Emma Mathews (Gilda) Giorgio Caoduro (Rigoletto) |
Director:
Roger Hodgman - Conductor: Renato Palumbo - Set Design: Richard
Roberts Costume Design: Tracy Grant Lord - Lighting
Design: Matt Scott
Opera
Australia - Joan Sutherland Theatre – Sydney Opera House
June 26 –
August 24, 2014
Reviewed by
Bill Stephens
Opera
Australia’s 2014 winter season at the Sydney Opera House has begun with a brand
new production of the much loved Verdi Opera “Rigoletto”.
In keeping
with the composer’s original vision, director, Roger Hodgman has gone back to
taws with this production, restoring the setting to 16th Century
Mantua, and directing the action so that the focus rarely moves from the
hunch-back court jester Rigoletto, and his frustrated efforts to protect his
beautiful daughter, Gilda, from the clutches of his debauched employer, The
Duke of Mantua.
Gianluca Terranova (Duke of Mantua) and guests |
Matt Scot’ atmospheric
lighting enhances Richard Roberts impressive double-turntable set, which
together with Tracy Grant Lord’s lavish costumes, realised in every shade of red
velvet, heavily decorated with gold, purple and black, contrasts the splendour
and decadence of the Duke of Mantua’s court and it’s bare-breasted courtesans,
with the shadowy squalor of the assassin, Sparafucile’s abode, providing a
satisfyingly rich visual spectacle.
But for this
most dramatic and gloriously tuneful of operas to weave its spell it needs a
cast of great singers. This production currently has a dream cast. It is hard
to imagine this opera being better sung or acted, or indeed, better played than
it currently is by the Australian Opera and Ballet Orchestra under the expert
direction of Renato Palumbo.
David Corcoran (Borsa) Luke Gabbedy (Marullo), Giorgio Caoduro (Rigoletto), Samuel Dundas (Count Ceprano) |
Emma Matthews,
at the top of her form, is simply spellbinding as Rigoletto’s beautiful
daughter, Gilda. Her compliant yet questioning acceptance of her father’s
wishes, her rapturous response to her handsome young suitor’s advances leading inevitably
to her final, fatal decision, are all beautifully realised, and her superbly
staged, crystalline performance of the famous “Caro nome” is the stuff of
operatic legend.
Handsome Gianluca
Terranova has the looks, dash and swagger to be totally convincing as the
predatory Duke of Mantua, and his glorious Italianate tenor voice makes
mincemeat of “Questa o quella” and “La donna ‘e mobile”.
Sian Pendry (Maddalena) Gianluca Terranova (Duke of Mantua) |
Samuel
Dundas as Count Ceprano, Gennadi Dubinsky as Count Monterone, as well as David Corcoran and Luke Gabbedy as the courtiers,
Borsa and Marullo, all contributed vocal strength and eye-catching performances
in their roles, and were strongly
supported by the excellent, mainly male chorus, which included Canberra’s Damien
Hall.