'Midsummer Night's Dream' at Wolf Trap
Ryan Belongie (Oberon) and Alexander Strain (Puck) in A Midsummer Night's Dream (photo by Kim Pensinger Witman for the Wolf Trap Opera Company) -- More photos |
Although it seems a little surprising to me, some people are still put off by Britten's harmonic and melodic style: at the end of the first act, which is heavy on Oberon's menace, a large portion of the audience got in their cars and drove away. This is a shame, because by the third act the opera becomes a rollicking farce with the performance of the "rude mechanicals," costumed in this production (directed by Patrick Diamond, costumes designed by Camille Assaf) as a highway construction crew in reflective vests and overalls. The concept included a mullet for Nicholas Masters's Bottom, played as the paragon of inept vanity, which required only a large pair of ears for him to be transformed into an ass. Among the group of six, the full low range of Kenneth Kellogg as Quince stood out, as did the cross-dressed hilarity of David Portillo's Flute, complete with voice cracks as he tested out his feminine range (Peter Pears, who created the role, would have been proud). Nathaniel Peake should win some sort of versatility award, having switched gears from the sadistic Soliman in Zaide to the hapless Snout, whose blithely tone-deaf performance as the Wall in the Act 3 play brought down the house.
Britten, A Midsummer Night's Dream, F. Lott, I. Cotrubas, J. Bowman, Glyndebourne Opera, B. Haitink |
Joan Reinthaler, Wolf Trap's "Midsummer Night's Dream" is a light, fun frolic (Washington Post, August 16) Terry Ponick, Spend your 'Midsummer Night' at Wolf Trap's Barns (Washington Times, August 17) |
This production of Britten's A Midsummer Night's Dream will be repeated once more, on Tuesday night (August 17, 8 pm), in the Barns at Wolf Trap.
1 comment:
Thanks to a kind-hearted patron who gave me a ticket gratis barely 15 minutes before the Friday evening curtain - I knew that the performance was sold out in advance but took a chance that someone might perchance return a ticket at the last minute - I was unable to make the other two performances - I managed to see the same performance - and was similarly enchanted by the quality of the singers.
It did, however, remind me of a non-musical film which dates from 1955, namely Ingmar Bergman's great tragicomedy "Smiles of a Summer Night." In that film, as in Britten's operatic "Midsummer Night's Dream," various couples become disentangled and progressively entangled, and it is up to Bergman, as the "Oberon" of his film odyssey, to bring resolution to the confusion. For those who did not do the cowardly thing and did not drive away after the first act, check out the Bergman masterpiece and see if it does not hold some similarities with the Britten chamber opera.
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