There are a few opera houses in the world which are worth visiting regardless of the quality of the performance offered: La Fenice, Drottningholm, Teatro San Carlo in Naples, the Hungarian State Opera and Munich's Cuvilliés Theatre immediately spring to mind. Arguably at the top of the list is the superb 650-seat Estates Theatre in Prague where Don Giovanni was first performed in 1787 with Mozart himself conducting. You can’t get much better operatic history than that.
Czech maestro David Švec appeared to opt for the original Prague score as Don Ottavio’s “Dalla sua pace” was cut, which was not so tragic given the less than Wunderlich-quality of tenor Martin Šrejma. Švec used Mozart’s 1788 Vienna revision which, as usual, added Donna Elvira’s “Mi tradì” aria but omitted the final “Questo è il fin di chi fa mal” sextet. The small Mozartean orchestra played in a more accompanying than assertive way and Švec’s tempi were consistently on the brisk side, especially in the recitatives which were galloped through to the serious detriment of both diction and dramaturgical impact. The “Giovinette che fate all’amore” chorus was so rushed it gave a new meaning to “shotgun” wedding.
The production dates back to 2010 and was the brainchild of Czech directing duo Martin Kukučka and Lukáš Trpišovsk who bizarrely call themselves “SKUTR” which means “Scooter” in English. Unfortunately in terms of directional quality this Giovanni was closer to a second-hand Vespa than a Ducati Desmosedici. The opening set was a bare courtyard surrounded by three very high walls in which numerous concealed windows and openings were located. Paradoxically there were no windows at all in Act II when Giovanni sings the “Deh, vieni alla finestra”.
Like many modern day directors who think an overture has no value unless there is some visual distraction going on, SKUTR had Giovanni and Leporello ambushing Don Ottavio on his way to a sex date with Donna Anna (who is blindfolded and dressed in some kind of commedia dell’arte tutu) and Giovanni adroitly impersonates the chloroformed betrothed. Admittedly before “Or sai chi l’onore” Donna Anna gives the same identity-confusion explanation but such libidinous pre-marital behaviour hardly fits Don Ottavio’s intensely circumspect temperament.
Leporello sings the Catalogue Aria without anything even vaguely approximating a “little black book”. Instead, it is directed to a pair of Elvira’s shoes which makes “leggete con me” somewhat implausible. Beds of black tulips miraculously appear at odd internals more suitable to a macabre staging of La finta giardiniera. Donna Elvira (a slightly shrill Jana Horáková Levicová) carries a similar bouquet although hers are actually elongated arrow/darts which she hurls indiscriminately onto the floor and walls. She is accompanied by her maid to whom Leporello directs his sarcastic comments when Elvira recognises her feckless seducer. Obviously this contradicts Leporello’s later assertion that he has never seen Elvira’s servant.