things change
by Douglas Messerli
Salvadore Cammarano (libretto), Gaetano
Donizetti (composer) Roberto Devereux / LAOpera, Dorothy Chandler
Pavilion / the production I saw with Lita Barrie was on Thursday, March 5, 2020
In his opening night review of the LAOpera
production of Gaetano Donizetti’s opera Roberto Devereux, Los Angeles
Time’s music reviewer Mark Swed began by noting how the composer
himself felt that his 1837 opera had been jinxed. The opera as Swed notes, was
born out of his wife’s death and written and performed during a cholera
outbreak in Naples.
When Swed wrote his review, it had not yet been perceived just how much
California itself was already being affected by the new coronavirus, an
equivalent of cholera (fortunately, the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion production
played to a mostly full audience, although any intermission cough was duly
noted by its audience).
The major singer, highly featured in early announcements of the
production, was to have been the great tenor, now baritone director of the
opera company, Plácido Domingo—who had to bow out not only of his role of the
villain of this piece, the Duke of Nottingham, but, because of revelations of
sexual abuse—was bravely replaced by the talented Hawaiian-born singer, Quinn
Kelsey.
It
is Meade, this time around, who un-jinxed this work, bravely singing the role
of Elizabeth I, without any stage rehearsal time on opening night, from a
stage-side music stand, while the choreographer Nicola Bowie equally bravely
acted out her movements on center stage.
I
was too young and operatically naïve to remember or, even then, have been able
to evaluate “Bubbles” Silverman (the early incarnation of Beverly Sills),
although we also saw a couple of her other major operatic presentations. But
Meade certainly now owns this role, singing powerfully and yet scintillatingly
beautiful, and suddenly coming onto central stage in the production I saw with
friend Lita Barrie, as a bit more zaftig version of the queen than Rodríguez
might have represented, but perhaps more dramatic for that very fact. If she
loved Roberto Devereux (the truly excellent Mexican-born singer, Ramón Vargas)
she is equally terrifying in her willingness to revenge his evidently quite
chaste love of Nottingham’s current wife, the lovely soprano, in the production
I saw, Ashley Dixon.
Her
color is blue, and she is the closest we can get to an early 19th century
version of a blues singer. After all, she has been forced by her very best
friend, the Queen, to marry the less-than-dashing Nottingham, who loves her but
also attempts to lock her away and violently punish her for his own jealousy.
Finally, given all the operatic heroes who made this operatic production
significant—Meade, Bowie, and Kelsey in particular—one cannot ignore the
amazing wonders of conductor Eun Sun Kim, recently appointed music director of
the San Francisco Opera. All LAOpera fans love conductor James Conlon; yet she
brought out a sound from the LAOpera orchestra that shifted its usual muted
acoustics to something that was quite glorious. The Dorothy Chandler Pavilion,
which has long recognized problems of muted orchestral sound, suddenly seemed
to open up to new possibilities. If I am growing a little deaf, last night I
heard every brilliant cord of Donizetti’s previously jinxed opera. And it was
as if this opera’s sometimes clotted and unclear motivations of his composition
had suddenly sprung into new life. I can’t wait to see Meade wow the Met
audiences.
Los Angeles, March 6, 2020
Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and
Performance (March 2020).
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