Throughout the pandemic, we have seen orchestras, ensembles and opera companies worldwide coming to terms with Covid restrictions and using them as springboards for creativity. Seattle Opera has gone one step further and set itself the additional challenge of presenting Mozart’s Don Giovanni to an audience acutely aware of the #MeToo movement, and – here in London, for example – alive to the campaign to reclaim the streets as a safe place for women.
Seattle has chosen to take a wholly cinematic approach to its latest stream, using close-ups and travelling shots to focus on the wronged women in the story, not the perpetrator. In doing so it diminishes the dominance of the Don – actually reflecting the score and libretto, something that is often overlooked in more extravagant productions. It is the women who are given the most complex and demanding arias, and it is their story and their response to the Don’s rapacious character that lies at the heart of the drama.
To complete the cinematic approach, director Brenna Corner has chosen to film in black and white, apparently inspired by the 1964 film of a Broadway staging of Hamlet, starring Richard Burton. It’s not clear that this adds anything tangible to the already cut-down production; draining it of colour when our current world is so solidly monochrome is frankly deflating. And despite valiant playing, lone pianist David McDade and conductor Lidiya Yankovskaya can’t make up for the loss of the vivid orchestral palette so embedded in Mozart’s magical score. At times it feels we are eavesdropping on a rehearsal.
To avoid physical contact and the need to socially distance a chorus, significant cuts have been made (no partying, no fights), bringing the whole opera down to a fast-track 90 minutes. Some curious gear changes are inevitable with this approach, but the essence of the drama is never lost and the crucial set pieces allowed their full weight.