Carnival in Venice
GIUSEPPE PENNISI reviews Hervé's
'Les Chevaliers de la Table Ronde'
'Les Chevaliers de la Table Ronde'
A not very
joyful happy-go-lucky Carnival, this year in Venice. With
Easter Sunday on 27 March, it took place earlier than usual: at the beginning of a rather
rainy and foggy February. Then, the long recession
is taking a toll on what people intend to
spend for entertainment, parties
and masked balls. On Mardi Gras 9 February, only a few were wearing masks on
the streets and squares; by 9.30pm most of the restaurants seemed either closed
or waiting for few and far between clients. Nonetheless, there was a lot of fun
and many laughs at the Teatro Malibran, the smaller art deco theatre of the two opera houses of the La Fenice Foundation.
The Carnival
show was an import from France: Les
Chevaliers de la Table Ronde by Hervé (the nickname of Louis Auguste
Florimond Ronger), considered the 'father' of French opera buffa, which has
distinct differences from Italian comic opera or Austrian operetta. First of
all, it includes a strong element of political satire. (Les
Chevaliers had its debut in 1866 at Les Bouffes Parisiennes; thus the
satire was addressed to the Second Empire.) Hervé had to cross the Channel also
for political reasons and work in London for a few
years. Les Bouffes Parisiennes became Offenbach's kingdom.
The satire was extended to the opera style then
fashionable in the 1866, the target of Hervé's humor was Verdi's melodrama and,
consequently, there are arias and even a
concertato in Verdi's style, as seen through a deforming mirror. Many Verdi fans
can take a fun ride.
Nonetheless,
Les Chevaliers is a very interesting rediscovery
on its own account: spoken parts are intercalated with musical numbers and real
acrobatic numbers. The music has excellent moments. In Venice the original three acts
are compacted into a single two-hour act to quicken the action. The stage director, set
designer and costume designer is
Pierre-André Weitz: its style reminds of Charlie Chaplin and The Marx Brothers'
slapstick. There are thirteen soloists, although
some sing very little
as they are actors, dancers and
acrobats. In the pit, Christophe Grapperon conducts an ensemble of twelve
soloists. They are all quite young. There are
at least two remarkable voices: Ingrid
Perruche and Chantal Santon-Jeffery.
The very
intricate plot is drawn
from Breton sagas and from Ariosto's Orlando Furioso. Too long to
summarize, it is also a pretext for swift action, gags, slapsticks, satire and
musical numbers. The audience enjoyed it;
some critics ranked it
as one of the best offers to subscribers of La Fenice's opera and ballet season.
Quite often,
these revivals have a few performances and then
disappear again. This does seem to be the case of Les Chevaliers de la Table
Ronde.
The production is
organized by the Centre de Musique Romantique Française, a private Swiss foundation
with its headquarters in Venice (see 'A Real Joy', 16 February 2015 and 'A Wealthy Maverick', 21 April 2015), in
collaboration with some fifteen French, Belgian, Italian
and Dutch theatres. Some
seventy performances are already scheduled over two opera seasons. It may
also reach the UK and the USA. A CD of
the ten most elaborate musical numbers is available, and the stage action lends
itself quite well to DVD and television.
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