Director: Francesca Zambello
Revival Director:
Matthew Barclay
Designer:
Tanya McCallin
Lighting Designer: Paule Constable
Choreographer:
Arthur Pita
Opera Australia
Sydney Opera House until March 29th 2014
Opening night performance reviewed by Bill Stephens.
The success of any production
of Bizet’s “Carmen” is largely dependent of the casting of the three main
roles. So returning to this production, first seen in the Sydney Opera House in
2008, following last year’s imaginative and audacious staging of the same
opera, by Gale Edwards, for the Handa Opera on Sydney Harbour, fuelled as it
was with Kelly Abbey’s flamboyant choreography and the riveting performance of
Rinat Shaham in the title role, the initial reaction was that it seemed a bit
staid and dull.
However, once Spanish soprano, Nancy Fabiola Herrera, hit the stage, wilful, tempestuous and thoroughly captivating as Carmen, the temperature rose immediately and things never looked back.
However, once Spanish soprano, Nancy Fabiola Herrera, hit the stage, wilful, tempestuous and thoroughly captivating as Carmen, the temperature rose immediately and things never looked back.
Besides possessing the
requisite lustrous, malleable, mezzo-soprano voice, Ms Fabiola Herrera also
looks ravishing, dances passionately, and is a superb actress, so thoroughly
possessing the role so that it is hard to take your eyes off her whenever she’s
on stage, which is exactly as this role is meant to be.
Nancy Fabiola Herrara as Carmen with artists of Opera Australia |
Dmytro Popov as Don Jose |
Natalie Aroyan as Micaela |
Natalie Aroyan as Micaela, impressed with her sweet, clear soprano, and her ability to capture the fragility and resilience of the young woman sent on an impossible mission to persuade Don Jose to return home to comfort his dying mother.
.
Michael Honeyman as Escamillo |
Michael Honeyman as the toreador Escamillo made a fine entrance astride a tall white horse and sang the “Toreador Song” with gusto and assurance amidst the well-staged crowd scene. However he was not served well by his costumes, especially the unfortunate gaucho chaps in the second act.
Adrian Tamburini is
impressively menacing as the opportunistic Lieutenant Zuniga, and Jane Ede and
Tania Ferris were both excellent as Carmen’s friends Frasquita and Mercedes,
especially in the quintet where together with Sam Roberts-Smith and Luke
Gabbedy as the smugglers, Dancairo and Remendado, they try to persuade Carmen
to join them on an adventure.
Though Paule Constable has
made good use of hot sun and shadows effects in her lighting design, Tanya
McCallin’s sets look claustrophobic on the opera house stage, and despite the
best efforts of the huge chorus and well-rehearsed children, to capture the
atmosphere of mid- 19th century Seville, many of the crowd scenes
were cramped and stagey. The Toreador’s arrival in Lillas Pastia’s tavern generated
real excitement, (the horse had a lot to do with that), but the parade of the
matadors in the final scene, apart from the elaborate mobile altar, was
decidedly skimpy and unexciting.
Nancy Fabiola Herrara and Dmytro Popov in the final scene |
But this opera is all about
Carmen, Don Jose and Escamillo, and of course, Georges Bizet’s wonderful music.
Any lack of visual excitement is more than compensated by the fine singing and
passionate, performances of the principals, and the music, in the capable hands
of the excellent Australian Opera and Ballet Orchestra, conducted by Antony
Walker, receives exactly the spirited,
exciting performance it was meant for.