Tuesday 7 October 2008

 

The latest culture as recommended by our staff

Michael Henderson

Michael Henderson suggests


Stifling the Egyptians

Wednesday, 4th June 2008

Aida
Wales Millennium Centre

Welsh National Opera’s new Aida, directed by John Caird, is a moderate success, not more, and raises the question of why some operas survive falling into that category so much better than others — Aida is not, I think, one that does. However much financially hard-pressed companies have articles in their programmes about the essentially intimate nature of the work — ‘Aida is mostly a chamber opera,’ says the conductor Carlo Rizzi in a thoughtful interview — the fact remains that the intensity of the private drama that unfolds is enhanced by contrast with the monumental ceremonial trappings, and by the dependence of the characters’ fates not only on their feelings for one another but on their public roles. The poignancy of Amneris, on which Rizzi quite rightly insists, is not only a matter of her realising that she has a rival who is loved by the man she loves, but that she has the rival, the slave Aida, in her power and can destroy her; but that means she is aligned with the priestly powers she abominates and who sentence Radamès to death, and, given that he has betrayed an all-important secret of his country to Aida, quite rightly. The interfusion of the political and the personal is as effective here as it is in the greater Don Carlos, where more characters are drawn into the tragic and much more involving action, and we care about them more because Verdi’s characterisation of them is more vivid.

The problems with Aida begin, for me, after the exquisite prelude and Ramfis’s hinting to Radamès whom Isis has chosen to lead the Egyptian army. Verdi immediately awards Radamès one of the most famous but least interesting of all his tenor arias. And that, really, is all the characterisation that Radamès gets. It isn’t enough to convince me that two such emotionally hyper-charged women as Aida and Amneris would fall for him. Nor, I fear, did Dennis O’Neill approximate to my conception of an heroic warrior. Aged 60 and looking it, dressed in a way that he might retain in Tosca or Andrea Chénier, and with a voice that is inevitably drying out, though he can still get the notes if he sings them loudly enough, this Aida instantly turned itself into a concert performance. And why, given that the Wales Millennium Centre’s stage is quite large, did Caird and his designer Yannis Thavoris decide to reduce it to a tiny acting space surrounded by tiers, all in dark slate? That is, of course, entirely appropriate to the closing scene, where a set that makes the audience as well as the lovers feel stifled is what’s needed, but it meant that the chorus, a very large one including a lot of local amateurs, were no more than spectators, and ones who at the end of Act II threw down confetti and red streamers, a campy touch just where humour is fatal. And no distinction could be made between scenes taking place outside and those in royal apartments: large, vague symbolic shapes descended from the flies from time to time, but did nothing to establish mood or environment.

More articles from: Michael Tanner | this section

Subscribe now

Post this entry to:   del.icio.us | Digg | Newsvine | NowPublic | Reddit

Comments

Post a comment


Your comment:*

Your name:*

Your email address:*
(We won't publish this)

*Required information

Please click the button only once - your comment will not be published immediately


In this section

Losing is the new winning

Deborah Ross

How to Lose Friends and Alienate People
15, Nationwide

Meditation on meaning

Andrew Lambirth

Rothko
Tate Modern, until 1 February 2009

Garden shorts

Ursula Buchan

Ursula Buchan on the new chief presenter of BBC 2’s Gardeners' World

A power to enthral

Henrietta Bredin

Henrietta Bredin on how book illustrations can bring the narrative to life

The turf

Robin Oakley

Team tactics

Related articles

The pragmatic approach

Jonathan Sumption

‘The Half’ is how actors refer to the half hour before their play begins, when they ready themselves, steady themselves, for their performance.

The Half

Mark Amory

The Half: Photographs of Actors Preparing for the Stage, by Simon Annand

Make do and mend

Michael Tanner

Otello
Welsh National Opera, Cardiff

La fanciulla del West
Royal Opera House

Moscow’s secret war in Ingushetia

Tom Parfitt

Russia’s President, Dmitry Medvedev, pretends that this republic is a haven of stability. Not so, says Tom Parfitt: the Ingush are subject to a campaign of murder and repression

Family business

Andrew Lambirth

Painting Family: The De Brays, Master Painters of 17th Century Holland
Dulwich Picture Gallery, until 5 October

Cecil Collins — A Centenary Exhibition
Monnow Valley Arts Centre, Middle Hunt House, Walterstone, Nr Abergavenny, Herefordshire, until 14 September

Spectator recommends

Sky TV, Broadband & Talk from £16 a Month

Sky TV & free broadband packages available from £16 a month. Choose from a standard free sky box, sky plus...


Spectator classifieds

ROME CENTRE

PORTA METRONIA, ROME Standing high on the top of one of the seven hills of Rome- the Coelian- this unique

City Breaks. ROME and PARIS

ROME and PARIS: over 350 holiday rentals apartments listed: visit  www.romanreference.com  and  www.parisreference.com or call +39 0648 903612.

Jewellery. RUFFS (Estd. 1904).

Goldsmiths by Design Welcome to Ruffs!  You have found a company of Goldsmiths that specialises in the manufacture, amongst other