Eros and Philosophy
GIUSEPPE PENNISI's last
report from
this year's Salzburg Festival features
a new production of Mozart's 'Così fan tutte'
Martina Janková as Despina and Michael Volle as Don Alfonso in Mozart's
'Così fan tutte' at the Salzburg Festival. Photo © 2016 Ruth Walz.
Click on the image for higher resolution
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In 2013, I was somewhat disappointed by the very traditional, elegantly plush but neither innovative nor imaginative staging (New Directions, 31
August 2013) offered at the
Festival. In the Summer Festival 2016, the same director, Sven-Eric Bechtolf, in a different theatre (Felsenreitschule, rather than Haus für
Mozart) had a very different result. Initially, I was concerned about the
staging of Così in the huge Felsenreitschule, originally
conceived not as a theatre but as a place where horsemen would train
horses for the pleasure of the Prince-Cardinal who ruled Salzburg in Mozart's times. Nonetheless, Sven-Eric
Bechtolf (who is also the set designer, whilst the costumes are signed by Mark Bouman) had a brilliant idea. The well-known plot is conceived as the
contrast between Masonic Enlightenment, on the one hand, and affections,
Eros and sex instincts, on the other. The action is played in the central
part of the stage (with only painted sets and props) whilst on the side of the stage it
is observed by the Masons who also move to the three rows of boxes (originally
conceived so that the Salzburg aristocracy could admire the horses and
their trainers in the eighteenth century). In short, a dark comedy on the struggle between philosophy (Enlightenment and its rationalism), on the one
hand, and sentiments and erotic love, on the other. At the end, there is no winner:
the final scene is open as the confrontation continues ...
maybe forever.
Julia Kleiter as Fiordiligi in Mozart's 'Così fan tutte' at the
Salzburg Festival. Photo © 2016 Ruth Walz. Click on the image for
higher resolution
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Così is not only dramaturgy and philosophy but essential music. In the pit,
the Salzburg Mozarteum Orchestra conducted by Ottavio Dantone provided a magnificent
reading of the unabridged score. As the opera is quite long — four hours including a half hour intermission
between the first and the second part — the recitatives are often
shortened, which does not help understanding the work. Maestro Dantone is
a specialist of baroque operas and concerts, and offered an exemplary reading of the
frequent changes of moods, tints and colors — a key element of the score.
Julia Kleiter as Fiordiligi, Martina Janková as Despina, Alessio
Arduini as Guglielmo, Michael Volle as Don Alfonso, Mauro Peter as
Ferrando and Angel Brower as Dorabella in Mozart's 'Così fan tutte' at
the Salzburg Festival. Photo © 2016 Ruth Walz. Click on the image for
higher resolution
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The six singers are also
excellent actors: Julia Kleiter (Fiordiligi), Angela Brower
(Dorabella), Martina Janková (Despina), Mauro Peter (Ferrando), Alessio
Arduini (Guglielmo) and Michael Volle (Don Alfonso). Especially impressive were Michael Volle as an authoritative
'enlightened' Don Alfonso and Julia Kleiter as a doubtful and tormented
Fiordiligi. A
great success.
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