San Francisco Opera
Rossini’s “The Barber of Seville”
Nov. 16, 2013
Some productions of “The Barber of Seville” are goofy; some
are profoundly goofy. SFO’s new production is goofy and profound, thanks to the witty, often elegant touches of stage
director Emilio Sagli.
The joyousness of Sagi’s vision shows itself immediately,
when a flamenco troupe takes the stage mid-overture to carry off a bust of
Rossini and pull out the white walls and wrought iron windowframes of the
village square that form Llorens Corbella’s set. The set changes often during
the performance, reflecting the ephemeral nature of love and life, and the
delightful absurdity of Rossini’s opera.
Our Barber for the evening, Lucas Meacham, is one smooth devil.
He begins the demanding “Largo al factotum” while riding circles on his bicycle
wagon, and continues to nab flyers from the air and flip his hairbrushes as he
sings to a group of admirers.
As if to one-up his barber in the category of suavity,
Javier Camarena performs Count Almaviva’s first serenade, “Ecco, ridente in
cielo” with stunning legato and a use of tonal coloration bordering on (gasp!)
tenor coloratura. He goes even further in the second serenade, “Se il mio
nome,” accompanying himself on guitar and even throwing in a passage of
flamenco (to which Figaro utters a wry “Olé!”). I have never seen an Almaviva
so dominate the stage, particularly in the strenuous final-scene combination of
“Cessa di piú resistere” and the cabaletta “Ah il piú lieto,” which is cut from
most productions.
Mezzo Isabel Leonard sings with a similar ease, performing
“Una voce poco fa” and its cabaletta “Io sono docile” while applying rhythmic
spray-bottle mistings to her flowers and using a pair of garden shears as
castanets. She also showed great agility in the runs of “Contro un cor” in the
Act Two music-lesson scene. Leonard makes an excellent straight-woman, getting
the most from her expressive features.
All this smooth vocalizing produces a further payoff in Act
Two, in the a capella sections of the lead trio’s ode to the ladder which will
facilitate their escape. The “ping” of the overtones is spine-tingling. As is
the laughter when the ladder turns up missing.
Andrea Silvestrelli, SFO’s bass-in-residence (allow me to
make it official), has a terrific amount of fun with Don Basilio’s “La calunnia
è un venticello,” singing of the “gentle zephyr” of a spreading rumor even as
mysterious beings beneath the stage create artificial clouds using fans and
sheets. At half of Silvestrelli’s size, Alessandro Corbelli makes a superb
Doctor Bartolo, conjuring laughter from unexpected moments (his preposterous
armchair-sleeping postures during the music lesson) and delivering the insanely
rapid patter of “A un dottor della mia sorte” with lip-cramping elán. Mezzo
Catherine Cook follows with an entertaining rendition of Berta’s “sorbet aria”
(literally, an aria from a minor character meant to cleanse the palate and give
the leads a rest), “Il vecchiotto cerca moglie,” a warning to old men chasing
younger women.
Pepa Ojanguren’s costumes are divine: the Count’s
cream-colored coat, Figaro’s striking brown suit, and especially Rosina’s
brilliant yellow skirts in Act Two (lending color to an otherwise monochromatic
setting). An Act Two rainstorm was accomplished with what appeared to be tiny
bits of plastic, creating an enchanting effect. Conductor Giuseppe Finzi led
the orchestra in an ebullient, assured performance. The production operated in
an amorphous time-frame, leading to unusual phenomena like Bartolo’s exercycle
and the Count and Rosina departing the game show-like finale in a cherry-red
’56 Jaguar XK-SS convertible, on loan from Price Family Dealerships of Marin.
Through Dec. 1, War Memorial Opera House, 301 Van Ness
Avenue, San Francisco. Alternating casts. $23-$385, www.sfopera.com, 415/864-3330.
Images: Isabel Leonard (Rosina) and Javier Camarena (Count Almaviva). Lucas Meachem (Figaro). The set from Act One. Javier Camarena (Count Almaviva) and Alessandro Corbelli (Doctor Bartolo). Photos ©Cory Weaver/San Francisco Opera.
Michael J. Vaughn is the author of the novels Operaville and
Gabriella’s Voice and a 25-year opera critic.
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