Set on a country estate just outside a picturesque city, with much of the action playing out against its lavish gardens, Le nozze di Figaro seems tailor-made for Garsington. John Cox’s efficient, no-nonsense production opened here in 2005, but could be ten or twenty years older: there’s nothing to frighten the horses here, with powdered wigs, breeches and corsets aplenty, and the overall impression is of a director who’s content to stay out of the spotlight and simply allow Mozart and Da Ponte’s well-made play to unfold with clarity and class.
The darker aspects of a work that’s shot through with class tensions and complex sexual politics are largely glossed over. However, little touches like Figaro knocking the Count’s coat of arms from the wall in his first aria and the sardonic impudence of the evidently already-deflowered village girls (one patting her pregnant stomach!) as they troop in to praise their master’s supposed abolition of his droit de seigneur register all the more keenly for this. Douglas Boyd’s reading of the score works hand-in-glove with Cox’s approach, emphasising the rococo elegance and timeless charm of the music rather than the bubbling, even subversive energy that’s played up by the likes of Teodor Currentzis.
In a strong, committed cast, first among equals is Jennifer France’s immaculately-sung and beautifully nuanced Susanna, always alert and engaged but never playing to the gallery. Her lilting Act Four serenade (ostensibly addressed to the Count, but really for the benefit of the eavesdropping Figaro himself) was the musical highlight of the evening, sung on a thread of silvery tone with such hushed introspection that one could’ve heard Barbarina’s much-lamented pin drop.
Less voluptuous of voice and presence than her predecessors in this production, France gives us a Susanna who trades on her sharp wits rather than any overt sensuality, both in her dealings with Joshua Bloom’s big-voiced, endearingly bumptious Figaro (clearly not quite her intellectual equal, despite his moments of brash self-confidence) and Duncan Rock’s smarter-than-average Count. The Australian baritone is a natural stage-animal, capable of commanding instant attention even when delivering the most introverted recitative (no mean feat when it comes to marshalling a post-prandial audience after the long dinner interval with the low-key opening of Act Three), and I’d love to see him in a production which tapped into the character’s darker side a little more.
Canadian soprano Kirsten MacKinnon (still only in her mid-twenties) makes for a Countess closer than usual in age and spirit to both Susanna and to the Rosina of The Barber of Seville, however much she insists to her husband that “I’m no longer that girl”. Once the flicker of nerves evident in her opening aria had subsided, she revealed a big, richly-coloured soprano that’s surely destined for Strauss and Puccini, and her “Dove sono” brims with real optimism and confidence in her ability to turn things around rather than being weighed down with dogged desperation. Her chemistry with Marta Fontanals-Simmons’ strapping Cherubino (so convincingly masculine that I had to do a discreet programme-check when she first burst onto the scene) really sizzles – one senses that her husband’s jealousy is perhaps not entirely without foundation.