It was an exciting night at the opera. Three leading American singers were making their Dutch National Opera debut and powerhouse mezzo Anita Rachvelishvili her much-anticipated return. All of them delivered on their promise, as the audience, grabbing every opportunity for mid-performance applause, made clear. Disappointment at conductor Sir Mark Elder’s cancellation for health reasons was compensated by the unplanned house debut of Lorenzo Viotti, who is poised to succeed Marc Albrecht as chief conductor at DNO and the Netherlands Philharmonic. The way he shaped the beloved double bill Cavalleria Rusticana and Pagliacci into smouldering dramas promises a golden tenure in Amsterdam. A couple of imperfections aside, the orchestra played for him with agility and a consistently glowing sound. The intermezzos emerged slowly from a place of stillness to peak with incandescent melancholy. And the chorus, children included, matched the musicians in radiance and fire, dispatching a series of choral highlights.
While the performers thrilled, director Robert Carsen provided plenty to mull over for those who like challenging productions. Judging from the polite applause and a few boos for the production team, not everyone does. This is not the first staging of Pagliacci to play with the idea of the blurred line between theatre and reality. Its plot, about an actor who murders his wife and her lover during a performance, intrinsically raises questions about actors and their onstage personas, as well as audience complicity. But Carsen goes full metatheatre, stripping the two Southern Italian revenge tragedies of any trace of local colour. He smashes out all realism and remoulds them in the spirit of playwright Luigi Pirandello, who, decades after Mascagni and Leoncavallo composed their Verismo flagships, explored the interaction of actors with their roles and the works they interpret.
Switching the traditional order, Carsen presents Pagliacci first, planting the chorus playing the audience amidst the real audience. Having witnessed the double murder, they reappear onstage in Cavalleria, together with the murderer and his resurrected victims, as a company of actors unable or unwilling to stop the vengeful violence being repeated. Carsen continuously points to the inextricable relationship between life and art, actor and spectator. The Pagliacci set is a dressing room, and the set of the farce within the opera is a replica of that same dressing room. In Cavalleria, the spectators-turned-performers keep changing into costumes identical to their everyday clothes. DNO chorus master Ching-Lien Wu appears as herself, conducting a rehearsal. Since Cavalleria is replete with references to Sicilian village life, the play-within-a-play-within-a-play construct is sometimes a bit of a stretch, notwithstanding creative translation of the subtitles and the odd snippet of left-out dialogue. Santuzza has not been socially disgraced, but fired from the cast, and Mamma Lucia is a stage manager. But the production is wholly convincing, because Carsen is a great singers' director. From the first lines of the prologue, sung with dash and finesse by baritone Roman Burdenko, he gets you involved with the characters, all superbly acted.