Originally posted by makropulos
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Lucia di Lammermoor at ROH
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostDidn't Bernard Shaw say that the best way of experiencing Wganer in the theatre was to take a box & sit with your back to the stage?
Which reminds me: does anyone remember when Richard Jones was the enfant terrible, who was booed for his ROH Ring in which, amongst other things, Gwyneth Jones as Brunnhilde wore a paper bag on her head? Now his Il Trittico and Boris Godunov are both celebrated as models of opera production. Autre temps.....
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostGoodness, was Dame Gwyneth still singing Brunhilde in 1994?
(Coincidentally, I'm listening to the recording of Die Walkure Act 1, Vienna Philharmonic conducted by Bruno Walter, with Lotte Lehman & Lauritz Melchior. My dears, the vibrato! Caliban would be having a fit of the vapours)
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Originally posted by underthecountertenor View PostIt's odd. I've done a search which suggests that Richard Jones's Brunnhilde in 1994 was Deborah Polaski...
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Originally posted by Belgrove View PostI attended the first night of each of these. On consulting the programmes, the first two were on consecutive evenings in October 1994, Siegfried and Götterdämmerung in April and October 1995 respectively, and Deborah Polaski was Brunnhilde throughout. I remember the booing made R4 news the following morning! The cycle was performed in festival conditions in October/November 1996 with Polaski and Anne Evans as Brunnhilde (replaced by Carla Pohl in Siegfried). It's still the most exciting and best performed Ring I've seen. Looking forward to Opera North's cycle in June.
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I guess everybody knows by now that it's Diana Damrau. An interesting interview with her on 'Front Row' tonight, discusing the production, which includes the on-stage murder of Lucia's husband.
(edit: Looking back through the thread I see that everybody knew way back on the 6th of March. Ooops!)
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Belgrove View PostI attended the first night of each of these. On consulting the programmes, the first two were on consecutive evenings in October 1994, Siegfried and Götterdämmerung in April and October 1995 respectively, and Deborah Polaski was Brunnhilde throughout. I remember the booing made R4 news the following morning! The cycle was performed in festival conditions in October/November 1996 with Polaski and Anne Evans as Brunnhilde (replaced by Carla Pohl in Siegfried). It's still the most exciting and best performed Ring I've seen.
Those were only my first and second complete live Rings, I wasn't sold on the production but forgave everything for the dream cast, 2007 and 2012 distinctly patchy by comparison!
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Originally posted by underthecountertenor View PostROH could make innovative use of its surtitles at Lucia. I'm thinking of a flashing warning along the lines of 'DON PAPER BAGS OR REGIEMASKS (TM) NOW!'
Originally posted by underthecountertenor View PostWhich reminds me: does anyone remember when Richard Jones was the enfant terrible, who was booed for his ROH Ring in which, amongst other things, Gwyneth Jones as Brunnhilde wore a paper bag on her head? Now his Il Trittico and Boris Godunov are both celebrated as models of opera production. Autre temps.....
I am imminently expecting a call from a friend who attended the first night of Lucia, so I am looking forward to a first-hand report. So I shall discover whether my Regiemask will be required. (Though of course, not on my first visit.)
Re your observations on Jones - Michieletto went from catastrophe in Tell to triumph in Cav&Pag.
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Well, a wonderfully dismissive review by Rupert Christiansen: "Too leaden even for the hecklers"...!
Ever since the Royal Opera foolishly issued a warning last month that its new production of Donizetti’s tragedy would contain high levels of sex and violence, expectations of a juicy scandal were raised.
Haven't seen/heard it, so what do I know if this is fair?
But love the (deliberately?) ambiguous sentence: "Stroppy, duplicitous, and sexually aggressive, Mitchell makes Lucia a curiously modern figure..."
As anybody who knows their gwammer would realise, this could apply the three epithets as well to Mitchell as to Lucia.
Naughty, Rupert...
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Originally posted by Prommer View PostWell, a wonderfully dismissive review by Rupert Christiansen: "Too leaden even for the hecklers"...!
Ever since the Royal Opera foolishly issued a warning last month that its new production of Donizetti’s tragedy would contain high levels of sex and violence, expectations of a juicy scandal were raised.
Haven't seen/heard it, so what do I know if this is fair?
But love the (deliberately?) ambiguous sentence: "Stroppy, duplicitous, and sexually aggressive, Mitchell makes Lucia a curiously modern figure..."
As anybody who knows their gwammer would realise, this could apply the three epithets as well to Mitchell as to Lucia.
Naughty, Rupert...
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Originally posted by Prommer View PostBut love the (deliberately?) ambiguous sentence: "Stroppy, duplicitous, and sexually aggressive, Mitchell makes Lucia a curiously modern figure..."
As anybody who knows their gwammer would realise, this could apply the three epithets as well to Mitchell as to Lucia.
Naughty, Rupert...
His comment that Lucia "is desperately trying to abort Edgardo’s baby" doesn't agree with Damrau's statement during yesterday's Front Row interview that Lucia has a miscarriage (& presumably she would know, being involved in the production & working with the director).
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A rather more favourable (but only 3 star) review in the Guardian
Over-complicated stagecraft is distracting as much as illuminating in Katie Mitchell’s new version of the Donizetti tragedy, but it builds to a powerful head
Tim (Ashley) thinks that Diana Damrau's mad scene was good - perhaps he doesn't belong to the 'nobody's as good as Joan was' school that Rupert subscribes too?
In the comments below the review someone wonders how it will be 'filmed' for cinema transmission - a very valid point given the split stage. Too many close-ups on the singers will cut out the action on the other section of the stage, & vice-versa, ruining the intentions of the designer & director. (Some here might think that's a good thing.)
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostBut how well does Rupert know Ms Mitchell, to know that she is 'sexually aggressive', or even 'duplicitous'? It would have to be pretty well
His comment that Lucia "is desperately trying to abort Edgardo’s baby" doesn't agree with Damrau's statement during yesterday's Front Row interview that Lucia has a miscarriage (& presumably she would know, being involved in the production & working with the director).
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Originally posted by Prommer View PostWell, a wonderfully dismissive review by Rupert Christiansen: "Too leaden even for the hecklers"...!
Ever since the Royal Opera foolishly issued a warning last month that its new production of Donizetti’s tragedy would contain high levels of sex and violence, expectations of a juicy scandal were raised.
Haven't seen/heard it, so what do I know if this is fair?
Further RC article "Opera must bring down the curtain on gimmickry and gore"
Last edited by Lento; 09-04-16, 09:28.
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