BLOOD, LUST SPILL OVER IN VERDI'S `IL TROVATORE'.Byline: Reed Johnson Daily News Staff Writer An anguished woman picks her way through a pile of blood-splattered corpses. A lithe gypsy with a bare midriff midriff /mid·riff/ (-rif) the diaphragm; the region between the breast and waistline. mid·riff n. See diaphragm. gets gang-raped by soldiers outfitted like leather-bar patrons. Flames lick the ground as weapons clang furiously, and sexual cravings are blurted out with the fervent ecstasy of prayers. Sounds like the latest Hollywood shoot-'em-up, or maybe an episode of the Jerry Springer show? Actually, it's L.A. Opera's production of Verdi's ``Il trovatore,'' a piece of musical theater that's as hard to top for relentless melodrama as it is hard to resist on its own lurid emotional terms. Musically succulent, if dramatically overripe o·ver·ripe adj. 1. Too ripe. 2. Marked by decay or decline. o ver·ripe , ``Il trovatore'' revels in its excessive libretto, which tells a story of witchcraft and revenge triggered by a fateful love triangle and enflamed by civil war. In terms of dramatic sumptuousness, the score rivals Verdi's other midcareer masterworks, ``Rigoletto'' and ``La traviata.'' All of which makes ``Il trovatore'' hard to overkill, try as one might, although Stephen Lawless' production certainly doesn't scrimp scrimp v. scrimped, scrimp·ing, scrimps v.intr. To economize severely. v.tr. 1. To be excessively sparing with or of. 2. To cut or make too small or scanty. on sensational effects. The buckets of stage blood may go too far, but they do remind us that the opera's borderline-hysterical sensibility echoes the bracing emotional directness of Verdi's baroque ancestor, Monteverdi. None of this is lost on conductor Gabriele Ferro, who respects Verdi's grand gestures while never allowing the orchestra to get ahead of the singers. And what good singers they are. Playing the tragic heroine Leonora, Carol Vaness leaves no doubt that she's among the world's top dramatic sopranos, registering the exact moments of psychological truth that drive her passionate character toward a lusty lust·y adj. lust·i·er, lust·i·est 1. Full of vigor or vitality; robust. 2. Powerful; strong: a lusty cry. 3. Lustful. 4. Merry; joyous. , defiant comeuppance come·up·pance n. A punishment or retribution that one deserves; one's just deserts: "It's a chance to strike back at the critical brotherhood and give each his comeuppance for evaluative sins of the past" . Both Vaness' singing and acting confidently express the mature sensuality of a performer in her absolute prime. In the role of the lovestruck troubadour troubadour One of a class of lyric poets and poet-musicians, often of knightly rank, that flourished from the 11th through the 13th century, chiefly in Provence and other regions of southern France, northern Spain, and northern Italy. Manrico, Russian tenor Vladimir Bogachov, with a chest like the Rock of Gibraltar and a voice of similar proportion, shows an impressive ability to rise and fall with the tidelike swells of Verdi's score. Nina Terentieva, after a slurry beginning, settles comfortably into the crowd-pleasing role of the old gypsy Azucena. But the most pleasant surprise, at least to this reviewer, was Jorma Hynninen playing the Count di Luna, Manrico's rival for Leonora's affections. An elegant, self-possessed singer in previous L.A. appearances, Hynninen here reveals a dashing, virile virile /vir·ile/ (vir´il) 1. masculine. 2. specifically, having male copulative power. vir·ile adj. 1. musical profile as the swaggering count. In the split-screen aria where he's pleading his admiration for the convent-bound Leonora, his awestruck awe·struck also awe·strick·en adj. Full of awe. awestruck Adjective overcome or filled with awe Adj. 1. voice conveys both a boyish infatuation and a warrior's ruthless determination to claim his prey. Alas, the singer's purposefulness isn't echoed in set designer Benoit Dugardyn's ambitious but overbearing amalgam of monumental screens. During scene changes, the singers practically have to run for their lives. Paul Pyant's lighting design is quite beautiful, bringing out the copper, burgundy and sepia tones in Martin Pakledinaz's historically nonspecific nonspecific /non·spe·cif·ic/ (non?spi-sif´ik) 1. not due to any single known cause. 2. not directed against a particular agent, but rather having a general effect. nonspecific 1. costumes. We can imagine these 15th-century gypsies and Spanish knights as citizens of some futuristic fascist state, caught up in an endless cycle of grisly retribution. THE FACTS What: L.A. Opera presents ``Il trovatore.'' Where: Dorothy Chandler Pavilion The Dorothy Chandler Pavilion is one of the halls in the Los Angeles Music Center (which is one of the three largest performing arts centers in the United States). The Music Center's other halls include the Mark Taper Forum, Ahmanson Theatre, and Walt Disney Concert Hall. , Music Center of Los Angeles County, 135 N. Grand Ave., downtown. When: 1 p.m. Saturday; 7:30 p.m. May 5, 8 and 13; 1 p.m. May 16. Tickets: $24 to $135. Call (213) 365-3500. Our rating: Two and One Half Stars. |
|
||||||||||||||||||

ver·ripe
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion