A Duel of Voices
Donizetti's 'Maria
Stuarda' in Rome,
reviewed by GIUSEPPE PENNISI
Carmela Remigio as Elisabetta and Marina Rebeka in the title role of
'Maria Stuarda' at Teatro dell'Opera di Roma. Photo © 2017 Yasuko Kageyama. Click on the
image for higher resolution
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In Anders Wiklund's
critical edition of the score, Maria Stuarda is a compact opera —
about two hours of music, compared with three each of Anna Bolena
and Roberto Devereux. It emphasizes the confrontation of the two
queens over the young man each of them is longing for rather than the
historical power struggle. Indeed, Schiller's play — the basis for Giuseppe Bardari's libretto — takes little notice of the historical facts.
Mary was forty-five when she was beheaded (after eight years in jail) and
Elisabeth was fifty-three at that time. The Earl of Leicester appears not
to have been such a good looking man to cause a bloody fight between the
two queens. As mentioned, Wiklund's critical edition emphasizes the
sentimental and erotic tensions rather
than the political
context. These were the key ingredients that pleased the audience until
the mid-nineteenth century (when Maria Stuarda disappeared from the
repertory). It
reappeared around 1990 when the opera was a war horse for singers like Beverly Sills,
Levia Gencer, Edita Gruberova, Monserrat Caballé and Joan Sutherland.
The opera has very many interesting
numbers. The first act finale — the
confrontation between the two queens — which historically never occurred
as they never met — is unusual in that the middle section is longer than
the larghetto and
the final stretta. The concertato at the second act finale, after
the eloquent and
moving prayer, is magnificent. Donizetti was
aware of the value of Maria Stuarda: he borrowed some of the
numbers for later operas such as La Favorite and Adelaide.
The Rome
production is a collaboration with the San Carlo Theater in Naples,
where the stage director
(Andrea De Rosa) and his team (Sergio Tramonti for the staging —
essentially a single set — and Ursula Patzak for the costumes, in
black and white) also staged Schiller's tragedy.
A scene from 'Maria Stuarda' at Teatro dell'Opera di Roma. Photo © 2017 Yasuko Kageyama. Click on the
image for higher resolution
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Carmela Remigio
(Elisabetta) must be praised for her skill in
managing her voice; I
remember her in Aix-en-Province some twenty years ago, when under the direction of Abbado and
of Harding she surprised the audience as a young lyric coloratura
soprano. She has now a deeper and darker voice
but still an astonishing coloratura.
Carmela Remigio as Elisabetta in 'Maria Stuarda' at Teatro dell'Opera
di Roma. Photo © 2017 Yasuko
Kageyama. Click on the image for higher resolution
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Marina Rebeka (Maria)
has a very pure voice and commands her breath very well.
Marina Rebeka in the title role of 'Maria Stuarda' at Teatro dell'Opera
di Roma. Photo © 2017 Yasuko
Kageyama. Click on the image for higher resolution
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There's a perfect match
with Paolo Fanale (Leicester) and Carlo Cigni (Talbot), both in
magnificent shape.
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