Glyndebourne Tour is celebrating its 50th year, and opened its new season with their 135th performance of Verdi’s La traviata – who knows what the worldwide tally of performances is now! At its heart, the opera is about devastation caused by illness, but moreso, male power and privilege, and the placing of money, family and honour above love and honesty. It should be shocking that this is still “a subject for our own age”, as Verdi described it, yet it remains a perennial favourite.
What is it about our desire to still watch this tragic destruction of a ‘fallen’ woman played out before us over and over again? Verdi’s intention to set the action in the present day was thwarted by the censors, who demanded he moved the action back by 150 years, distance lending enchantment and therefore reducing the challenge to a contemporary audience. So many productions do the very same thing – keep things in ‘period’, allowing us to tut at the tragedy of the tale and the folly of the characters, and perhaps delight in some colourful costumes, without being forced to look at ourselves too closely. Tom Cairns’ production, with Hildegard Bechtler’s set and costume designs, goes some if not all the way towards achieving Verdi’s contemporary challenge. The time period is non-specific, but clearly closer to the present, and the costumes, particularly in the party scenes, draw on all kinds of influences, as one might expect from contemporary fashion, making it feel current and familiar. The darkness and sparseness of the design strips away much of what normally distances us from the personal, making this appropriately more uncomfortable than the run of the mill Traviatas.
Cairns keeps things simple and uncluttered, concentrating on the relationships and the psychology of proceedings, avoiding distraction from the core action, the two set-piece party scenes being the only moments of extravagance. Even here, the chorus (on fine form) is slightly claustrophobically constrained by the towering walls of Bechtler’s slowly revolving set. Bechtler’s design limits colour to occasional splashes, such as Violetta’s red cloak, or the green baize of the card tables at Flora’s party. But it is Peter Mumford’s lighting design that lifts all of this to another level, with Act 3 opening on a deathbed scene with almost glowing red and blue material, straight out of a Renaissance painting.
The production has struggled to find consistently secure casting since its 2014 debut. However, colleagues here found both casts in the 2017 Festival added a missing dimension to the production. Would Glyndebourne succeed once again with their new cast for this year’s tour? Well, possibly not entirely. A very late cast change has replaced Fabrizio Paesano as Alfredo, with Emanuele D’Aguanno for the first four performances, and Luis Gomes taking over for the remainder of the run. D’Aguanno performed the role in four performances on the 2014 tour, whilst this will be Gomes’ Glyndebourne debut.