Words fail me in trying to say how wonderful Joyce DiDonato was as Maria Stuarda. Rupert Christiansen of the Telegraph found appropriate words:
"Joyce DiDonato’s performance as Donizetti’s Mary Queen of Scots leaves one bereft of adequate superlatives. So let me just start by claiming that bel canto of this quality has not been heard at Covent Garden for more than a generation and that on the strength of this night alone, her name should rank in the operatic pantheon alongside the greatest legends of the past.
Flawless technical virtuosity – based in firm legato, lucid projection, clean diction, breath control, fast trills and precisely articulated runs – makes every note tell. But this is the mere machinery, the hard work.
DiDonato has the rarer gift of imaginative musicality too, and it’s the glowing beauty of tone, warm shaping of phrase, delicate colouring of words and intense commitment to character which cast the magic and make the drama meaningful.
Proud yet vulnerable, impulsive, arrogant, deeply unsure of herself and her own worst enemy, DiDonato’s Mary is not just heart-rendingly beautiful but also vividly real – aching with nostalgia in her opening aria, fiercely defiant when confronted with Elizabeth, bitterly remorseful in the duet with Talbot, and poised in the face of death with a mixture of courage, terror and spiritual calm that I found almost unbearably moving."
It is being broadcast this evening, and will (hopefully) be on the iplayer for a week. Anyone who appreciates fine singing should not miss this!
"Joyce DiDonato’s performance as Donizetti’s Mary Queen of Scots leaves one bereft of adequate superlatives. So let me just start by claiming that bel canto of this quality has not been heard at Covent Garden for more than a generation and that on the strength of this night alone, her name should rank in the operatic pantheon alongside the greatest legends of the past.
Flawless technical virtuosity – based in firm legato, lucid projection, clean diction, breath control, fast trills and precisely articulated runs – makes every note tell. But this is the mere machinery, the hard work.
DiDonato has the rarer gift of imaginative musicality too, and it’s the glowing beauty of tone, warm shaping of phrase, delicate colouring of words and intense commitment to character which cast the magic and make the drama meaningful.
Proud yet vulnerable, impulsive, arrogant, deeply unsure of herself and her own worst enemy, DiDonato’s Mary is not just heart-rendingly beautiful but also vividly real – aching with nostalgia in her opening aria, fiercely defiant when confronted with Elizabeth, bitterly remorseful in the duet with Talbot, and poised in the face of death with a mixture of courage, terror and spiritual calm that I found almost unbearably moving."
It is being broadcast this evening, and will (hopefully) be on the iplayer for a week. Anyone who appreciates fine singing should not miss this!
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