With Fedora, Umberto Giordano created a quintessential opera verista: the rigid recitativo-aria structure was abandoned, the text was seamlessly integrated with the music in a continuous flow, the singing style was more declamatory, and the concept of Leitmotiv was employed generously throughout the composition. The uninterrupted musical flow was enhanced in Christof Loy's Kungliga Operan production by the complete absence of intermissions: one and a half hours of music in one go, with just a very short break between acts. It fitted the musical concept very well, and made the whole evening very enjoyable. A bold and winning choice, for the Scandinavian première of the opera.
The plot revolves around Princess Fedora Romazov, whose fiancé is assassinated in the first act. She ends up falling in love with his murderer, Loris, who, as it turns out, is actually quite a good guy. Before falling in love with him, however, she reports him to the authorities as a murderer, and her statement causes the death of Loris' brother and mother. The opera ends with Loris finding out that she is the cause of his own family's destruction, and she commits suicide.
The orchestra of the Royal Opera House, conducted by Tobias Ringborg, did a very good job of driving the action forward and giving the singers a rich musical carpet on which to shine. Ringborg conducted with force, never timid or afraid of covering his singers, but nevertheless careful of their needs. The strings provided a lustrous wall of sound when required. Several elegant details in the complex score were correctly highlighted. A very good performance.
The production was set in the 1960s (if we are to judge by the furniture), but in quite a timeless setting. The same big room served as a set for all three acts. In the middle of the wall, facing the audience, was a very large golden frame, where black and white movie clips were shown, mostly of the protagonist, Fedora. She was shown, for example, backstage with all the theatre personnel around her. This created a distance between the audience and the character of Fedora, which was detrimental to emotional participation.
In other moments, the golden frame showed an "alcove" where other parts of the story took place, such as the piano playing scene in the second act, with all the party guests cheering, while Loris and Fedora sit alone in the main portion of the stage, closer to the audience.