Scottish Opera’s final production of the season was a revival of the much-loved 1980 production of Tosca by the late Anthony Besch, redirected here by Jonathan Cocker. Besch was struck by the political parallel between the Napoleonic era of the 1800s and Italy under Mussolini in the 1940s, and he made the bold choice to set this production in 1943. It all works superbly, which is testified not only by this seventh revival for Scottish Opera, but also by the fact that this production has been seen in places as far apart as New Zealand, Spain and the USA.
Peter Rice’s wonderfully convincing designs transport us to the three actual settings in Rome: the convincing interiors of the Church of Sant’Andrea della Valle and Farnese Palace in particular must strike those new to this production as amazing. The sets still look splendid and fresh back in their Glasgow home after all their worldwide journeys – if there were a prize for most travelled opera set, surely this must be a contender.
It has been fascinating to follow this production over the years. I first saw this in London during the heady days when Scottish Opera toured regularly, and Besch returned to Glasgow when he could to redirect revivals in person. Cocker continues to make slight changes in the staging and lighting, but we lost one of the iconic images of this production, Tosca’s long scarf snaking out the door after her as she steals out of the Farnese Palace at the end of Act II – a lone figure lit in the doorway was not the same somehow. In the very final moment of the opera, after Tosca’s leap, there are a baffling few seconds: in what is apparently an air raid, the soldiers on the battlements of Castel Sant’Angelo all fall down dead as the curtain comes down. The magnificent set piece during the Te Deum in Act I is as stunning as ever: the Cardinal sprinkles holy water, King Victor Emmanuel III and Queen Elena are in attendance, and Scarpia forgets about God and bows to Benito Mussolini who arrives in the very final tableau.