Reviewed by James Karas
Puccini’s La Bohème is one of the most reliable crowd pleasers and the Canadian Opera Company has wisely revived John Caird’s 2013 production again after repeating it in 2019. It is a sound production and was enthusiastically received by the audience. Rightly so.
Any production of La Boheme needs to fulfill certain prerequisites for the audience. We want a lovely, lovable, seamstress named Mimi who just happens to have a beautiful soprano voice and can sing with such passion to make us cry. Egyptian soprano Amina Edris fulfills those requirements quite nicely. She does not have a big voice but she is never not heard and her tenderness from “Mi chiamano Mimi” to “Addio, senza rancor” (Goodbye without resentment) she delights and moves us.
All her love and passion need a suitable partner and that is the poet Rodolfo who is smitten by her at first sight. They search for her key and he touches her hand and erotic electricity is transmitted as he sings “Che gelida manina” (What a frozen little hand.) Samoan tenor Pene Pati launches into his two-word (says he) autobiography very quietly and then soars to his high notes. He is a poor poet and dreamer with the soul of a millionaire. Now he sees the beautiful eyes of the seamstress and the rest is operatic eros.
Canadian Opera Company’s production of La Bohème, 2023,
Photo: Michael Cooper
Rodolfo’s three friends deserve praise. The painter Marcello (South Korean baritone Joo Won Kang) is a real mensch who is in love with the flighty Musetta. The philosopher Colline (Congolese bass Blaise Malaba) and the musician Schaunard (Canadian baritone Justin Welsh) make up a fine ensemble of friends and singers. They are the lighter side of the opera with their tomfoolery and enjoyment of life under financially dire circumstances. They are also the support group of the two lovers. Well sung, well played, well done.
production of La Bohème, 2023, photo: Michael Cooper
The singer Musetta (Canadian soprano Charlotte Siegel) is a flirt and superficial seeker of fun. Her aria “Quando me’n vo” (When I walk all alone in the street) expresses her pride in men staring at her. The aria is also known as Musetta’s Waltz expressing her flirtatiousness, energy and love of fun. Unfortunately Siegel fell short of expressing those qualities in her portrayal of Musetta. Her voice, her vivacity and her movements fell short of what Musetta expresses and stand for.
The set by David Farley featured hanging panels with some furniture for the first act. The same panels in a different position and additional furniture made the scene in the café Momus of the second act, not opulent but adequate. The third act near the gates of Paris on a snowy February morning is again adequate but don’t look for too many snowflakes. The set is unimportant. What happens between Rodolfo and Mimi and between Marcello and Musetta and among the friends is what we are focusing on.
Katherine M. Carter is the revival director as she was in 2019 and the production works very well on all levels.
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La Bohème by Giacomo Puccini with libretto by Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica opened on October 6 and will be performed eight times on various dates until October 28, 2023, at the Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts, 145 Queen Street West, Toronto, Ontario. www.coc.ca
Hello Mr Karas, I agree with most of the your observations. Vocals were more than adequate with Mimi and Rodolfo being at the top of their game. What I do not agree is the set. Recently, for the sake of simplicity or more " modernistic" ,we are seeing sets which are poorer and poorer. This is not the first time that it happens at this theatre. In the case of La Boheme, everybody knows the "plot" /story of the four poor artists : Still this doesn't mean that one can built a set only on some pieces of wood or better say cardboard which most of the times were hanging and "shivering" there. The scenes out and about Paris were very poorly done as well. I do want to believe that this is a question of money and cutting costs ( even when we pay high priced tickets). because otherwise, this opera , this magnificent music, Puccini , but even the Patrons of the opera here in Toronto deserve better.
ReplyDeleteWhen you go to enjoy an opera you want to enjoy it all. it is in the definition of an opera. If this is not possible I would prefer just a clean production: singers and the orchestra and nothing else.
D. Babi, you have no idea how wrong you are. This is the best production of La Boheme at the COC. I have had season tickets for 43 years with the COC and I have compared many productions in the last forty-three years. This is the absolute best!
ReplyDeleteI agree with Anonymous this is the absolute best production of La Boheme at the COC in the last 40some years!
DeleteThank you for your comments. I am with Dogberry who said "comparisons are odorous" and refrain from comparing different productions or performances unless i am writing about the very subject.
Deletei am respectful of the sets chosen partly form the cost involved and partly from productions that shy away from competing with Zeffirelli and the Met's budget.
I have seen twenty productions of La Boheme in various cities around the world including the three directed by Caird for the COC but i am jealous of Anonymous's season tickets for 43 years. Lucky guy or gal.
Agreement or disagreement - so what. Let's keep going to the opera