Robert Shearer as Albert Herring |
Music: Benjamin
Britten.
Libretto: Eric Crozier
Conductor:
Rick Prackhoff.
Director: Caroline Stacey
Set Design: Gillian Schwab
Costume
Design: Imogen Keen,
Lighting Design: P.J. Williams.
Vocal Coach: Alan Hicks
Orchestra Leader: Barbara Jane Gilby
The Street Theatre
- Friday 27th September 2012.
Reviewed by
Bill Stephens
Written as a
chamber opera for an ensemble cast of equals, “Albert Herring” is a
near-perfect melding of music, words and story, and with its cast of eccentric
characters, a perfect choice to showcase the talents of the current crop of
Canberra School of Music students.
The opera
follows the story of a mummy’s boy, the virginal and eponymous, Albert Herring
(Robert Shearer), who is crowned “May King” when no girl in the village can be
found who meets the puritanical standards set by the autocratic and overbearing
Lady Billows (Alexandra Dalman) and her retinue of comical sycophants on the
Festival Committee who include the reticent Vicar, Mr. Gedge (Joshua Burke),
The self-important Mayor, Mr. Upfold (Norman Meader), The Superintendent of Police, Budd (Patrick
Baker), and the teacher, Miss Wordsworth (Jessica Westcott).
Not all the
inhabitants of the village however pretend to be such goody two shoes. A trio
of youngsters (Jessica Harper, Keren Dalzell, and Madeline Anderson) seem intent
on causing chaos at every opportunity, and when Butcher-boy Sid (Rohan
Thatcher) and his girlfriend Nancy (Livia Brash) decide to spice up proceeding by
spiking Albert’s lemonade at the crowning ceremony, chaos is exactly the result.
Livia Brash - Rohan Thatcher |
Director,
Caroline Stacey, knows how to delineate each character to maximum comic affect,
and by choosing to present the opera in an abstract, rather than naturalistic,
setting, has provided opportunities for her cast to develop characterisations
outside the obvious stereotypes, so that in this production Lady Billows’
housekeeper, Florence Pike, (arrestingly performed by Julia Wee) wears severe jacket
and trousers instead of the expected dress and apron. The Mayor Mr. Upfold carries his own set of
steps ever-ready for the media opportunity and the three little girls wear balloon-like dresses. It's all great fun.
This idea is
carried through Gillian Schwab imaginative set design - apart from the unfortunate
white curtain draped half-mast across the stage for the opening scene. The colourfully-lit hanging fruit baskets, and moveable fruit-display stands,
providing a deliciously zany environment for Stacey’s peripatetic direction for
the early stages of the opera, then, adapting very effectively for the static
final ensemble numbers.
Imogen Keen’s
costumes added to the jollity, particularly her use of faux fur, and the colourful,
all -envelloping surreal coats for the final scene which cleverly combined spectacle and playfullness.
Given the ambitious
nature of this production, (some of the roles had double-casting for other
performances) the consistently high standard of singing throughout was impressive.
Among the outstanding performances was Robert Shearer’s confident portrayal of Albert
Herring; his transition from gormless to confident young greengrocer being beautifully
realised. Julia Wee’s impressive
contralto as Florence Pike, Livia Brash and Rohan Thatcher cheekily sensuous as
Sid and Nancy, Norman Meader’s delightfully stupid Mr. Upfold, Jessica Westcott’s
soaring soprano as the schoolteacher, Mrs Wordsworth and Kathryn Jenkinson’s
portrayal of Albert’s mother, Mrs Herring.
Benjamin
Britten has written this opera to be accompanied by a 13 piece virtuoso
orchestra. The orchestra assembled for this production certainly met that
qualification and the exceptionally fine playing, under the baton of Conductor
Rick Prackhoff, added additional pleasure to a confident and memorable
production.