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Danielle de Niese (Carmen) - Abraham Breton (Don Jose) in Opera Australia's production of "Carmen" |
Composed by Georges Bizet – Libretto by Ludovic Halevy and Henri Meilhac
Conducted by Lidiya Yankovskaya – Directed by Anne-Louise
Sarks
Sets and Costumes designed by Marg Horwell – Lighting Design
by Paul Jackson
Choreographed by Shannon Burns – Fight Director Shannon
Burns.
Presented by Opera Australia, Sydney Opera House, until
September 19, 2025.
Performance on July 18 reviewed by BILL STEPHENS
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Andrii Kymach (Escamillo) and Opera Australia chorus |
These may be Danielle de Niese’s first performances as
Carmen in a production of Bizet’s perennial favourite, but it most certainly will
not be her last. From the moment she takes the stage until her inevitable death
scene at the hands of Don Jose, she dominates the production in a way very few
artists are able.
Obviously relishing this opportunity to direct her first
fully staged opera, Anne-Louise Sarks has taken opportunity to again team with
set and costume designer Marg Horwell, and lighting designer, Paul Jackson, to
create a vibrant, rebellious, slightly surreal, Latin Mardi world for her characters
to inhabit.
Horwell has leapt to world attention having won a slew of
awards for her designs for The Picture of Dorian Grey including Olivier,
Tony, Green Room and Sydney Theatre Awards.
For Carmen she has employed a riotous mixture of glam and
grunge for her costumes in which sequins are used in surprising ways. Her costume
choices for various of the characters might also raise eyebrows. For instance,
Escamillo, (Andrii Kymach) is deprived of any toreador glamour instead costumed
in simple shirt and jeans.
Her set designs feature her signature floral motifs teamed
with religious iconography but rescued from any hint of drabness by the
brilliant lighting design of Paul Jackson.
Among many reasons why Carmen has retained its
popularity is the glorious score packed with instantly recognisable arias, each
one exactly right for the moment it exists in the opera. There’s also the haunting
incidental music that heralds and highlights critical moments in the story.
Returning to the podium after her triumphant Opera Australia
debut last year conducting Il Trittico, Conductor Lidiya Yanovskaya knows
every one of them. She draws a superbly nuanced reading from the Opera
Australia Orchestra which frames the joy and drama inherent in Bizet’s
miraculous score.
The timeless libretto also offers fascinating options for
the singers and creatives and a major reason why audiences are attracted back
to the opera to experience how it responds to different interpretations.
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Andrii Kymach (Escamillo) - Danielle De Niese (Carmen) |
Danielle de Niese is incandescent as Carmen. Provocative and playful, sensuous and demanding, blessed with a flexible, creamy soprano, she is also a consummate actress and dancer, all of which she invests in creating an unforgettable Carmen.
De Niese doesn’t just perform Carmen, she becomes her. Watch
her response to the moment when Don Jose first threatens her. Just one
unforgettable moment in a performance to relish.
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Danielle de Niese (Carmen) - Jane Ede (Frasquita) - Helen Sherman (Mercedes) |
Making his SOH debut in this production, Abraham Breton as
Don Jose is an excellent foil for de Niese’s Carmen. His handsome presence and
ringing tenor are major assets in charting Don Jose’s inability to cope with
Carmen’s refusal to be tamed. His
singing of “The Flower Song” was particularly affecting.
Jennifer Black offered
a more confident Micaela than many, particularly when dealing with the soldiers’
advances in the opening scene, while Jane Ede and Helen Sherman as Carmen’s
friends Frasquita and Mercedes, and Luke Gabbedy and Kanen Breen as El Dancairo
and El Remendado, were all excellent in their roles making the quintet,” We
Have a Plan in Mind”, another of many highlights.
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Jennifer Black (Micaela) - Andrew Moran (Morales) and company. |
For this production,
which runs until September 19, Opera Australia is offering four Carmens. Danielle
de Niese performs the role until August 4. Tunisian Canadian mezzo-soprano
Rihab Chaieb will make her Australian debut in the role on August 7, followed
by Sian Sharp on September 3 and Angela Hogan on September 13.
De Niese has set a high bar, but no doubt each will bring a uniqueness
to her interpretation, therefore providing a dilemma for those opera lovers who
would like to see them all.
Photos by Keith Saunders
This review published in the digital edition of CITY NEWS on 23.07.25