Any opera house willing to revive Damiano Michieletto's production of Guillaume Tell is a brave one. At its 2015 inauguration at the Royal Opera House, a controversial rape scene in Act 3 drew outrage from audience and critics alike, precipitating a crisis at Covent Garden and a debate about the nature of its public function. The production has not resurfaced since, but Palermo's Teatro Massimo has decided it is time for a re-evaluation, and secured a lease from Covent Garden to open the season. This is no light undertaking. Rossini's casting requirements are enough to put even top theatres under pressure, while Michieletto's large-scale set, featuring a huge central tree trunk that had to be transported from London, was always going push the Massimo's comparatively less well-equipped stage to its limits.
But the effort paid off handsomely, and the smattering of boos that met the director at the curtain call were greatly outweighed by applause. I was with the cheerers. On the basis of this viewing, Guillaume Tell is up there with Michieletto's most effective productions.
Not that the staging is the only element to enjoy. Gabriele Ferro, the Massimo's Music Director who is generally regarded to be beyond his best years, provided the evening's welcome surprise, with playing that started leadenly but acquired sparkle thereafter. The latter two acts were especially notable for their sense of proportion, grace and, crucially, inbuilt propulsion, and Rossini's full range of atmospheres was effectively conveyed. Horns emerged vaguely as if from out of fog, and the music for the storm exhilarated. The finale, in which the gloominess is replaced by a radiant glow, sounded euphoric.
Roberto Frontali was a brooding Tell, and sculpted his text beautifully especially in the plangent aria "Sois immobile". Dmitry Korchak, the heroic Arnold Melcthal, matched a high-lying range with a full-bodied tone, evading fatigue in this taxing role so that top notes pinged in his call to arms “Amis, amis, secondez ma vengeance”. Nino Machaidze matched an even legato and firework coloratura with a strong feel for drama in the role of Mathilde, and Luca Tittoto's growling Gesler, an abhorrent, gun-wielding villain in this production, raised pulses. Of the smaller roles, Enea Scala's Ruodi impressed with laser-like high notes after Juan Diego Flórez, and Anna Maria Sarra sang lushly as Jemmy.