Given the paucity of operas in Ireland, there is always great anticipation when one is performed, especially one as witty and delightful as Wide Open Opera’s production of The Barber of Seville. Rossini’s Barber is a jewel among comic operas of the 19th century, and judging from the frequency and heartiness of laughs from the audience, it has lost none of its capacity to entertain and to amuse modern audiences. It was not just the fine comic acting that was so impressive but the stellar cast of singers which made it a resounding success.
While I am not hugely in favour of directors updating period gems like The Barber to make it more relevant for modern audiences, there was lots to admire in director Michael Barker-Caven’s 1970s take on this classic. Most of the action of the opera took place in the simple interior of Dr Bartolo’s house, cleverly designed by Jamie Vartan with large amounts of vinyl and recording equipment in evidence while for the street scenes the interior could spin round to reveal slightly grotty, graffiti-sprayed walls typical of city houses on the continent. A faded poster of Franco completed the set. Barker-Caven’s idea of having Figaro enter in an old Beetles van with the hairdresser’s red and white pole aloft was nothing short of hilarious as was Count Almaviva’s serenading of Rosina via a street telephone with Figaro accompanying him on an electric guitar. While setting the action of the opera in the 1970s offered many moments of mirth, it still did not explain satisfactorily two essential premises of the opera, why the spirited Rosina would have neither the freedom to love whom she wished nor the liberty to leave the house of her lecherous guardian?
However, such was the quality of singing from the principals that any incongruities of period were quickly forgotten. In particular it was the ravishing voice of young Irish mezzo Tara Erraught that really bowled me over. Dispatching her rapid passages, leaps and high notes with pearly brilliance, she beguiled us all with her delicate coloratura and pellucid tone. At once saucy and sly, Erraught brought Rosina alive perfectly capturing her inherent wilfulness, while in Act II she imbued her character with a certain vulnerability as she sings the alternative aria “Ah se è ver che in tal momento” (not usually included) wondering whether her lover has been faithful or not. Erraught has been often dubbed as a rising star of the opera world: I think last night’s performance proved her as a luminously brilliant star at her zenith.