Countess - Evgenia Grekova
Susanna - Lee Yun-Jeong
Figaro - Carl Rumstadt
Cherubino - Eleonora Vacchi
Marcellina - Claude Eichenberger
Bartolo - Stephen Owen
Don Basilio - Andries Cloete
Don Curzio - Andres Del Castillo
Barbarina - Daniela Ruth Stoll
Antonio - Kai Wegner
Chor Konzert Theater Bern
Berner Symphonieorchester
Jochem Hochstenbach (Conductor)
Markus Bothe (Director)
The overture gave a kaleidoscope of the key figures and set the opening scene alike the television drama 'Upstairs Downstairs'. They climbed up and down the ladders between two rooms or appeared from the doors on the ground. Interestingly except Susanna and Figaro in servant outfits from early 20th century, the rest still wore powdered wigs and fashioned to the early 18th century. Generation gap was exemplified by fashion changes but it would require the stage choreography to reinforce the ideological conflict than merely a visual impression. An example would be the count, who wore silk coat to symbolise his status, as a naive figure in this hide and seek game, though far from portraying an authority failed to preserve and exercise his feudal rights. He was also soft with Figaro that only frustrated than raged over the growing mistrust after attempting to seduce Susanna.
The countess bedroom scene looked rather chilling by the displayed cold coloured dresses and tired stage lights. It captured the countess's loneliness in a loveless marriage though omitting the emotional torment over her husband's infidelity. A warmer light scheme returned when Susanna and Cherubino entered the room. Although the latter was a pant role, the flirting over serenade became rather like a lesbian threesome affair. Later confusions was dramatically unfolded as the count tried to trap everyone in further hide and seek chasing. The best moment was the flood of shoes collapsed when the count opened the cupboard to discover Susanna but not Cherubino hiding in there. Though it was rather straight forward to find the countess reconciled with the count quickly neither did she put much efforts to stop the forceful advance. The portrayal did not inject much character to the role than only a weak and submissive wife. Even so, intensity was able to kept tightly during the exchange between Figaro and the count on Cherubino's commission letter while confronting with Antonio. One could sense the sheer tension gathered up by the chaos in its fullness sense at the brilliant sextet conclusion of the first half.
Compare to the first half as a playground of confusion, hostility was more apparent in the second half. The count was furious by Susanna's further betrayal and confronted Figaro over the marriage arrangement than only being tossed around by actions. In turn, Figaro was anguished by the count's further distrust and vicious plot. He was still upset after the wedding and even angry at Marcellina even recognised she was his actual mother. The party itself made another statement that the class distinction no longer clearly defined, and the aristocrats gradually losing the respect and courtesy from the household.
One high point of this production was the confetti celebrating the marriage later formed the garden maze in the final scene with long colourful strips. Visually it was effective from the audience perspective, though singers had difficulty to manoeuvre around in their long dress. The finale was appropriately not a jubilant celebration and the count lost his plot altogether even the countess forgave him, who probably the only one left had a soft spot for his misdeeds. Both minor roles, Barbarina and Don Basilio, were also given more perspective in this production. The former appeared throughout and she not only flirted with Cherubino, but also the count even he rejected her wild advance. Basilio wore a flamboyant outfit and acted as a key player in first half trying to side with anyone who ever came to his interest in revealing scandals.
One was amazed by the high musical standard from both singers and orchestra at first hearing. Carl Rumstadt, as the protagonist, delivered a confident start for being clear on diction and a resonated voice with the desired warmth and vocal body. His singing had the flexibility to realise the emotion changes in each arias through switching vocal colour, and phrased the music naturally. Perhaps tiredness sunk in towards the end of the evening and his vocal energy was not as sustain as before. Lee Yun-Jeong, who sang the role of Susanna, improved immensely as the evening went. Mostly vowels were audible in the opening entries even with a beautiful timbre and smooth articulation to keep a flowing momentum. Later the singing carried the ringing tone more and the voice never show any sign of tiredness. Register changes were smooth and flexible, also paced the tempo naturally.
Todd Boyce, as count, was rather muddy in diction and portrayed the role as a naive figure at first. He gradually built up the character over arguments with the countess in act two and plotting for revenge in act three. His singing became more dramatic to convey the emotions and richer in vocal colour to add the weight as a bass-baritone. Musically the weakest link of the evening was Evgenia Grekova who sang the role of countess. She preferred a slower tempo but the voice was rather thin in body that did not carry much direction. During her duets with the count or Susanna, her projection was often underweight compare and the vocal energy faded gradually in the second half. Heavy vibrato and rather closed way of singing vowels did not help her singing to keep the pitch level from going flat.
Among the minor roles, Andries Cloete's Don Basilio was most suited in terms of timbre and characterisation. Despite not a beautiful voice, his singing was smooth and flowing throughout the only extended aria in act one. Eleonora Vacchi's Cherubino was a mixed affair that tuning went flat in the text heavy passage and the voice was more projected only by reaching the higher register. Her vocalisation improved during the serenade to the countess but tempo was too quick for my taste. Daniela Ruth Stoll was more audible in the recitative than Barbarina's only aria in the second half. Claude Eichenberger as Marcellina had a rich powerful voice but at times one felt the vocal body too big and rich for the part. Stephen Owen was rather heavy on vibrato in the role of Don Bartolo and often speaking than singing his part. The orchestral playing was generally crisp, tidy and responsive to the direction of Jochem Hochstenbach. Only the brass was occasionally flat on tuning and sluggish. There were no moment I felt dull and a surprise to find such a capable ensemble from a regional opera company.
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