the conscience of a king
by Douglas Messerli
George Frideric Handel (composer), Nicola
Francesco Haym (libretto, based on a libretto by Antonio Salvi), Rodelinda / the performance I saw as a
live HD broadcast from the Metropolitan Opera of New York on December 3, 2011
On the surface Rodelinda seems
a somewhat confusing story about a King, Bertarido (Andreas Scholl) who has
just been defeated, and presumably killed, by Grimoaldo (Joseph Kaiser). The
former queen, Rodelinda (Renée Fleming) and her son Flavio have been
immediately arrested and put into chains, sequestered away—at least in the Met
production—in what seems like an abandoned bedroom somewhere in the bowels of
the castle.
Meanwhile Grimoaldo's advisor Garibaldo (Shenyang) prods his master on
to more evil deeds, insisting that only the forceful, even the brutal are fit
to rule. He has his own plans, moreover, to take the throne for himself, by
marrying Eduige and becoming the rightful ruler.
Only the court advisor Unulfo (Iestyn Davies) knows that Bertarido is
still alive, pretending death in order to evaluate the situation and retrieve
Rodelinda and his son from harm's way.
Through her lovely arias we know that Rodelinda is loyal to her husband,
denying the approaches of Grimoaldo. But when Bertarido shows up, to be hidden
away in a nearby horse barn by his friend Unulfo, he overhears yet another
encounter between Rodelinda and Grimoaldo in which she first insists of her
love for her dead husband, but then suddenly seems to change heart, accepting
Grimoaldo's proposal for marriage. What the two men hiding in the barn have not
seen is that Garibaldo has threatened to kill her son if she does not give in,
the knife put to the son's neck.
Suddenly Bertarido's world collapses around him as he believes that his
wife has not been able to remain faithful. Unulfo attempts to cheer him with an
aria that relays the underlying theme of Handel's work: what seems unbearable
today will look different in the future. Performed as it is between the two
countertenors there is a slightly homoerotic suggestion in the plea that
Bertarido should try to forget his wife's faithlessness.
Unulfo suggests that Bertarido tell his wife that he is still living, an
idea which, at first, Bertarido rejects, but then perceives that it will help
to torture her for her deeds. It soon becomes apparent, however, that Rodelinda
has no intentions of becoming Grimoaldo's wife, insisting that if she is to
marry him that he must personally kill her young son, that she cannot be a
mother to the boy would have been king and wife of the throne's usurper both.
The ploy works, as Grimoaldo backs down, and Rodelinda is freed, temporarily at
least, from any vows.
In collaboration, Eduige and Unulfo plan Bertarido's rescue, she
secretly passing him a sword, Unulfo determined to lead him through a secret
garden passage to his son, Rondelinda, and escape. However, when he comes to
guide Bertarido to safety, in the dark room where he lies Bertarido mistakes
the intruder as one of Grimoaldo's henchmen come to kill him, and he stabs
Unulfo, who, although badly wounded, still pulls Bertarido to safety.
Grimoaldo, meanwhile is in deep torment. All that he has sought has
slipped his fingers. His first love Eudige has rejected him and Rodelinda has
declared him a monster. Power has not fulfilled him, and he is tormented by
conscience and his dark deeds. Finding him in such despair, Garibaldo is
disgusted with his lack of will and determines to put a sword through his
heart. At that very moment Bertarido and his family are passing, and the former
king leaps into action, killing Garibaldo and, in so doing, saving Grimoaldo's
life.
Recognizing his position, Grimoaldo is only too happy to give up the
throne to its rightful king. Turning again to Eudige she finally accepts his
apologies, and the happy survivors sing in celebration of the future.
Just recounting this breathless plot nearly exhausts me. One by one each
of the major performers sing marvelous arias revealing their feelings and
situations. This production was particularly blessed with the glorious soprano
of Renée Fleming who premiered Rodelinda at the
In all this was a marvelous opera. If only the director, Stephen
Wadsworth—who the singers all highly praised—had not felt it necessary to keep
everything in motion by bringing in and out ancillary individuals during each
aria, and arming his singers with flowerpots, books, even toys which at some
point were often flung or crashed into the set. We understand that Handel's
arias are structured with a beginning theme that elaborated on and repeated
several times before returning us again to the original theme to be repeated
once more, but that does not mean that we need be continually distracted. If
the singers are good enough actors—as all of these were—to revitalize and
slightly revise each repeated phrase, the music enwraps us into a kind of
trance that works against this production's realist interruptions.
Although the set was quite lovely, and the concept of moving
horizontality through different sets across the gigantic Met stage worked well
in several scenes, it appeared that the designers and director feared that the
audience might fall asleep without the constant interruptions of everyday life.
Although he is a powerful storyteller and a masterful dramatist, Handel is not
Verdi.
Nonetheless, with such great singers I would love to see the Met look
into yet more Handel and other Baroque operas. Rodelinda was a joy.
Los Angeles, December 9, 2011
Reprinted from Green Integer Blog (December 2011).
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