The close-up world of opera, with its ensembles and packed choral and orchestral groups, was not made for pandemics. But in 2021 Covid has prompted creativity. At Longborough Festival Opera, three productions are in the “Big Top”, a red circus tent fitted with a ground-level “pit” to one side, raked and distanced seating, and a raised stage in the round.
For Janáček’s The Cunning Little Vixen, designed by Nate Gibson, the forest was represented by a solitary portable tree, occasional sprinklings of leaves by cast members and Jake Wiltshire’s effective lighting. Table and chairs appeared for interiors, and scenes were announced by titles chalked live onto a small blackboard (the cast includes a schoolteacher after all). David Pountney’s fine English translation was used, as were surtitles. Costumes avoided the “gorilla suits” that can afflict Vixen, with a fur stole doubling as Vixen's tail. Rooster and the doomed hens were striking with their scarlet trim, though Cricket’s batting pads might have confused foreign visitors in an era that had any. Both the bustling and the quieter moments in this bucolic yarn were clearly directed by Olivia Fuchs.
The skillful reduced orchestration by Jonathan Lyness (string quintet, solo winds, horn, trumpet, harp, percussion) inevitably impaired some familiar splendours, but it did enable the poetic and pastoral oboe and cor anglais solos (doubled by Victoria Brawn) to shine out. The sound was surprisingly satisfactory in general, but the Big Top was small enough for vocal and instrumental tuttis to become overloud at one or two moments. But when the score required it, piano playing and singing registered well, as in the tender first meeting between Vixen (Julieth Lozano) and her Golden Fox suitor (Frances Gregory), both very winning in stage manner and voice.