Amadeus by Peter Shaffer.
Designed and directed by Cate
Clelland. Music by Christine Faron. Lighting design. Nathan Sciberras Sound Design Neville Pye. Costumes by Deborah
Huff-Horwood. Brenton Warren Properties. Assistant Directors Ian Hart and
Rosemary Gibbons. Set Construction
Coordinator Russell Brown OAM. Costume Coordinator Jeanette Brown OAM. Stage
Manager Ewan. Canberra Repertory Society. July 27 – August 12 2023 Bookings 6257
1950
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
Michael J Smith and Justice-Noah Malfitano as The Venticellis
and Jim Adamik as Salieri in Amadeus b
Director Cate Clelland has staged
a highly commendable production of Peter Shaffer’s Amadeus at Canberra Rep. Shaffer ingeniously combines historical
fact and fiction to imagine the relationship between 18th Century
court composer to Austrian Emperor Joseph ll, Antonio Salieri and musical
prodigy Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The aging Salieri, obsessed with jealousy and
envy of the rising musical star, enters into a Faustian pact to live a life of
virtue devoted to his God if he will provide divine intervention to destroy
Mozart’s career and the favour he enjoys at court. Shaffer employs two society gossips Venticello
1 and Venticello 2 , played with
delightful tittle tattle by Justice-Noah Malfitano and Michael J. Smith. to entertain
the audience with historical fact, rumour and innuendo. Salieri (Jim Adamik) obsessed with envy
narrates his own tormenting preoccupation with the genius of the young Mozart
(Jack Shanahan). Overcome by Mozart’s divine genius, Salieri conspires to
discredit and destroy Mozart’s career with poisoned malice, feigned friendship and
malicious accusation before Joseph ll (Neil Macleod), the emperor’s esteemed
courtier’s Count Johann Killian von Strack (David Bennett), Count Franz
Orsini-Rosenberg (Tony Falla) and Baron Gottfried van Swieten (Ian Russell).
Shaffer has written a homily of
bitter irony. Accused of poisoning Mozart in order to achieve success, Salieri
in the final scene must face his own destruction The cancerous resentment has
devoured the virtue he promised his God and his confession offers no reprieve from ignominy and future anonymity. Shaffer’s play is so wittily written, so
convincing in its drama and so riveting in its hypothesis that it is easy for
an audience to be intrigued and convinced that Mozart’s death was the direct
consequence of Salieri’s jealousy and evil Machiavellian manipulation. Shaffer
is a superb storyteller and Clelland’s production has capitalized wonderfully
on his theatrical flair. But history is a chronicle of different truths, and
Salieri’s talent and influence as court composer and teacher remains acknowledged
in the works of such composers as Beethoven, Lizt, and Shubert. But then not
even Shaffer, as fine a dramatist as he is is likely to let the truth get
completely in the way of this story or Clelland’s inventive and imaginative
production.
In staging Shaffer’s historical
fiction, Clelland is fortunate to be supported by an excellent team. Clelland’s open stage set design has allowed
her to take full advantage of the freedom to keep the action flowing . 18th
century specialist in keyboard music, Christine Faron has magically recorded
Mozart and Salieri’s composition on fortepiano lending authenticity to the period
and the music.. Deborah Huff-Horwood continues this attention to period in her
costume designs which also observe the court dress as well as the costuming of
the ordinary Viennese citizens. Sound designer Neville Pye and Lighting
designer Nathan Sciberras provide the necessary mood and atmosphere, capturing
the play’s moments of light comedy and
Mozart’s dark descent at the hands of a scheming Salieri.
The play hangs on the
performances of Salieri and Mozart and Clelland’s casting of these roles is
inspired. Adamik, renowned for his comic roles in past productions has proven
to be an actor of enormous dramatic stature. His Salieri. on stage throughout
the production, is mesmerising from private confession to fawning ingratiation
and demoniacal deviousness. It is a tour
de force performance matched only by Shanahan’s mercurial Mozart, a sniggering
infantile youth , supremely conceited and yet divinely gifted. Shanahan’s
descent from confident genius to the pit of despair is brilliantly captured in a performance that evokes both pity and empathy. They are well supported
by a fine cast but deserving of special mention are Sienna Curnow in the
impishly sexy and long suffering role of Mozart’s wife Constanze Weber. It is
an especially difficult part and Curnow convincingly captures the early
coquettishness and later desperation. There is also a finely tuned comic
performance from Neil McLeod as the doddery emperor with a grip still on his God
given authority.
Amadeus runs for three hours including an interval and the second
act would not suffer from some editing, but having said that, this is a very
fine production of Shaffer’s intriguing debate on one’s relationship with one’s
God and the cost of human frailty. Highly commended.