Conducted by
Andrea Battistoni -Directed by Davide Livermore
Set Designed
by Gio Forma -Costumes designed by Gianluca Falaschi
Lighting
Designed by John Rayment - Video designed by D-Wok
Presented by
Opera Australia – Joan Sutherland Theatre until 31st August 2018
Premiere
Performance on July 18th 2018 reviewed by Bill Stephens
If you only go along to a performance of “Aida” for
the Triumphal March, be forewarned. This production doesn’t have a Triumphal procession. Instead, during the music Verdi wrote for the
triumphant return of the Egyptian army in which it displays its victory spoils,
the audience is treated to film of a masked horseman galloping through a valley
of sand hills.
But despite this omission, this staging of Verdi’s
epic of love story about an Ethiopian handmaiden and an Egyptian princess, who both
fall in love with the same Egyptian General, is never less than diverting and
often visually and aurally dazzling.
Elena Gabouri ( Amneris) - Amber Wagner - (Aida) |
This ground-breaking, digital production of “Aida”, touted as the future of stage spectacle in opera, contains plenty of other sensational elements to qualify it for your “must see” list. Replacing conventional scenery are multiple high-tech movable LED screens and ‘ghost’ gauzes, onto which images are projected in extraordinary high definition, to create sensational visual images. Golden serpents slither sensuously up giant pillars in the great crowd-filled halls. A huge black panther, representing the inner thoughts of Amneris, glowers over her shoulder while she interrogates Aida. Beautiful cloud and water effects dissolve into each other.
Riccardo Massi (Radames) - Amber Wagner (Aida) |
It quickly becomes clear that director, Davide
Livermore is more interested in the visual than the dramatic elements of the
story, for despite the ambiguousness of many of the visual elements of his production,
his staging is remarkably conventional and static. There’s practically no physical contact, or
chemistry, between any of the protagonists. For most of the opera they simply sit
or stand and sing to the front, barely noting the presence of the other, and relying
on old-fashioned stock gestures to denote emotion.
A dance sequence in "Aida" |
The Opera Australia chorus, resplendent in Gianluca
Falaschi’s extraordinarily lavish costumes, is contained in tightly regimented groups,
which works to its advantage when the mighty orchestra, under the baton of
Andrea Battistoni, strikes up the massive choruses. A large troupe of dancers provides the
movement, which despite their best efforts at decadence, is mostly ungainly and
surprisingly tedious.
In many ways this static direction serves the
production well, because opera is about the singing and Livermore has been
gifted with three outstanding principal singers, each of whom rises to the
occasion magnificently to hold their own against the lavishness of the staging.
American soprano, Amber Wagner, making
her role debut as Aida, is simply sensational, with a huge voice capable of sailing effortlessly above
the combined forces of the huge chorus and orchestra for Verdi’s magnificent
massed choruses, and heart-breakingly tender for her beautiful rendering of her
first act solo “Ritorna Vincitor” (Return a conqueror), which elicited an
excited audience response.
She had a worthy adversary in Russian born contralto,
Elena Gabouri, as Amneris, who displayed her arresting lower register to great
effect, firstly raging at Aida when she admitted her love of Radames, then more
tenderly in the final moments, high above the stage, reflecting on the fate of
the doomed lovers.
Riccardo Massi (Radames) - Amber Wagner (Aida) - Elena Gabouri (Amneris) in the final moments of "Aida". |
Handsome Italian tenor, Riccardo Massi, was perfectly
cast as the object of both women’s affections, Radames, whose opening solo, “Celeste
Aida” (Heavenly Aida) set a high bar which was maintained by the rest of the
topline cast, among them Warwick Fyfe as Amonasro, the king of Ethiopia, Jud
Arthur as the king of Egypt, Roberto Scandiuzzi as the high priest, Ramfis,
Jane Ede as the High Priestess Dean Bassett as the Messenger.
Opera Australia has announced plans for three more
digital productions next year. It will be interesting to see how this new
technology adapts to the requirements of each of those operas. Meanwhile, this
production of “Aida” provides a tantalizing preview of how we may view opera in
the future.