Rossini’s Armida is a rarely-performed gem. One of the reasons why this opera is not often performed is that it requires no fewer than six tenors, but despite the male-dominated cast, it is in fact a brilliant showcase for a soprano – in this case for Renée Fleming. When the Met staged it in 2010, it was specifically for the celebrated American soprano, making this production a must-see for all Fleming fans, as well as for fans of Rossini and bel canto operas.
Armida was first performed in Naples in 1817, a productive year for Rossini in which he composed four operas including the better known La Cenerentola and La gazza ladra. The subject of the Saracen sorceress Armida who falls in love with a Christian knight Rinaldo during the time of the Crusades – taken from Tasso’s epic poem La Gerusalemme liberata – was a popular one in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and was set by Handel (Rinaldo), Gluck, Haydn and many others. Rossini’s setting is in three acts. In Act I, Armida seduces Rinaldo, who kills his rival Gernando in a duel and flees with Armida. Act II takes place in an enchanted forest (here more of an underworld setting) which is transformed into a palace where Armida and Rinaldo enjoy their love. In the last act, Rinaldo’s fellow knights come to rescue him and finally he is freed from Armida’s spells. Her virtuosic fury aria in the final scene forms a spectacular climax.
Although theoretically this is an opera seria, it is not, under Mary Zimmerman’s direction, taken too seriously. The stylized and colourful set by Richard Hudson vaguely represents the Middle East with its mosques and palm trees, but it is certainly not set in the time of the Crusades, but probably in a more recent Imperialist era. Zimmerman’s shrewd idea is to introduce acting roles for “Love” and “Revenge” who shade and manipulate the action of the characters, and come to a head in the final scene.