Since time immemorial, opera has been seen as a blood sport, and the best sportsman knows that even the cleanest kill requires a little bloodletting. Tourniquets wound tight, Bartlett Sher's bloodless production of Giuseppe Verdi's Otello for the Metropolitan Opera read as a highly-stylized, censored confectionary package painted in tamed palettes.
Sher’s interpretation of Verdi's 1887, four-act opera based on Shakespeare’s Othello – which premiered in September 2015 to open the current Metropolitan Opera season – purged blood and thunder, pathos and passion, impudence and rage, jealousy and revenge to colorless casts. The production failed to tap into Verdi's iron, Boito's shades or Shakespeare’s' dramatics. The Moor has been moored.
Just as Sher played it safe, so did conductor Ádám Fischer, highlighting Verdi's beauties and beasts as a faithful custodian of the score. Rangier, disciplined muscle over brute force would have fared better, such as the opening storm vignette that jangled like Orff.
Catherine Zuber's stylized, wholesome costumes were nicely modeled by an inertly-staged mannequin chorus. Monochromatic menswear hinted profession and social status through cut, drape and detail. Naval uniforms were vague assertions without pinning title or rank onto stacked chests, waists adorned with gold brocade sashes. Achromatic female wardrobes blossomed into decorous ball gowns in predictable, eveningwear tonalities of scarlet, magenta, plum and cobalt decorated with opera gloves and chokers.
Lighting designer Donald Holder sourced Boito's libretto cues – a literal “Fuoco di gioia” was lit in peachy-golden flame. Rich, atmospheric sets signed by Es Devlin were rendered as stylized, architectural glass carvings, crystal palaces weathered in sea salt and mist that slid around the stage into various blockings.
Projection designer Luke Halls set moods with effective, convincing video casts that sourced authentic textures such as granite and ocean whitecaps. Despite punishing the audience with the mercifully-strobing floodlights of Act I's opening storm, Halls created intimate, dynamic settings through video screen arrangements etched in roiling seas, crashing waves, and skies tinged blue and fire-and-brimstone red.