Autumn Trilogy
GIUSEPPE PENNISI writes
about
three operas on the brink of the twentieth century,
performed as a cycle in Ravenna
As underlined several
times here, Ravenna, like
Salzburg in
the Austrian Alps,
is a festival town on the shore of the Adriatic sea. After a long Summer
Festival in June and July, it features an 'Autumn Trilogy' — three operas on a
theme with the same stage director, creative team and conductor as
well as a young cast. In addition, there is a regular opera
season, featuring eight productions this year, as well as a concert
season. As Ravenna was the capital of the Roman Empire and of two
different Kingdoms from 402 to 751, opera and concert goers can enjoy
quite a bit of sightseeing. An important part of the audience is
non-Regional, or coming from abroad.
The 'trilogy' is
masterminded by Cristina Mazzavillani Muti, who
also has a key role in the Summer Festival. This November, the title of
the trilogy is On the Brink of the Twentieth Century. It includes three operas that had their debuts
between 1890 and 1900 — Cavalleria Rusticana by Pietro Mascagni, I Pagliacci by Ruggero Leoncavallo and Tosca by Giacomo Puccini. The operas are presented in three cycles so
that the audience can see and listen to all of them during a three day
stay in Ravenna. I saw
the trilogy on 17-19 November 2017.
A scene from Leoncavallo's 'Pagliacci' at the Ravenna Festival's
'Trilogia d'Autunno'. Photo © 2017 Zani
Casadio. Click on the image for higher resolution
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As the first two operas
are relatively short, each of them is prefaced by a forty minute
performance where children, aged
eight to sixteen, show their understanding and views of the opera about
to be shown. The operas have the same conductor, Vladimir Ovodok, and the
same creative team — Cristina Mazzavillani Muti for stage direction,
Vincent Longuemare for lighting, David Loom for visual design, David
Broccoli for video programming and Alessandro Lai for costumes. In the
pit is the Luigi Cherubini Orchestra,
created and often conducted by Riccardo Muti. The chorus is
provided by the Teatro Municipale di Piacenza, directed by Corrado
Casati, and the children's chorus Ludus Vocalis is led by Elisabetta
Agostini. This provides for artistic unity. Finally, the cycle represents
travel from Sicily (Cavalleria)
to Calabria (Pagliacci) and Rome (Tosca)
during the last decade of the nineteenth century.
A scene from Mascagni's 'Cavalleria Rusticana' at the Ravenna
Festival's 'Trilogia d'Autunno'. Photo © 2017 Zani Casadio. Click on the image
for higher resolution
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A sunny but primitive
village near Catania is the set for Cavalleria. The strong light
provides the atmosphere of a Greek tragedy; performances in Greece used
to start in the early afternoon and end at sunset. The orchestra
emphasizes the tints. Chiara Mogini excelled in the generally good cast.
She dominated the difficult vocal role very well by ascending to high
notes and descending to a low register without showing any difficulties.
Antoniella Carpenito as Lucia and Chiara Mogini as Santuzza in
Mascagni's 'Cavalleria Rusticana' at the Ravenna Festival's 'Trilogia
d'Autunno'. Photo © 2017 Zani
Casadio. Click on the image for higher resolution
|
In Pagliacci too
we are in a small village, but one somewhat better off than that in Cavalleria:
the folks can afford entertainment by travelling theatre companies. Here
the key colour is black. It is a black play of blood and guts where only
Nedda and the village children wear white. Ovodok's conducting is
brisk, accelerating the impending drama to its double homicide
conclusion. In this good cast are noticeable voices such
as Estibaliz Martyn, Kiril Manolov and Diego Cavazzin, who had to act and
sing with an arm in a cast because of an incident.
Kiril Manolov as Tonio and Estibaliz Martyn as Nedda in Leoncavallo's
'Pagliacci' at the Ravenna Festival's 'Trilogia d'Autunno'. Photo ©
2017 Zani Casadio. Click on the image for
higher resolution
|
Cavazzin was still in
the cast on the following day when, as Mario Cavaradossi in Tosca,
the audience requested an encore after 'E lucevan le stelle'.
Diego Cavazzin as Cavaradossi in Puccini's 'Tosca' at the Ravenna
Festival's 'Trilogia d'Autunno'. Photo © 2017 Zani Casadio. Click on the image
for higher resolution
|
Dark colours dominate
each of the three acts of Tosca. We are no longer in a poor
Sicilian village, but in a slightly better off small Calabrese town. Sets
and projections show the majestic baroque architecture of Rome, including
St Peter's dome. At the end of the first act, the Te Deum scene
fills St Andrew's Church with light. In the second act, there is an
elegant use of singers' shadows on the Palazzo Farnese walls. In the
third act, the night over St Angel's castle becomes a slightly pink dawn
at day break; dawn should mean hope, but in Tosca it is tragedy. Ovodok
and the Cherubini orchestra render Puccini's
melodic symphonic writing and the use of leitmotif well. Along
with Cavazzin, Virginia Tola
and Andrea Zaupa were experienced and well-versed as Tosca and Scarpia.
Andrea Zaupa as Scarpia and Virginia Tola in the title role of
Puccini's 'Tosca' at the Ravenna Festival's 'Trilogia d'Autunno'. Photo
© 2017 Zani Casadio. Click on the image for higher resolution
|
There were ovations and
open stage applause. Next year, the festival may include three new
productions of Verdi's
operas. Look
out!
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