Keenlyside as Don Giovanni. Photo (c) Catherine Ashmore |
In the first tableau of this production, Donna Anna is going to bed. The walls of her father's house close her in, and feminine virtue (so fragile a thing!) is safe: the Commendatore and Don Ottavio shake hands on it, and retire. Under the forbidding walls, however--under the very statue of the Blessed Virgin, who alone accomplished the duties of her sex while escaping its curse!--Leporello waits. When Don Giovanni appears, he is clad in mephistophelian red and completely consumed with the thought of his own safety. He is charismatic, sadistic, a trifle fey; he kisses the dying Commendatore and lies down with him, seeking perhaps the unfamiliar sensation of awe. Morally bankrupt is the society which must look to such a man for liberation. Perhaps the chief merit of Zambello's production, however, is that the Don's relationships with the opera's three women are markedly different, determined not only by his character, but--perhaps evenly more strongly--by the characters of the women themselves.
Donna Anna is a woman who has learned very well the role she will be expected to perform for the rest of her life, and who is beginning to fear and resent its constraints. Having found the temporary escape of pleasure with Don Giovanni, she is let down by his selfishness, and spends the rest of the opera looking for a way out using the means open to her alone. Marina Poplavskaya gave a performance stronger than I expected. There were some intonation problems, but she tackled Donna Anna's challenging music with steely determination. Ramon Vargas was excellent as Don Ottavio, displaying his customarily nuanced musicianship, and unusually nuanced acting, giving the hapless Ottavio both intelligence and character growth. Joyce DiDonato's Elvira appears in a pearl-gray dress, carrying a rifle like a latter-day Artemis with her bow. She is incandescent with fury. But we have the strongest possible proof that she actually loved Don Giovanni: she still does. And he, seeing this as a weakness, does not hesitate to use it against her. DiDonato sang with both agility and expressiveness, infusing her tone with nuances of sensuality and outraged tenderness. (Not for a minute do I believe that this Elvira ends up in a cloister. Intriguingly, she and Donna Anna disguise themselves as men to infiltrate Don Giovanni's house.) Zerlina is, in many ways, the heroine of the piece, who works to forge a true partnership with Masetto and crosses class boundaries to console and advise the other women. It helps that she is the fantastic Miah Persson. Persson's intelligent dramatic and musical choices made Zerlina charming without being saccharine. When we meet her, she and Masetto are being feted with a charivari; it is she who pulls Don Giovanni on to the bed. But what Don Giovanni actually desires (rather than what he promises) she wants no part of. The moment where Don Giovanni violates his own sole creed, "Viva la liberta!" by seeking to violate her is the catalyst of his downfall. The cast is rounded out by Robert Gleadow, a solid and notably serious Masetto; Erik Halfvarson, a genuinely frightening Commendatore; and Kyle Ketelsen as an excellent Leporello, moving as well as witty, held in thrall by the threat of his master's violence. Although finally conquered (in that rarity, a genuinely frightening final scene) Keenlyside's Don Giovanni ends up in an afterworld where the pleasures of the flesh are gratified rather than punished. Equally mysteriously, the final tableau suggests that the characters have succeeded in creating a clean slate for their shared futures (gone is the prison-like set, and gone are the color-coded costumes.) Is Don Giovanni perhaps the unworthy catalyst of reform, and the women its agents? I'd like to think so, anyway. And I'd like to watch the DVD again.
Zerlina and Don Giovanni:
I am going to have to watch this again. My clearest memory of this production is that particularly heinous wig! Agreed that the Grandage production is dire. There are far too many good DGs around to bother with that!
ReplyDeleteThe wigs are indeed awful! Surely the point that Giovanni, Ottavio, and the Commendatore are all idle aristocrats could have been made without that. Sigh. This production is hardly a masterpiece, but I found its readiness to play with the interpersonal dynamics refreshing, and its attempts to find a visual language for political systems at least passable.
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