Verdi’s Don Carlo at the Deutsche Oper combines strong singing and acting with lush music in an evening that, despite its beauty, is not without its faults. The version used is the four-act Italian Carlo, and without the Fontainebleau scene to introduce us to the doomed romance of Carlo and Elisabetta, the entire evening flounders.
The production, originally created for the Deutsche Oper by Marco Arturo Marelli, is stark, consisting of revolving blocks meant to denote a monastery, a garden, a prison. The lighting is harsh: we are given to understand that this is a very unhappy country, ruled by very unhappy people. Unfortunately, while amply helping the audience to understand the psychology of the Spanish royals and their people, the enormous blocks proved to block sightlines, so that unless one was sitting in the exact center of the auditorium, one could not see all the action. This was particularly so during the auto-da-fé scene, obscuring a powerful moment between an unsympathetic Filippo and the condemned heretics. But where the production lacked, the musicians shined.
Don Carlo’s main love triangle of father-son-stepmother is oft mocked, but makes perfect sense in the hands of capable singers. Anja Harteros was Elisabetta, and was the evening’s true star. There is perhaps no other Verdi singer as excellent as Ms Harteros, and though she took some time to warm up, her singing was clear and beautiful. She executed Elisabetta’s Act IV aria with an ease that belied its difficulty; her dignity and elegance as the unhappy queen were apparent in her every gesture. It was a show-stopping performance.
In contrast was Russell Thomas in the title role. Though he sang with style and panache, there was hesitancy about him: the depth of Carlo’s despair was never fully evident. However, this was the American tenor’s debut in the role, and with experience will come ease.