Glyndebourne has a great track record with staging Handel’s works. In recent years, there have been great productions of Theodora, Rodelinda and Giulio Cesare, all of which have proved equally popular at subsequent revival and Glyndebourne on Tour (GTO) productions as well. This year, at the festival and now on tour, Glyndebourne staged a new production of Handel’s Rinaldo, his first opera for the London stage which excited audiences exactly three hundred years ago.
The libretto of Rinaldo is based on Tasso’s epic poem Gerusalemme liberata, a popular source for operas in the baroque era. Set during the First Crusade, the Christian forces led by Goffredo (Godfrey of Bouillon) are laying siege to the city of Jerusalem, which is defended by its king, Argante. Goffredo is accompanied by his brother Eustazio and his daughter Almirena, who is loved by the Christian knight Rinaldo. Argante's ally and lover Armida, the Saracen Queen and a powerful sorceress, abducts Almirena to deprive the Christian of their hero Rinaldo, and subsequently he too is captured by Armida. However, instead of killing him, she falls in love but he rejects her. Finally, with the aid of a Christian Magician(!), Goffredo and Eustazio rescue both Rinaldo and Almirena and in the ensuing battle the Christians emerge victorious. The opera concludes with a typical chorus of reconciliation.
When Handel staged this opera in 1711, no expense was spared and the magic and sorcery in the plot were presented with lots of special stage effects including real birds and fireworks. In this production, the Canadian director Robert Carsen (here revived by Bruno Ravella) relocates the action to a Harry Potter type boarding school. Rinaldo, a schoolboy who is bullied by classmates, dreams that he is the Crusader knight about whom he studied in history class. In his imagination, his girlfriend becomes Almirena, his classmates fellow knights and his schoolteachers become Argante and Armida.
I can understand that Rinaldo is not an easy opera to relocate or modernize, and to set it as a schoolboy’s dream is a clever way of dealing with the fantastic plot and on the surface it certainly works and is fun to look at. However, by making the main characters school pupils, I felt that it trivialized the intense emotions that Handel explores so touchingly in his music, for example in Rinaldo’s famous aria “Cara sposa” or Armida’s aria “Ah! crudel”. When Armida appears as a dominatrix in a rubber suit with a whip who suddenly falls in love with Rinaldo, or when the battle between the Christians and Saracens becomes a school football match (both scenes got a lot of laughs from the audience), I felt there was a huge gap between the what the music expressed and what was happening on stage, and I failed to engage with the staging.