Despite Violetta’s fragile health, Covent Garden Traviatas are made of sturdy stuff. Luchino Visconti’s 1967 production lasted nearly thirty years and Richard Eyre’s successor clocked up its 25th anniversary just before Christmas. It was an instant hit, the BBC hastily clearing its schedules to broadcast the third performance on television. It made a star of Angela Gheorghiu and sopranos have been queueing up to don Bob Crowley’s fabulous frocks ever since. Last night, it was Aleksandra Kurzak’s turn, making her house debut as Violetta to a depleted audience as – for now at least – the show goes on.
It’s often said that one needs three sopranos to sing the role of Violetta: a coloratura for the vocal pyrotechnics of Act 1; a lyric soprano for Act 2; and a dramatic soprano for Act 3. Kurzak has all the coloratura agility, having sung bel canto roles such as Adina, Norina and Rosina at Covent Garden for years, so “Sempre libera” was a walk in the park, diamantine top notes – including the interpolated E flat – tossed off with ease and dynamic sensitivity. When she sang Lucia di Lammermoor here in 2016, I wrote that the warmth of her coloratura reminded me of Renata Scotto; I noted exactly the same parallel here.
But Kurzak’s voice has grown and darkened since she last sang in London and there was an impressive, fuller quality to her chest voice, evident when she immediately put Germont père in his place right away (“I am a lady, Sir, and this is my house.”). In the Violetta–Germont duet, she fully captured the nervous hesitancy in “Non sapete quale affeto” and spun a golden legato in “Dite alla giovine” until bringing an appropriately breathy quality to the word “morrà”. There was robust intensity to steeling herself to write the letter to Alfredo, and her plea for him to love her as she loves him was delivered on her knees.