Lavish and Effective
Marco Tutino's 'La Ciociara'
comes to Italy
and impresses GIUSEPPE PENNISI
La Ciociara by Marco Tutino was premiered in San
Francisco in Summer 2015.
At the time, the title
used was Two Women, the same title as Vittorio De Sica's
Oscar-winning 1960 movie. On its own account, the movie was based on
Alberto Moravia's successful 1959 novel. It is noteworthy that La
Ciocaria / Two women is the first opera commissioned from an Italian composer by a large and prominent American opera house since Puccini's Il Trittico by the
Metropolitan Opera House, premiered in 1920.
In San Francisco,
Tutino's opera was reportedly a great success: the audience applauded for
nearly fifteen minutes. However, the reviews were mixed. A balanced
review by James Sohre was published in this
magazine — 'Taking Flight', 6 July 2015. The production is the same,
even though there are some cast changes, so this review is only intended
as an addition to Sohre's 2015 article.
Anna Caterina Antonacci as Cesira and Lavinia Bini as Rosetta in Marco
Tutino's 'La Ciociara'. Photo
© 2017 Priamo Tolu. Click on the image for higher resolution
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There are two
preliminary questions. Why was the Italian premiere in Cagliari on 24
November 2017 — I was in the audience — and
not in Turin, shown as a co-producer when the opera was staged in San
Francisco? And why did many American reviewers consider La Ciociara
to be a late verismo opera? See 'Autumn Trilogy', 23 November
2017.
The answer to the
first question is trivial: in-fighting within Turin's opera house caused
never-ending delays until the management sold the Teatro Regio co-production rights to
Cagliari's Teatro Lirico. Turin embarked on a major internationalization
program, but lost the opportunity to premiere in Italy the best Italian opera since
the beginning of the twentieth century.
Anna Caterina Antonacci as Cesira, Aquiles Machado as Michele and
Nicola Ebau as John Buckley in Marco Tutino's 'La Ciociara'. Photo © 2017 Priamo Tolu.
Click on the image for higher resolution
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The second question
raises more complex issues. On the one hand, most Italian opera composers are devoted to experimental
music, with a few performances in small theatres. Only a few — Marco
Tutino and Giorgio Battistelli — work on traditional large-scale operas which can be appreciated by
vast audiences.
La Ciociara has little to do with
verismo, even though the vocal writing for the villain Giovanni —
Sebastian Catana in the Cagliari production — has echoes of the role of Scarpia in Tosca and the final aria of Michele
(Aquiles Machado), 'Come faranno i boschi', resembles 'E lucevan le
stelle' and 'Ella mi creda' — two war horses for Puccini tenors.
From left to right: Lavinia Bini as Rosetta, Anna Caterina Antonacci as
Cesira, Aquiles Machado as Michele and Sebastian Catana as Giovanni in
Marco Tutino's 'La Ciociara'. Photo © 2017 Priamo Tolu. Click on the image for higher
resolution
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However, Tutino's
work is a verismo blood and guts drama. Its basic theme is the
horror of wars as they influence interpersonal relationships, and an
accentuation of violence against women. In this two act six scene opera,
four magnificent interludes sublimate the plot and take it to a
philosophical level. The orchestra, conducted by Giuseppe Finzi in Cagliari, gave evidence of
expertise, especially in merging the moments where the timbres prevail
with those where the strings and brass have the dominant roles. The
orchestra reminds us that we are dealing with universal and
transcendental themes, not with one of World War II's violent episodes. The
similarities are more with Zandonai, Previn, Janáček, Prokofiev's Semyon Kotko and
recent American and British operas such as Dead Man
Walking by Jake Heggie and The Exterminating Angel by Thomas Adès than with Puccini or Mascagni.
A few words on the
two women who are the real protagonists. The part of Cesira was conceived
for Anna Caterina Antonacci, and she is as perfect for the part in Cagliari
as she was in San Francisco. Lavinia Bini as Rosetta is a sweet
light soprano.
Lavinia Bini as Rosetta (left) with Anna Caterina Antonacci as Cesira
in Marco Tutino's 'La Ciociara'. Photo © 2017 Priamo Tolu. Click on the image for higher
resolution
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I won't comment on
the lavish and effective production, identical to that seen and reported
on by James Sohre in San Francisco.
Enrico Zara as a boy, with the Chorus of the Teatro Lirico di Cagliari
in Marco Tutino's 'La Ciociara'. Photo © 2017 Priamo Tolu. Click on the image for higher
resolution
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The audience
responded with enthusiasm. Almost all of the ten Cagliari performances
are fully booked.
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