Rigoletto on the Beach
Verdi in Sardinia,
reviewed by GIUSEPPE PENNISI
A beach scene in Sardinia. Photo: Forte Village. Click on the image for higher resolution
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The arena has been
conceived in a modular manner: it can accommodate an audience varying from two thousand and five hundred
(operas, concerts) to five thousand (rock concerts); acoustics are quite good. In short, the arena is
conceived both for a top-class high paying audience (on the opening night, top prices for best seats were higher than at
the Salzburg or Bayreuth Festivals) and for the population of the area.
The Forte Arena in Sardinia. Photo:
Forte Village. Click on the image for higher resolution
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This Summer, four performances of Rigoletto, one on each Saturday in
June, will alternate with a popular American musical comedy (Mamma Mia!), ballet (Roberto Bolle and his company) and concerts (including one by
eighty-three-year-old Charles Aznavour).
This Rigoletto is
produced by Teatro Lirico di Cagliari, which has established a close relationship with Forte Village, one of its sponsors. It is
not an entirely new staging, and is based on an idea by Alberto Fassini;
the stage director is Joseph Franconi Lee; the sets and the costumes are by Alessandro Ciammarughi. The original production had to be revised to fit the very large stage:
without a roof, the full moon and stars of the Sardinian sky added charm to the reconstruction of palaces and alleys of Renaissance Mantua.
Forte Arena at night. Photo: Forte Village. Click on the image for higher resolution
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Seventy-five-year-old
Leo Nucci had the title role. He has performed Rigoletto at least six
hundred times on various continents. He knows, the part inside out, of
course, but he also knows how to tame the adverse implications of
humidity. He acted and sang like a middle age star. He received open stage applause and accolades.
Leo Nucci in the title role of Verdi's 'Rigoletto' at the Forte Arena
in Sardinia. Photo: Prima Tolu. Click on the image for higher
resolution
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Barbara Bargnesi as Gilda (centre) with Leonora Sofia as Giovanna
(left) in Verdi's 'Rigoletto' at the Forte Arena in Sardinia. Photo: Prima Tolu. Click on the image for
higher resolution
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At the strong request of the audience, Nucci and Bargnesi had
to encore Sì vendetta, tremenda vendetta.
The Duke of Mantua was the Spanish tenor Antonio Gandìa, another international star. He
has a generous voice, a clear timbre and an excellent acute. Rigoletto offered him many
opportunities for open stage applause.
Antonio Gandìa as the Duke of Mantua (right) with Ivana Canovic as the
Countess of Ceprano in Verdi's 'Rigoletto' at the Forte Arena in
Sardinia. Photo: Prima Tolu. Click on the image for higher resolution
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The new arena is
starting well and deserves all best wishes.
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