An internationally acclaimed singer with a career spanning well over 30 years should be granted almost whatever role he’d like to do. It would also be understandable if the singer chose a well-known, crowd-pleasing piece, but, as is quite evident by now, Ferruccio Furlanetto is not a typical singer. The elder statesman of Italian basses, who has made Massenet’s Don Quichotte a staple of his repertoire, requested and received from San Diego Opera a new production of Ildebrando Pizzetti’s rarely performed Murder in the Cathedral (1958). The highly-anticipated opening Saturday night certainly didn’t disappoint thanks to a tour de force performance from Furlanetto and fine support from the rest of the company.
The opera world owes a debt of gratitude to Furlanetto, who essentially brought this piece back 10 years ago after decades of obscurity. Pizzetti’s opera is uniquely concise, with minimal dramatic action, but maximum dramatic anticipation. Including intermission, the evening was under two hours. The frenetic pace of the text, supported by Pizzetti’s atmospheric yet relentlessly driving score, made for a uniquely engaging piece of operatic theater. The through-composed score has virtually no repetition in it save a unique sort of ensemble mimicry in the groups of priests, tempters and knights. Just keeping up with the supertitles can be a bit of a workout.
Thankfully, the expert leadership at San Diego Opera created a straightforward but effective production by Ian Campbell. The sets essentially consisted of columns, a wide, short staircase, and realistic stained glass backdrops. Combined with appropriate religious props it made for a satisfying tableau. The lighting was unfussy, but significant in focusing the action.
Still, a piece like this could not succeed without an artist of Furlanetto’s magnitude. Thomas Becket, the legendary Archbishop of Canterbury, is on stage for virtually the entire evening. His music is not only musically challenging, running the entire range of the tessitura, but dramatically exhausting in its declamatory delivery. Furlanetto was supremely sympathetic as Becket. His nobility of stature and ease of delivery was convincing and especially devastating in his tragic demise. His gleaming bass voice, an especially noble instrument distinguished by his highly expressive delivery, was majestic in its sonority. Furlanetto oozed authority and regalness vocally, dramatically, and physically, yet also a passionate fevor. His confrontation with the four tempters in the first act was a dramatic dilemma reminiscent of King Philip’s third act in Verdi’s Don Carlo. Furlanetto portrayed Becket’s struggle as a multi-layered journey towards the ultimate choice of martyrdom as the only answer.