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Anna Dowsley (Dido) - Nicholas Jones (Aeneas) |
DIDO AND AENEAS – Opera Australia.
Composed by Henry Purcell – Libretto by Nahume Tate
Conducted by Chad Kelly – Director and stage designer: Yaron
Lifschitz
Costume design by Libby Mcdonnell -Lighting design by
Matthew Marshall
Presented by Opera Australia – Sydney Opera House until
March 29, 2025
Performance on 20th March reviewed by BILL STEPHENS
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Anna Dowsley (Dido) and Circa member. |
Widely regarded as the one of the earliest known English
operas, Henry Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas focusses on the love of Dido, the Queen
of Carthage, for the Trojan hero, Aeneas, and her despair when he abandons her.
For his extraordinary production, first staged by Opera
Queensland in 2024, Director and Stage Designer, Yaron Lifschitz has ditched
historical references in favour of a stunning abstract, highly visual presentation
in which spectacular acrobatics replace the more usual dance sequences inherent
in baroque opera.
As it entered the theatre the audience was met by text
projected across a black screen posing a series existential questions and comments,
among them “Why is it so hard to love the world?”, “The invention of the ship
is also the invention of the shipwreck”, “Whoever goes in search of humans will
find acrobats”, “Whatever I hide by my language my body utters”.
The effect of this attention-focusing device was disrupted by
the 'Welcome to country' ceremony followed by the orchestra tuning up.
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"Dido & Aeneas" - Circa and Ensemble |
However, as it settled into the opera, the prologue offered
the first of a succession of arresting sequences, commencing with the sight of
an embracing couple on a tightly lit pedestal. As they slowly moved, the curtain
rose to reveal a row of candles flickering across the front of the stage, and a
silhouetted figure traversing a tight rope, as Anna Dowsley, costumed as Dido,
in a black sequined gown and orange wig, began the first of her arias.
Uninterrupted by an interval, the opera progressed through a
mesmerising series of brilliantly lit (Matthew Marshall), strikingly staged
sequences. Although sung in English, on-stage surtitles kept the audience abreast
of the artistic, though largely unintelligible, lyrics, as well as the locales
in which the action was taking place.
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Jane Ede (Belinda) - Anna Dowsley (Aeneas) and Circa ensemble. |
The Opera Australia Chorus, Circa acrobats and supporting characters, Belinda (Jane Ede), Second Lady (Sian Sharpe), First Witch (Angela Hogan), Second Witch (Keara Donohoe), Spirit Mercury (Cathy-Di Zhang) and Sailor (Gregory Brown) were all costumed by Libby McDonald in similar elegant black uni-sex costumes. At certain points the acrobats discarded the trousers to enable their more difficult manoeuvres.
Only Dido (Anna Dowsley in sequins) and Aeneas (Nicholas
Jones in a black dinner suit) were distinguished from the others.
This device allowed Lifschitz to keep them in focus while
the rest of the cast participated in the tightly choreographed staging where it was often difficult to separate who were chorus and who were acrobats in scenes
for which both were much more integrated by Lifschitz than even his Orpheus and
Eurydice seen in the Opera House last year.
This freed the audience to concentrate on the beauty of the
singing and orchestral playing while feasting their eyes on the succession of
stunning, constantly changing, stage images.
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Nicholas Jones (Aeneas) and ensemble. |
Anna Dowsley and Nicholas Jones were masterful casting as Dido and Aeneas. Both in glorious voice, completely believable as the thwarted lovers and unfazed by the complicated staging into which both were more integrated than would normally be expected for such difficult singing roles.
For Dowsley this involved a stunning transformation in which
she emerges from her sequined gown, stripping away her orange wig to emerge as a
bald Sorceress, and for Jones, having to walk over the bodies of the acrobats
while singing an aria.
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Anna Dowsley (Dido) and Circa Ensemble |
Conducted for this performance by Chad Kelly, the Opera Australia Orchestra and chorus paid homage to Purcell’s music with exemplary performances which ended with the chorus creating a stereophonic sound by singing from the balconies inside the auditorium for a stunning finale.
The rapturous response from the audience was a fitting indication
of the success of a daring concept which honoured a work which has survived
centuries.
Unless otherwise marked, all images by Keith Saunders
A slightly shorter version of this review first published in the digital edition of CITY NEWS on 25.03.25.