|
By STEVEN CORNELIUS
BLADE MUSIC CRITIC
The stage and real life, love and revenge are brought into play
in Toledo Opera's bracing production of Ruggiero Leoncavallo's
Pagliacci, which opened a three-performance run last night at the
Valentine Theatre.
Though remarkably short for an opera at just 75 minutes, Leoncavallo
created a searing tale of love and infidelity. The composer characterized
the piece as "verismo," that is, true to life. Whether
real people actually live their lives with as much passion as can
be delivered on the operatic stage is a question worth pondering.
Certainly true, however, is the fact that when well done, as was
last night's performance, looking in on such passion is terrifically
disturbing, like being a sexual predator and victim, enabler and
voyeur simultaneously.
Briefly, the story tells of Nedda, the faithless
wife of the jealous and passionate Canio. Already losers in real
life, they find themselves making their living on the stage where
night after night they confront their marital demons by playing
a comic version of their real-life story. In the end, Canio is
no longer able to separate theater from reality. He demands to
know the name of Nedda's lover, which she refuses to reveal. Canio
murders her.
Watching all this is difficult, and yet, because the
music is so wonderful, also irresistibly engaging. Credit much
of this production's power to stage director Gregory Fortner, who
succeeded in stripping the various characters to their emotional
essences. Nedda is simultaneously sultry and feral, her lover,
Silvio, a puppy of a man. The hunch-backed Tonio, whom Nedda has
jilted, is a raging cyclone of vengeance. Canio is a man reduced
to clown. Solo singing was first-rate all around and invariably
in character.
Credit must also go to the large chorus. Not only
was it extremely well rehearsed, but better yet, richly spirited.
Every entrance was an event worth savoring.
Conductor Thomas Conlin
seemed perfectly in his element with this rich musical score. He
drew large and passionate timbres from the Toledo Symphony musicians.
A
suggestion. Anyone looking to try opera for the first time, this
is the show to attend. The pacing is tight, the singing terrific.
The drama? I guarantee you will leave the theater emotionally shaken.
Toledo
Opera presents Leoncavallo's Pagliacci at 7:30 p.m. Friday and
2 p.m. Sunday in the Valentine Theatre. Information: 419-255-7464.
The
Toledo Blade, Sunday, April 2, 2006
Reprinted with permission. |