There’s nothing like a trip to The Barber to refresh you. This season, the Metropolitan Opera revives Bartlett Sher’s 2006 production of Rossini’s comic masterpiece, The Barber of Seville. Isabel Leonard, who appeared in an abridged, English language version of the same production in 2012-13, returns as Rosina, and is supported by a well-rounded ensemble that includes Christopher Maltman, Lawrence Brownlee, and Maurizio Muraro.
While Rossini’s operas are loaded with camp, some stage directors play up the comedy and forget the raison d'être of bel canto operas – beautiful singing. Bartlerr Sher’s production has just the right amount of comedy to keep audiences laughing without degenerating into too much silliness and slapstick. Any production of Barber contains a few predictable elements: the singers will always park and bark at the edge of the stage during the Act I finale, and someone is bound to dart across the stage with a broken umbrella in the Act II storm. But, Sher includes a few surprises sure to make anyone smile.
Set in Seville just before the French Revolution, Michael Yeargan’s set designs do less to put us in that time and place than they do to suggest a simulacrum of the same. Architectural structures were, of course, new at one time. So, why is it that designers feel the need to “antique” their sets? The main elements of the production are a series of “distressed” looking doors and “faux-stucco” backdrops. But the set looked best at the ends of each act, when the faux-stucco background was raised to reveal a solid white backdrop. During these moments, the characters glowed. During the rest of the production, the drab, pseudo-Mediterranean sets made the cast appear as if they were all waiting for a table at the Olive Garden.
Mezzo-soprano Isabel Leonard was a delightful Rosina. Since so many great singers have tackled this role, singers are often under pressure to add something new in their interpretations. While Leonard was not afforded many opportunities to leave her own mark on the music with ornaments and cadenzas, she played a spirited Rosina. Some singers play Rosina a bit coy at the beginning of Act I, even though the character remarks, “sarò una vipera” (“I’ll be a viper”) if I am crossed. With Leonard, we know that Rosina’s fresh face certainly has fangs!