Prague has a longstanding love affair with The Marriage of Figaro. It is still a point of pride among the city’s musical establishment that after a première and brief run that drew a lukewarm reception in Vienna, the opera opened in Prague in December 1786 and played for months to rapturous audiences. In a letter written during a visit to Prague the following month, Mozart marveled, “Nothing else is being talked about but Figaro, nothing but Figaro is being played, trumpeted, sung and whistled, no other opera but Figaro is being attended... it’s certainly a great honor for me.”
Mozart himself conducted the January 22 performance. In the decades since, luminaries like Carl Maria von Weber, Bedřich Smetana and Adolf Čech have succeeded him on the podium. So it’s a disappointment to see such a lackluster new production at the storied Estates Theater.
Director Magdalena Švecová has done Figaro before, as well as Baroque and bel canto opera, plus a portion of the Czech repertoire. So experience is not an issue. But in this production, she canʼt quite seem to make up her mind. In appearance and performance it’s very much a period piece, with costumes and scenery that fit a predominantly Baroque style of declamation and singing. The sensibilities, however, are jarringly modern – physical comedy, contemporary choreography, breaking the fourth wall. This tongue-in-cheek approach has its moments, but ultimately seems to slight the material.
And it can be distressingly uneven. Švecová teaches opera acting and movement at the Plzeň Conservatory, and at times the production is a model of period performance. But too often the singers seem not to know what to do, waving their arms aimlessly or tugging on their costumes. Figaro striking a cuckolded pose under a mounted pair of antlers is witty, but Cherubino and Barbarina making their way through the audience for their brief scene in Act Three feels contrived. Bits of slapstick to fill the time for set changes between acts just reinforce the impression of the entire evening being an awkward in-joke.