Comedy's a funny old thing. Rossini and Wagner certainly had rather different approaches to it. The previous night, Glyndebourne Festival opened with Die Meistersinger, a lengthy comedy on a poignant theme, but one not exactly packed with belly laughs. Yet director David McVicar added plenty of comic touches. Rossini's Barber of Seville, clocking up its 200th anniversary this year, is one of the funniest in the business; a raucous farce to a zinging score. Annabel Arden's new production, although decently sung and visually striking, is seriously under-directed, allowing forced acting to blunt the humour.
Joanna Parker's stylish designs are based on blue and white tile patterns of Moorish Spain. Costumes set the action in the 1950s, Count Almaviva's 'poor student' disguise finding him in long metallic frock coat and sporting an Elvis quiff, while barber and general factotum Figaro is a hip-swinging hippie who's too busy to find time to get his own hair cut. It starts promisingly. Each member of the chorus assembled by Fiorello wields a guitar beneath a rose-strewn balcony. In the Act I finale, instead of a giant anvil descending from the flies, representing the confusion hammering the brains of the cast, harpsichords drop down, adding to a running gag involving tradesmen frantically attempting to deliver one.
Did I miss the memo that juggling is obligatory in opera production today? There was plenty of supernumerary action involving a trio of circus troupe acrobats, which added nothing meaningful. A veiled bride spooks Rosina during a storm that was considerably less spectacular than the ferocious downpour outside. And when Glyndebourne picnics are referenced by Bartolo eating lunch from a hamper in his very own house, it signals a director fresh out of ideas. Arden has little to say about the characters who all too often look left to their own devices, either planted at the front of the stage, eyes fixed on the pit, or mugging to the gallery instead.