Sir Richard Eyre's 2014 production of Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro is wound in such grand complications that its heartwood isn’t hewn until the fourth act, set in The Count's garden, a tremendous treehouse spiraling a majestic, old-growth trunk dropped in an ancient wood marsh.
Here, protagonists of Mozart's 1786, four-act opera buffa flitted among Rob Howell's monolith set, a latticed basilica of burnished wood carved in Ottoman filigree, which vaulted the opera house’s skyscraper stage (and, alas, created an echo-chamber for voices), dotted with lighting designer Paule Constable's warm lanterns.
The effect was charmingly metaphoric – song sparrows darting crepuscular forest undergrowth, restless and frenetic among Eyre's production set in 1930s Seville. The Count as a silky peacock, strutting ruffled tail feathers, throat puffed out; Susanna as a fearless, red-breasted robin, earnestly tugging-up prey; The Countess as a pearl-grey mourning dove in soft, morose laments; Figaro as a wise but wary crow; Bartolo as a dumpy, tawny woodcock; and so on.
Like Beaumarchais’ play, La Folle Journée, ou Le Mariage de Figaro from 1778, set in the shadows of pre-French Revolution, Eyre's avian metaphor tapped an ephemeral world about to be blown away by Zephyr breezes rattling the pines in the little grove, like the Susanna/Countess duettino "Sull'aria..." as the ladies conspire against the unfaithful Count.
Eyre wove kinetic propulsion among characters with great immediacy. Honoring Beaumarchais' dramaturgical complexities, he created palpable protagonists driven by flaws and strengths, and highlighted incessant tensions in vital pulses.
Through Eyre’s sketches, stage director Jonathon Loy sourced Mozart's keen humanity. Here, Antonio (sung adeptly by Paul Corona) was graciously shifted from the drunk, leathery gardener to a competent estate watchman; Cherubino's exhausting lust was mostly extinguished, Barbarina was palatable; and Marcellina and Bartolo were polished-up from superficial caricatures.
At the other end of Eyre's reverence, the production’s constant freneticism stripped away the Mozart/Da Ponte graces. Beauty’s rarely found in agitation. Beneath pretty, whirling ornaments, there was little transcendence left. Pallid cheeks under the rogue, beauty was asserted, never implied in a production more about décor than much else. To wit, The Count’s “Contessa, perdono” reconciliation – despite wailing strings and the Count's deeply-bowed head – sunk like lead.
As The Count, Luca Pisaroni was outfitted by Howell to reflect gentlemanly sport. Act I sailing chic came with a brass-buttoned navy jacket in soft Neapolitan constructions matched to cream, linen slacks. Act III’s polo sportsmanship came with high Spanish cut topline field boots and full-seat breeches. Little nobility or aristocracy left, Pisaroni held authority without relying on political menace, arrogance from vanity. With outstanding resonance and burnished, polished, lyric timbres, Pisaroni stamped beautiful, dark shades when needed or stripped it clean and clear with uniform emission in every register. Naturalistic recitatives (accompanied by harpsichordist Bryan Wagorn) were marked with great infections. Arias were masterclasses, such as “Hai già vinta la causa!”