Little to do with Shakespeare
A strong production of Rossini's 'Otello'
opens Teatro San Carlo's new season in Naples,
reported by GIUSEPPE PENNISI
opens Teatro San Carlo's new season in Naples,
reported by GIUSEPPE PENNISI
On 30 November 2016, Teatro San Carlo in Naples inaugurated a very rich season: seventeen opera productions and, in
addition, concerts and ballet — a clear indication that the theater
wants to have a non-secondary part in the city's revival after the long crisis. This was a gala evening with a gala dinner offered by
the jewelry maison Bulgary, with elegant long dresses and black ties.
On-stage was almost a rarity — Rossini's Otello in the two
hundredth anniversary of its
premiere. I had very
good orchestra seats.
The reason usually given for the rarity of performances of
Rossini's Otello is that Francesco Maria Berio di Salsa's libretto made hash of Shakespeare. If the characters were called
by names other than Otello, Iago and Desdemona, audiences would have no idea that they
were watching an operatic retelling of the drama. Another charge is that only
the third act, when Desdemona meets her fate in the one segment that hews
closely to Shakespeare, is truly inspired music. This judgment is unfair, for
the first two acts have long stretches that are lyrically beguiling and imaginative. As a
matter of fact, Rossini's Otello is little to do with Shakespeare. It is
a conventional early nineteenth century operatic plot where a father (Elmiro) wants his daughter (Desdemona) to marry the son
of the Doge (Rodrigo) whilst she is in love and secretly married to the Lord Admiral of the Venetian Fleet (Otello) who just
happen to be a Moor. A devious individual (Iago)
makes Otello believe that Desdemona is betraying him. Thus, the tragic end. Note that, until the end
of the nineteenth century, Rossini's Otello was
a major hit with three hundred productions or revivals — seventy in Frankfurt alone; some had a 'happy
ending' with Iago's plot discovered, a grand rondo, and a concertato to the long
life and love of Otello and
Desdemona.
The main reason that this opera is seldom performed is that it is so difficult to cast. There were some pretty fancy
tenors in the company in Naples for which Rossini
wrote Otello, and he felt compelled to use them. So the opera contains
three virtuosic tenor roles, each with a slightly different register: Otello, Iago and
Rodrigo, who becomes a full-fledged rival for
Desdemona's love. Also Desdemona was composed to fit Isabella Colbran's
amphibious voice able to reach a very high
register, to sing very hard coloratura and then
gently descend to almost an alto voice. This kind of voice was
very hard to find then and even more now.
After Verdi's depiction of Otello — the
most colossal tenor role in the Italian repertory, a tormented, complex and pitiable characterization
fully the equal of Shakespeare's tragic hero — some operagoers may find it
hard to accept a bel canto Otello who
sings lilting tunes and dispatches phrase after
phrase of coloratura roulades.
Rossini's Otello has had recent revivals in Italy: in Rome in the sixties with stage sets and costumes by Giorgio De Chirico, and in
Pesaro in Giancarlo Del Monaco's production, seen for
several years at Deutsche Oper Berlin. There was also an excellent
production at Zurich Opera (available on DVD) with
Cecilia Bartoli as Desdemona.
From the musical standpoint, the Naples production was excellent. Conductor Gabriele Ferro reproduced
Rossini's sound by raising the orchestra pit
and doubling up the string quartet so as to
provide a darker sound. Nino Machaidze was a perfect Desdemona, both vocally and in terms of acting. John Osborn (Otello), Dmitry
Korchak (Rodrigo) and Juan Francisco Gatell (Iago) were the three tenors in
contest for her. Mirco Palazzi was an effective Elmiro. The stage sets by Dante Ferretti were monumental.
Better not to comment on the stage direction, though:
Amos Gitai wanted to give the opera warring and racial undertones with some
Middle Eastern projections ... the only weak point in a very good performance.
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