Jago: Io non sono che un critico.After The Queen of Spades, reviewed yesterday, the second opera that the Mariinsky Theater has brought from St. Petersburg to the Kennedy Center was Otello. The other late Verdi masterpiece, Falstaff, was a disappointment last year, and this updated production left much to be desired visually but had some fine singing and one major discovery. Just as with the Kirov's Falstaff, the problem with stage director Vasily Barkhatov's approach in this new production (premiered in St. Petersburg only last month) is that he did not trust Verdi and his librettist, Arrigo Boito. At this point in his career, Verdi's dramatic instincts were fully formed and no detail in the libretto or score is unintended or out of place. Directors who interfere too much with that carefully wrought plan run the risk of ultimately diminishing the work rather than simply making it new.
A. Boito, libretto of Otello
Lighthouse in the harbor of Xania, Crete |
Tim Page, Kirov's 'Otello,' In One Fell Swoop (Washington Post, December 11) T. L. Ponick, Powerful voices propel 'Otello' (Washington Times, December 11) Karren LaLonde Alenier, Otello & the Lighthouse (The Dressing, December 12) |
The second cast on Wednesday night's performance was a mixed bag, mostly good rather than great. Baritone Edem Umerov was in pretty good voice, with plenty of snarl as Jago, but just as he did as Falstaff last year, he was perpetually ahead of or behind the beat (the Act I brindisi was all over the place, complicated by an overfast tempo), with panicky confusion often written on his face. Tenor Avgust Amonov was a gangling and oddly benign Otello, vocally and dramatically. The heroic passages never quite had the ring to thrill the ears and his high piano sound was not particularly sweet. Among the supporting cast, nice sounds came from the youthful and appealing Cassio of Sergey Semishkur.
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There is only one remaining performance of Otello, on Sunday afternoon (December 16, 3 pm). There is no way to know who will sing Desdemona. Full-time students are eligible to buy $25 tickets to the Sunday performance, through the Attend! program.
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