Giuseppe Verdi’s late opera Otello opened the season at Teatro Regio in Turin. Conductor Gianandrea Noseda faced the challenge of this disquieting masterpiece, last time performed in Turin by the Berliner Philarmoniker (conducted by Claudio Abbado) in 1997.
Sixteen years after the composition of Aida, Verdi returned to the opera house with his Otello (1887). From the very first notes, everyone could feel its modernity: a tempest is raging at the harbour of Cyprus, where Otello is struggling to dock. The thunder, wind and the sea’s violent lapping are all depicted by an orchestral deflagration: an ascending fortissimo leading directly to a F major. The sound raises and lowers, according to the movement of the waves smashing on the shore. Verdi’s usual audience must have been really shocked upon experiencing this powerful and overwhelming introduction which already has all the shades of an expressionistic picture.
British director Walter Sutcliffe sets Otello right in the middle of a never-ending battle. The minimalist scenes are overlooked by blooded war barricades, which surround the characters as a permanent frame of violence and brutality. Like a window, the barricades were opened and closed a few times throughout the performance, highlighting Otello’s profound thoughts and hidden motives. The result is a sense of imprisonment and subjugation to those sinister suspects which will lead to a desperate conclusion (“Ecco la fin del mio cammin”: this is the end of my path).
A part from this, Sutcliffe’s adaptation showed almost no originality. The violence was over exaggerated: blood stains covered everything, two Muslims were stabbed to death right after the tempest, even Iago was killed at the end of act IV. Otello’s modernity, conversely, lays in the crisis of the protagonist: the jealousy and the killing of Desdemona are just parts of this wider dynamic of depersonalisation. In Shakespeare’s tragedy, Otello was born in slavery and suffered in his life, as he himself and Desdemona remember in their superb and moving duet at the end of act I: “E tu m’amavi per le mie sventure“/ “ed io t’amavo per la tua pietà” (And you loved me for my misfortunes/ and I loved you for your pity). Otello is not a young man any more, but now a general with demanding responsibilities. His weakness is fomented by Iago, who instils in him the seeds of jealousy and revenge. Otello cannot recognize himself anymore: his values are overturned and his certainty vacillates. He is already condemned to misery.