A clever production of Franz Lehár's The Merry Widow has been making its way around the major Australian opera companies, and finally, with some extra tweaks, has arrived onto the Adelaide Festival Theatre's stage for a joyous end-of-year spectacular.
Director Graeme Murphy choreographed the performance seamlessly: it started slowly, gaining momentum and sparkle as the second and third acts evolved. Jennifer Irwin’s costume designs were startling, giving the best and most glamorous pieces to the widow herself, while decorating the uniforms of the Pontevedrin officials with enough gold braid to be the cause of the country’s looming bankruptcy. Large, imaginative sets from Michael Scott-Mitchell created a fresh atmosphere to accompany each act. Most impressive was the Monet-like waterlily backdrop in Act 2, which complemented the colours in Hanna’s dress, and a brilliant devil-red staircase down which Hanna sauntered in Act 3, dressed in alluring black, to join the grisettes at Maxim’s. Also remarkable was the lighting of Damien Cooper. A new translation by Justin Fleming added to this production, giving a brighter clarity and piqued sauciness to Léon-Stein’s original German libretto.
In the principal role of Count Danilo, Alexander Lewis was inspiring, bringing freshness to the role – his timing and phrasing a joy to listen to. He created a likeable, yet stubborn foil to challenge widow Hanna. His voice was clear and his acting always sparkling, from his entrance as a drunken fop dragged from the excesses of Maxim’s, through to his final resigned acceptance of the Glavari fortune.
Co-principal Antoinette Halloran sang a younger than usual Hanna Glavari – with moments that were perhaps more lemonade than Champagne. Her centrepiece "Vilja Lied", though, was all Champagne, unfazed by the challenge of being carried – not completely steadily and shoulder high – by four young admirers. It was followed by one of the most moving moments of the evening: a beautifully choreographed dance between her and Lewis, silently waltzing over the stage, all their repressed emotions unlocking and bubbling again to the surface: we were left in no doubt that their love for each other still burned strong. It was a great moment of theatre, helped by the persuasive sounds of the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra, whose playing, from the opening blast of the overture, was always rich and effervescent. Halloran’s most impressive singing came at Maxim's, as she adopted the role of leading grisette/cabaret singer for the "Grisette Song".