When the entire plot is triggered by a freak accident, you can't blame director David Pountney for making Fate itself the opera's key character. The first scene of Verdi's La forza del destino ends when the Marquis of Calatrava, having blundered across his daughter's elopement, is killed when the pistol discarded by her lover, Don Alvaro, accidentally goes off. Pountney takes the peripheral characters of Preziosilla – a war-mongering gypsy – and Leonora's maid, and turns them into Destiny, driving the opera from the moment she strikes her staff three times on the fate-ridden chords that open the overture.
Sometimes masked, sometimes in diamantine top hat and tails like a cabaret artiste, Justina Gringyte's Preziosilla dominates the action. It is Preziosilla who sees through the disguise of Don Carlo, seeking revenge for his father's death, and it is she who claims her victims in battle, bringing together Alvaro and Carlo (oblivious of each other's real identity) in military comradeship. And it is she who embodies the temptation Carlo feels, offering him the valise containing the wounded Alvaro's possessions, including the portrait of Leonora which gives the whole game away. When Carlo challenges the recovered Alvaro to a duel, Preziosilla steps between them; Destiny decrees their time will come.
Pountney divides the opera – the first of a Verdi trilogy at Welsh National Opera over the next three seasons – into two halves, Peace and War. He keeps the action flowing, so we plunge from one scene directly straight into the next, aided by Raimund Bauer's sets that turn like the pages of a book. The opera sprawls, the action a series of unwieldy tableaux, but Pountney makes something coherent from it. He swaps two scenes in Act 3, bringing forward the embittered soldiers' scene – here a ghoulish revue at the Piccolo Teatro della Guerra – that Verdi inserted from Schiller's Wallenstein's Camp, thus allowing Alvaro a little more recovery time for the sake of credibility. Slight cuts are inflicted, the most regrettable the duet for Padre Guardiano and the grumbling monk Melitone in Act 4, although arguably it holds up the action.