Falstaff
Giuseppe Verdi, with Libretto by Arigo Boito
Michael Orlinsky, Kiril Havezov & Richard Zeller |
“In this great abdomen are a thousand tongues that proclaim
my name ... This is my kingdom.” With a
measure of self-worth and a confidence in his own attraction to the fairer sex
that are almost as mammoth as his rotund belly, Falstaff sings with from his
tavern bench as if it were his royal throne.
In Giuseppe Verdi’s final opera, Falstaff,
the perennial Shakespearean favorite through the ages is about to have that
inflated view of himself severely tested as he with unashamed gluttony pursues
not one, but two wealthy, married women – women who will turn out to be much
the more clever and creative in their own schemes to teach Sir John a lesson he
will never forget – at least not until the next jug of mead he drowns down his
massive gut.
To bring it sixty-third season to a close, West Bay Opera
pulls out all comedic and tongue-in-cheek stops to present a Falstaff that is laugh-out-loud hilarious while also musically ‘Verdi-beautiful.’ Returning to Palo Alto for his eighth, annual
production from his home base in Mexico City, Stage Director Ragnar Conde finds
a host of ways to ensure the hilarity of Arigo Bonito’s libretto matches the
magnificence that Music Conductor José Luis Moscovich attains from the ten
principals, seventeen choristers, and twenty-six orchestra members (the last
playing from five different locations/levels).
The result is an evening of rambunctious and riotous revelry accented
with a stage full of voices melodically glorious in a Falstaff where a smaller-than-usual operatic venue affords the
audience up-close chances to feel as if we are right in the middle of all the
trickery targeting poor, ol’ Sir John Falstaff.
Richard Zeller |
Richard Zeller brings his big-sounding baritone into full
play as he barrels through with rum-reddened nose the antics that his Sir John
employs to set up his hoped-for duo-trysts with two women whom he believes
“keep the keys to the money box” of their rich husbands. As John fills his belly while dreaming how to
satisfy his lust for love, he is clearly also vested in filling his pockets
with the gold he needs to continue his life of tavern luxury.
Everything Sir John does is hilariously over-blown and
wonderfully over-done, from the voluminous layers of clothing he dons to the
grand sweeps of his arms used to accent his words to a mouth that can open in
cavernous proportions both to eat and to sing forth his propositions and
promises. So intent is he on his own
greatness and so hungry to appease his ever-gnawing appetite for a beautiful
woman’s kisses and her husband’s gold that he is as blind as a bat to all the
obvious schemes playing out around him that are meant as righteous and roisterous
revenge for his own devilry of sending the exact same two letters of love to
two women who are best of friends.
Patrice Houston, Anatasia Malliaras, Taylor Haines & Veronica Jensen |
Taylor Haines and Veronica Jenson are the two desired
flowers that Sir John hopes to pluck of their innocence and their money,
playing Alice Ford and her friend Meg Page, respectively. The scene where the two friends first
discover that each has received exactly the same letter as the other with only
their names changed – letters with such Falstaff lines as “You are the merry
wife; I am the merry conqueror” – becomes musically and comically a thoroughly entertaining
mixture of mocking Sir John and of planning how to lure him into a trap he
cannot escape. When joined by Alice’s
other friend, Mistress Quickly, and Alice’s daughter, Nannetta, the four women
join in intricately countering melodies as they push their plotting into firm
plans.
Veronica Jensen & Taylor Haines |
As events unfold and schemes become ever more silly, Taylor
Haines as Alice in particular has a number of opportunities to ring forth in
her soprano brilliance that rises in its clarity and beauty above the farcical
events on the stage itself. Sometimes
cheeky, sometime coy, her Alice sings in just the right manner to fool Falstaff
into believing she might actually love him while at the same time her voice and
facials are laughingly declaring just how much a fool she knows he is. Notes flow displaying both the powerful
strength of her character and the sureness of her abilities to outsmart the men
around her. As it turns out, not only
must she teach Falstaff that there is a Renaissance MeToo Movement bubbling up
in her garden, but she must also do the same for her too-quick-to-distrust
husband.
Krassen Karagiozov |
During a disguised move his wife has helped plot in order to
fool Falstaff into a planned rendezvous with the Thames, Alice’s husband Ford gets
himself caught up in believing that his wife actually is planning on a secret tête-à-tête with the balloon-shaped
scoundrel. Krassen Karagiozov as Ford
shows up at Falstaff’s chosen abode – the Garner Inn – in the guise of “Signor
Fontana.” “Fontana” is a supposed
admirer of Alice, offering greedy Falstaff a bag of gold to seduce a supposedly
shy Alice in order to ready her for his own approaches. Ford’s “Fontana” employs wonderfully animated
slyness to fool the gullible Sir John who almost slobbers in his anticipation of
earning money for an illicit affair that he thinks he is already scheduled to
have in the next hour.
The rich, rolling tones of Ford’s baritone explode with ignited
punch once he believes Falstaff is actually going to have such an affair with
his wife, reaching into impressive falsettos to express his mounting,
quick-judged jealousy. The soon-to-be cuckolded
husband that Falsetto had earlier jollily described to “Fontana,” is exactly
the horn-wearing victim that the real Ford now believes himself to be. In this rip-roaring scene and in the ensuing shenanigans,
Mr. Karagiozov continues to shine both musically and comically.
Richard Zeller & Patrice Houston |
Playing major roles in setting up and executing the traps
for Falstaff is Mistress Quickly, a name and persona Verdi borrows from
Shakespeare, transforming Quickly from the Bard’s malapropism-prone inn-keeper
and sometimes friend of Falstaff now to be a round and jolly lady of society
and loyal friend of Alice. Patrice
Houston is deliciously funny in her tempting seduction of Falstaff to fall not
once, but twice to the fates of embarrassment he will undergo in the hands of
her friend, Alice. Better yet, Ms.
Houston’s deep and beguiling mezzo-soprano has a range fun and furious that varies
from mocking mimics of the easily-fooled Falstaff to thunderous warnings of
approaching doom when she scares Falstaff that Ford is about to discover him in
the arms of Alice – all of course a pre-planned scheme to get the giant into an
even-more giant basket of dirty laundry.
Each time she is on the stage, Patrice Houston brings energy, frivolity,
and vocals that reach down deep to tickle and to impress us as audience.
While all the hoopla, disguises, and grand chases are
occurring in order to teach Falstaff a thing or two, Verdi and Boito have
included a love story involving the Fords’ daughter, Nannetta. Father Ford is trying to shut down the
love-birds while Mother Alice is intent that Nannette shall marry the man she
loves and certainly not the old, rich nincompoop her husband has chosen (a stumbling,
ridiculous Dr. Caius played with bumbling brilliance by Michael Mendelsohn). (Wouldn’t you think that Ford would finally
realize his only fate is to be out-smarted by his more-clever wife?)
Anatasia Malliaras is one of the evening’s true joys
vocally. As Nannetta, she time and again
takes Verdi’s runs of trickling notes and brings joyous interpretations. Her soprano so easily glides, then hangs, and
then ever-slightly trembles as she sings of her love for Fenton, played by
tenor Dane Suarez who has moments of his own accomplished vocals but also seems
somewhat strained in several of his passages.
In this finale of Verdi’s career, the role of the Chorus is
not a major one; but when called upon, Chorus Master Bruce Olstad ensures the
voices blend with style and sparkle. Chorus members really get to join in the fun
in a full-on, frantic search where Ford thinks he is about to find Falstaff
making love to his wife, just one more scene directed by Ragnar Conde that
milks every opportunity to increase the gag and the frolic.
The Cast of Falstaff |
The three acts, each with two scenes, play out on a stage designed
by Peter Crompton where a middle, drop-back section and steps up to its raised
position provides some depth and variety possibilities as we move from inn to
the Ford home to its garden and finally to Windsor Park. But it is in Peter Crompton’s Disney-esque
animated projections that a major element of the evening’s hilarity and sheer
‘wow’ lies. A large portrait comes to
life as its bearded resident makes faces watching Falstaff being fooled by Ford
as “Fontana.” Huge, sculpted shrubs in
the shapes of animals dance across the English gardens projected in the
three-dimensions of the stage’s walls while skies beautifully change their hues
as day proceeds through is stages of light and cloud changes. What cannot be projected on the walls populates
the stage itself through the flasks, mugs, and even baguettes provided by
properties designer Shirley Benson.
Abra Berman brings to yet another Bay Area stage her
over-the-top creativity and jolly-good fun in designing the costumes of this
Henry V era of England, having particular whimsy with those that the
larger-than-life Sir John dons. Lisa
Cross adds her period touches in wigs and make-up while Steve Mannshardt once
again proves himself to be lighting designer extraordinaire. Finally, designer Giselle Lee has ensured
both effects and balance of sound support the beautiful music of singers and
orchestra as well as enhance the frolicking story.
As a long-time subscriber to San Francisco opera, I can
attest it is absolutely a joy to attend a production by such a stellar company
as West Bay Opera where the vastly more intimate setting of the Lucie Stern
Center allows me to see clearly facial expressions without binoculars. To enjoy close-up the acting as well as the
singing is an opportunity that all opera faithful should avail themselves. And for the die-hard musical-theatre buff who
avoids operas, I can think of no better time to jump in and become opera-hooked
than the Verdi opera that at the end of the nineteenth century clearly set the
path for future musical comedies on Broadway and the West End.
Rating: 5 E
Falstaff continues
with performances May 26 and June 1 and 2 in production by West Bay Opera at
the Lucie Stern Theatre, 1305 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto. Tickets are available online at www.wbopera.org, by calling the box office at
650- 424-9999, or by stopping by the West Bay Opera box office, 221 Lambert
Avenue, Palo Alto.
Photos by Otak Jum
No comments:
Post a Comment