Here was a night of a thousand delights, but an unhappy heart. The 67th Aix Festival got off to a hot, heady start with Katie Mitchell's witty and ingenious staging of Handel's 1735 sorcery opera, a synthesis of drama and fantasy that expands upon brief episodes in Cantos vi and vii of Ariosto's Orlando furioso.
From Anna Prohaska's opening aria as Morgana, sung while minions were strapping her to a bed in 50 shades of bondage, we knew we were in unsafe hands. (Although it probably does the lungs good to sing when you're spreadeagled). The da capo ornamentations were teased out of her by the ticklish ministrations of Anthony Gregory's Oronte, complete with a deft placement of his feather duster to trigger the money note.
All too much? I feared so at first but Mitchell won me over. This scene was a clever manoeuvre, the first of many in a masterclass of Handelian stagecraft, because it grabbed the audience's eyeballs and put them on the alert for what turned into a beautifully paced and realised production.
Before long Alcina herself was centre stage, less spicy in her sexual tastes than her sister though no less hungry. And who's that in a dingy antechamber, idly combing her beaver? Morgana again? But she's so old!
The director and her designer, Chloe Lamford, have revisited the visual aesthetic of Written on Skin three years ago in order to create an unnerving palace of illusion and secrets. There are five rooms on two levels, with an enchanted boudoir at the centre where a pair of raddled old witches can be young again (in a conceit of Mitchell's invention) thanks to a magic elixir. Upstairs there lurks a gadget that looks for all the world like an airport luggage screening belt, though its true properties turn out to be somewhat more transformative. For the rest, expect all the trademark tics: widescreen stage, supernumeraries in drab frocks and lashings of extreme slo-mo. They've never worked better than here.
Alcina relates the fantastical tale of a sorceress who lures men to her court then transforms them into flora and fauna – hence the beaver. Handsome Ruggiero is next on her list, but his beloved Bradamente has arrived to save him disguised as her own brother and, together with her governor Melisso, to right all the wrongs.