It’s a little too heavy on the buffa, not to mention the sensory overload. That said, there is much to like in the Wiener Staatsoper's new Il barbiere di Siviglia, with a top roster of singers led by Juan Diego Flórez making up for much of the production’s dramaturgic and staging overreach.
It was an evening of Mark Rothko meets Rococo. Director Herbert Fritsch and Carsten Sander (lighting) opted for brightly lit stripes of gauzy fabric as frames and backdrops for the stage action, while Victoria Behr clad the cast in fanciful garb inspired by the early- to mid-18th century. It doesn’t take long to realise that the staging has little to do with the story beyond allowing its protagonists to appear unexpectedly from behind one or the other panel to take centre-stage Still, all seems well at first, at least in the wide boundaries allowed by Regietheater.
But with the panels changing size and colour at a clip at least as fast as the pace of the last section of Figaro’s “Largo al factotum,” what began as an entertaining light show soon turned into a distraction – and by the end of the near three hours into an annoyance. And that’s a shame, considering the excellent vocal performances by Flórez and the rest of the cast.
As Count Almaviva, who wins the heart of Rosina and frees her from the grasp of Doctor Bartolo, her conniving guardian, Flórez shone from the first note of “Ecco ridente in cielo,” his opening cavatina, to his showcase “Cessa di più resistere” at the very end. Lyrical passages? No problem. Ornate embellishments? Ditto.