In that archetypal verismo opera, Pagliacci, the Prologue promises “a slice of life”. In Puccini’s Il trittico, we get more than a single slice: in this evening of opera, we get a broad span of human joys and tragedies, more about the human condition than in any other. There are deaths (from crime-of-passion murder, suicide, illness and old age), greed, adultery, revenge, childbirth and, ultimately, the promise of new love.
This was Verismo with a capital V. The Opera Holland Park stage is very long and thin, enabling designer Neil Irish to produce a Seine river barge for Il tabarro that is photo-realistic to the minutest detail. But it's not just the scenery that was photo-realistic: director Martin Lloyd-Evans got first class acting from the whole cast, and rarely have I seen an opera with so strong a co-ordination between director and conductor. Stuart Stratford rendered innumerable details of the score, adding enormous colour to the events on the barge as well as all of the sounds of Paris street life in the background. We may have been light on the big Puccini string sweep, but I constantly heard new things in the score.
Conditions were not favourable: a blustery wind and high levels of outside noise meant that everyone (musicians and singers alike) had some level of difficulty making nuances heard. In spite of this, we had three strong performances in the lead roles. Jeff Gwaltney's Luigi had the biggest voice, with just the right combination of roughness and lyricism. Anne-Sophie Duprels was thoroughly in tune (no small feat, in this environment) and pretty of tone. As the wronged husband Michele, Stephen Gadd gave us a wonderful display of how to achieve a gamut of emotions through varying of phrasing and timbre.
The stamp of a great performance of Il tabarro is that at the end, I believed everything, feeling the hard life and small joys of the minor characters, the chill of an autumn evening, and, most of all, the nostalgia and anguish of the three principals. It was a gripping performance.
Oliver Platt, original director of Suor Angelica and directing Lloyd-Evans' original production of Gianni Schicchi, produced staging and acting performances that were every bit as good: both productions showed immense attention to detail.
Suor Angelica has a similar sense of dramatic pace to Il tabarro: we start with a gentle depiction of the surroundings and lives in which the drama is set, in this case, the convent in which Angelica lives – against her will, as we later discover. Imperceptibly, the mood darkens until we are suddenly focused on the main characters in the drama: in this case, the confrontation between Angelica (again sung by Duprels) and the Princess, her Aunt (sung by Rosalind Plowright.