Grand Tableaux
'Jérusalem'
at the 2017 Verdi Festival,
reviewed by GIUSEPPE PENNISI
After a few lukewarm years, things are
looking up for the Verdi Festival. Most of the past debt has been cleared up. Under new
management, industrial and financial sponsors came back. The central
Government included the Festival under the few Italian musical events of 'international relevance', implying an
additional subsidy of a million euros. Finally, even before the 2017 Festival (28 September-22 October) started, a million euros'
worth of tickets had been sold. Thus, business is thriving.
A scene from Act I of Giuseppe Verdi's 'Jérusalem' at the Verdi
Festival in Parma. Photo © 2017 Roberto Ricci. Click on the image for
higher resolution
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This year's festival included four new
productions (often in joint ventures with other theatres where they will
be staged later in the 'season'): Jérusalem, La Traviata, Stiffelio and Falstaff.
There also concerts and a special section named 'Verdi Off' to attract youngsters
to opera. The festival has also announced the four new productions for
2018: Macbeth, Un Giorno di Regno, Le
Trouvère (French version of Il Trovatore) and Attila.
Due to other commitments, this year I could see and listen to only the
first two operas; Jérusalem and La Traviata. This review
refers only to the performance of Jérusalem I saw and
heard on 28 September 2017.
A scene from Act II of Verdi's 'Jérusalem' at the Verdi Festival. Photo
© 2017 Roberto Ricci. Click on the image for higher resolution
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This was Giuseppe Verdi's first French opera commission from La Grande Boutique,
as the composer used to call the Paris Opera House. There has been a long dispute among musicologists:
is Jérusalem an adaptation of I Lombardi alla
Prima Crociata to suit French taste and style — complex plot,
special scenic effects and ballets — or an autonomous work? I stand for
the second hypothesis for the following reasons. Only eleven (of the
twenty seven) musical numbers of I Lombardi alla Prima Crociata are
reproduced in Jérusalem, often with adaptations and modifications
— after all there are seven operas between I Lombardi alla Prima
Crociataand Jérusalem, and Verdi's own style had evolved.
The protagonist is a bel canto tenor, not the customary
Verdian melodramatic tenor. Emphasis is on the atmosphere and on the
grand tableaux, not on psychologicaldevelopment of the main characters. Jérusalem had
a good circulation in France and Belgium until the late nineteenth century. It was revived in Venice in 1952. Performances are rare and far between.
Annick Massis as Hélène and Ramón Vargas as Gaston in 'Jérusalem' at
the Verdi Festival. Photo © 2017 Roberto Ricci. Click on the image for
higher resolution
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This production is a joint venture with
the Monte Carlo Opera, where it will be staged later in this operatic season. It has two strong points. First of all, the stage
direction, stage sets and costumes by Hugo de Ana. With skilfull use of
painted canvas scenes and projections (by Ideogramma srl and Sergio
Metalli), De Ana is able to create the atmosphere of French grand opéra.
The second aspect is the presence of three exceptional singers as the
main protagonists, with voices as similar as possible to those of the leading cast when the
opera was conceived. Mexican tenor Ramón Vargas, born in 1960, has maintained the fresh bel canto style
and the High Cs which impressed the panel of the 'Enrico Caruso Prize' in 1986. Annick Massis is one of the few sopranos who
can sing the four women's roles in Offenbach's Les Contes de Hoffmann. In the same evening, and
during the same opera (as in Jérusalem), she can easily
switch between coloratura soprano, lyric soprano and dramatic soprano.
Michele Pertusi is an excellent bass and was covered by ovations.
Michele Pertusi as Roger in 'Jérusalem' at the Verdi Festival. Photo ©
2017 Roberto Ricci. Click on the image for higher resolution
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All the others were of a good level.
The chorus deserves a special mention for its ability to sing difficult
parts in French. The ToscaniniPhilharmonic was conducted by Daniele Callegari with competence and care.
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