A scene "Maria
Stuarda" with Matthew Polenzani as Leicester, Joshua Hopkins as Cecil,
Elza van den Heever as Elisabetta, and Joyce DiDonato as Maria Stuarda. Photo: Ken Howard/Metropolitan Opera
Reviewed by James
Karas
Maria Stuarda, Gaetano Donizetti’s 43rd opera, finally made it to the Met.
Its first night at Milan’s La Scala was on December 30, 1835 and at Lincoln
Centre on December 31, 2012. That is a long coffee break but the Met went all
out to make up for lost time (I guess) by giving us a stellar cast and an
impressive production directed by David McVicar under the baton Maurizio
Benini.
In mezzo-soprano
Joyce DiDonato as Maria Stuarda and soprano Elza van den Heever as Elizabetta,
the production has two outstanding vocal performers. Bass Matthew Rose is a
superb Talbot with baritone Joshua Hopkins (Cecil) and tenor Matthew Polenzani
(Leicester) right up there if not quite as successful in their roles.
Maria Stuarda presents the fictionalized
relationship between Queen Elizabeth II and her cousin Mary Queen of Scots
which ended with the latter having her head chopped off. Schiller added the
fiction but the beautiful bel canto
arias and ensemble pieces (as well as some stock music) are all from Donizetti.
Heever as Elizabeth
dominates vocally the first part of the opera. She has an expressive and lustrous
voice that soars above the others. As the first act progressed, her marvelous
singing appeared incongruous with her physical movements. She waddled rather
gracelessly and affected a manly, meaning awkward, gait. This lady needs
lessons in walking gracefully, I thought, and why didn’t the director notice
it. It turns out that the gait was intentional and McVicar spent some time
teaching her how to achieve it. The result was not worth the effort.
The most powerful performance
was delivered by DiDonato as the imprisoned queen who feels she is unjustly
condemned. The final scene of the opera is simply extraordinary and DiDonato
does not miss a beat. She sings Mary’s prayer for forgiveness and for Elizabeth
to be forgiven with emotional depth and vocal majesty. Mary holds a rosary
during the final scenes of the opera and her hands start shaking as if she were
suffering from Parkinson’s disease. DiDonato never falters even in that small
detail and it adds to her outstanding portrayal.
Bass Matthew Rose was
the best of the male singers. He is a big man with a big voice and he sang with
commanding resonance and made a very sympathetic Talbot. Joshua Hopkins was
fine vocally but he played the elder statesman Cecil. Hopkins’ youthful
features contrasted unfavorably with the bearded man he was playing. He looked
like a young man dressed up awkwardly to play an older person in some amateur
theatrical production.
Tenor Matthew
Polenzani was correct in his singing and looked the part of a lover but he
failed to convey much emotional depth. Perhaps he does not have any – I mean
Leicester not Polenzani.
McVicar and Set and
Costume Designer John Macfarlane start the opera with most of the cast wearing
white clothes in front of a red backdrop. The second scene takes on darker
tones as becomes the setting of a prison even though Mary is initially happy. From
there we move to Mary’s apartment in Fotheringay Castle and finally to the
scene of her execution. All very dramatic and well-staged except for Heever’s
wobble.
Extended comments
about Gary Halvorson, the Director for Cinema are unfortunately inevitable.
This is the click-click man who thinks we are playing a video game instead of watching
opera in a movie theatre. A couple of examples of his ineptness and stupidity
will suffice. In one scene, Leicester is about to kiss Elizabeth. His lips are
about to touch her chin just below her lip and Halvorson stays on until the
last split second before he clicks away from it. Did we need to get that close to
the “kiss” and then put up with the added moronic click away from it?
Maria gets close to
Talbot during her confession scene. We can see every detail from a respectable
distance and still maintain the context of where they are. Halvorson zeroes in
on them and only when half of Maria’ face is hidden by Talbot’s costume, does
he click away.
During the beautiful
Hymn of Death, the stage is dimly lit and we have a dramatic view of the
chorus. We just want to listen to the splendid singing. Not good enough for
Halvorson. He pans the camera around, focuses on some members of the chorus and
almost succeeds in making a pig’s breakfast of the scene. I closed my eyes for
parts of it.
Let’s hope we will
not have to wait for Halvorson to straighten up his act as long as it took for Maria Stuarda to reach the Met.
____Maria Stuarda by Gaetano Donizetti was shown Live in HD on January 19 and March23, 2013 at The Beach Cinemas, 1651 Queen Street East, Toronto, ON, M4L 1G5 and other theatres across Canada. For more information: www.cineplex.com/events
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