuseppe Varano is good looking and acts well as
Cassio, but on 21 February he was short in volume
and monotonous in voice.
In April (the HD worldwide live performance), Marco Berti will be Otello and Alessandro
Liberatore Cassio.
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