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The Recipe of True Happiness

Por , 16 mayo 2011

If you believe that true happiness can be found in music, I have a recipe for you to follow. Take a funny story of disguise, sham and mock marriage and set it to great music. Add a quartet of bel canto stars (a lyric tenor, a coloratura soprano, a baritone and a bass) and dress them in spectacular 17th century costumes. Add pantomime artists, masked dancers and a chorus. Place all in a commedia dell’arte ‘theater within theater’ set, painted in coral and gold. Season with superb singing, impeccable acting and irresistible humor, and enjoy a perfect opera buffa, just like Donizetti’s Don Pasquale that I saw in the WNO Friday night. (Friday, 13th to be precise, but grand opera is way above bad luck superstitions, thus unsusceptible to their powers). And believe me, if a production of the described quality won’t make you happy, nothing ever will.

A headspinning opening performance of Leon Major’s production turned out to be a perfect fusion of first-class opera and sophisticated comedy. It offered anything and everything a comic opera ever had in store for the audience: exquisite bel canto renditions, flawless coloratura passages, refined theatricality, hilarious acting and of course, traditional for the genre on-stage commotions.

Set in the era of the great Moliere and the rise of Italian comedy, this compelling production treated us to quite a few surprises. A commedia dell’ arte pantomime, a masked ballet, a breathtaking performance of Povero Ernesto by tenor Antonio Gadia and a spontaneous encore of the hilarious Pasquale-Malatesta duet, masterfully sung by James Morris and Dwayne Croft, were just a few of the evening’s numerous gems.

However, the biggest surprise (and joy!) was to watch acclaimed Wagnerian bass James Morris step into a completely new for his repertoire comic role and handle the challenge with virtuosity and ease of a buffa veteran. His Pasquale, ridiculous in his pompous wigs and scarlet stockings, was nasty enough to make the audience mock his every step in Acts 1 and 2. Yet, in Act 3 he completely stole our hearts by showing a softer side of his touching and at times almost adorable character. During the performance there was not a single grim face in the house: the audience had a two-and-a-half-hour long laugh and loved it! This was a comedy with a capital ‘C’, contagiously happy and definitely the one to remember.

If you believe that true happiness can be found in music, I have a piece of advice for you to follow. Rush to get your tickets for Leon Major’s production of Don Pasquale and let happiness into your lives! And believe me, if a production of the described quality won’t make you happy… but what am I saying?! Of course, it will.

*****
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Crítica hecha desde Kennedy Center: Opera House, Washington el 13 mayo 2011
Donizetti, Don Pasquale
Washington National Opera
Plácido Domingo, Dirección
Leon Major, Dirección de escena
James Morris, Don Pasquale
Ekaterina Siurina, Norina
Dwayne Croft, Dr Malatesta
Antonio Gadia, Ernesto
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