Every year, the Guildhall, with each new crop of talent, chooses operas to showcase the current selection of voices on its prestigious opera course. Often, this means reviving rather rare works, a happy side-effect for keen opera fans, though sometimes obscurity can spare a composer’s blushes. In this double bill, we get a violently enthusiastic little farce from Donizetti which, though fiery, is definitely not his best work; but next, we are treated to the revival of a brilliant, beautiful one-act opera by Malcolm Arnold, which is so good that you can’t understand why it isn’t performed more often.
Director Martin Lloyd-Evans has created two distinct productions, each unique in tone and approach, with instant atmosphere produced by Yannis Thavoris’ playful designs: appropriately, a grimy padded cell for Donizetti, and a gilded cage of windows for The Dancing Master. Costumes are particularly lovely in both productions, as is the elegant lighting by Richard Howell. We also have one tenuous and unusual link between the pieces: in each work, some characters pretentiously break into French for effect, to the utter disgust of their (Italian- or English-speaking) fellows.
I pazzi per progetto translates as “Madmen by Design”: set in a mental hospital (here, L’Institut de Psychiatrie Experimentale), it is a tale of how a broken marriage is mended by an unfaithful husband and abandoned wife each pretending to go mad to prove their love for their (supposedly) unfeeling spouse. Naturally, no story of madness would be complete without an errant trumpeter who has deserted from the army, or a spurned mistress (whose dubious claim to sanity is that she “knows the whole of Molière by heart”!); Donizetti adds them in, to rather laboured comic effect. His structure, muddled enough by his chocolate-box cast, is skewed entirely by several vast double arias for Norina, the estranged wife: technically tough and requiring huge stamina, Alison Langer makes the most of this tricky part, with lots of natural stage presence and skilful acting. Langer sings with clear enjoyment, showing obvious potential. Szymon Wach is delightfully deranged as her erstwhile husband Blinval, a Colonel with a taste for strict discipline, while Martin Hässler shows innate comic talent and superb musical stamina as the disguised AWOL trumpeter Don Eustachio.
Donizetti’s viciously rapid lyrics are sometimes too much for some of this cast, who lose the occasional final syllable, but Hässler’s phrasing never misses a beat, and his clowning is a delight. The smaller parts are admirably executed by David Ireland as the unflappable orderly Frank, and Milan Siljanov as an evocatively nasty guardian, Venanzio. Praise must also go to Valeria Racco, the on-stage pianist disguised as another mental patient throughout, interacting hilariously with the rest of the cast while accompanying them, as Donizetti mixes full orchestra with solo piano. It may not be Donizetti’s best work, but this cast makes their exuberant best of it, and musically there is much to enjoy, even if it’s all rather bonkers.