“You take a trip, you wind up screaming at your own funeral.” Leonard Bernstein’s legendary description of the opium-fuelled drama of the Symphonie fantastique at one of his Young People’s Concerts in 1969 echoed in the air last night. The same combination of education and entertainment imbued Aurora Orchestra’s Proms performance, the last significant hurrah of the Berlioz 150 anniversary. Billed as an “orchestral theatre staging”, Aurora – playing the score from memory – gave us thrills, chills (and no spills) in a vivid reading… which they then repeated at the late night concert.
It helped that conductor Nicholas Collon could pass for Hector Berlioz himself, flowing locks and outsized cuffs giving him a dandyish air. Amiably informal, Collon introduced the action, but it was left to actor Mathew Baynton – sadly not dressed as the composer – to read from Berlioz’ memoirs. The audience heard about his fixation with the actress Harriet Smithson – we’d call it stalking today – and how his symphony, subtitled “An Episode in the Life of an Artist”, is pretty much an autobiographical account of his obsession. Given Harriet had ignored Hector’s love letters up to this point, a symphony depicting such passionate outpourings must have been alarming. But it worked. Harriet finally heard the Fantastique in 1832, realised Berlioz’ genius and they were married the following year. You couldn’t make it up.
Members of the orchestra, carrying illuminated white paper houses, created the rue de Richelieu, where Berlioz took an apartment so he could spy on Harriet’s whereabouts. Collon then illustrated the idée fixe, whose score ran along the screen at the back of the platform, and the audience provided their own internal punchline before Collon reached the end of his viola joke.