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Round-up UK

What kind of opera strikes the iciest fear into the critic’s heart? ‘Contemporary,’ you cry! But no – the answer is operetta: it’s the hope, you see, the fizz, frivolity and lax morals, the wise, loveable idea that serious subjects are best broached through silliness. So often this results in purgatorial evenings that feel as if they will will never end – the worst of them precisely when the cast appears to be having just amazing fun up on the stage. Thus one approaches beloved pieces like Off enbach’s Orpheus in the Underworld with clenched hope and foreboding – particularly when, as here, it is performed by a multi-lingual cast of student operetta neophytes in a mix of sung French and spoken English.

Well, I needn’t have worried too much. The Royal Academy of Music’s production was oddly tentative but eventually reached decent levels of entertainment, though the nervous cast took a long time to get into it, and the routines devised by director Martin Duncan and choreographer Steve Elias were a mite pallid and old-school. I’ve certainly never seen such a decorous cancan, though it went down well with the Hackney crowd (and I hope the college’s peregrinations while its theatre is rebuilt have shown a few new people how high the standards usually are).

It is hard to recreate the wicked scurrility of 1858, and probably wisely, Duncan didn’t try, though I wonder whether Helen Brackenbury’s Mary Whitehouseish Public Opinion, though amusing and cleverly performed, rang many bells with the young ones.

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Opera Now
April 2017
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Welcome
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Feedback
Write to Opera Now, 20 Rugby Street, London, WC1N 3QZ, email opera.now@rhinegold.co.uk or tweet @Operanow. Star letters will receive a free DVD from Opus Arte’s extensive catalogue of world-class opera productions.
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TRUE ORIGINAL
Being authentic isn’t always easy, says Christophe Rousset, as he describes the tension between historical fidelity and the need to evolve and embrace chance as a musician. Andrew Mellor meets the harpsichordistconductor as he celebrates a quarter century at the forefront of the Early Music scene with his ensemble, Les Talens Lyriques.
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Celebrating Monteverdi’s 450th birthday anniversary this year, John Eliot Gardiner revisits a composer who has been a lifelong inspiration as a fellow musical pioneer. Ash Khandekar meets the conductor as he embarks on an extraordinary musical and intellectual odyssey back to the 1600s, touring Monteverdi’s three surviving operas around the world.
FIRST IMPRESSIONS
Garsington Opera’s new staging of Debussy’s Pelléas et Mélisande features two charismatic young singers, both making their festival debuts this summer. Baritone Jonathan McGovern and soprano Andrea Carroll tell Andrew Green about the challenges of preparing for their complex, elusive title roles.
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Nicolai Gedda (1925-2017) was possessed of a honeyed tenor voice, known for its elegance and versatility across a wide range of styles and languages. A handsome figure on stage, he exuded an easy bonhomie and showed a generosity of spirit towards even the most difficult colleagues, winning the love and admiration of a legion of fans over the course of a 40-year career.
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With his eclectic musical tastes and a wide operatic repertoire, American baritone Scott Hendricks is a singer who resists being pigeonholed. You’ll often see him playing one of the mean, moody bad boys of opera, but this affable artist is just as convincing portraying characters with moral scruples – as he is doing at London’s Royal Opera House this month.
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