James Karas
Antonio Vivaldi
composed Cato in Utica in 1737 and it had its America premiere this
summer at the Glimmerglass Festival. The problem is not with the quality of the
opera rather than with the fact that the music for Act I is missing. There is a
way of getting around it by adding some music from other Vivaldi compositions
and some explanatory notes. The effort is worth it.
Cato in Utica is the loosely based story of the Roman senator who tried to stand up
to the dictatorial Julius Caesar on republican principles. Cato went to Utica,
Numidia in North Africa with his daughter Marzia and Emilia, the widow of
Pompey whom Caesar murdered.
John Holiday as Caesar and Megan Samarin as
Marzia in The Glimmerglass Festival's 2015 production of Vivaldi's "Cato
in Utica." Photo: Karli Cadel/The Glimmerglass Festival
As creaky plots go, this
one can use an extra dose of lubricant. You can draw a diagram of who loves or
does not love whom. Cato wants his daughter to marry Arbace, the Prince of
Numidia. Arbace wants to marry Marzia but she loves her father’s enemy Caesar.
Caesar’s lieutenant Fulvio is in love with Emilia who wants to kill
Caesar.
The opera consists of
a string of solo arias connected by recitatives. There is no chorus, no
ensemble singing not even a duet. The enemies and lovers walk on and off the
stage without much sense of why they are there. They sing, walk off and return
for their next big aria.
There are some
beautiful arias and the production has a marvelous roster of singers with an
unfortunate exception. I was most impressed with the performance of
mezzo-soprano Sarah Mesko as the aggrieved and vengeful widow of Pompey. She
wants to get Caesar. She has a velvety voice that combines flexibility, beauty
and strength. She has a good stage presence and seems to be at the early stages
of her career. We want to hear her again.
Countertenor John
Holiday Jr. sang an outstanding Caesar after the initial surprise at his
appearance. He is a muscle-bound African-American and on first sight I expected
him to have a deep voice like, say, Eric Owens, whom I heard the night before.
A high-pitched countertenor voice seemed incongruous but you get over the
incongruity after listening to a few bars. He has a number of long arias where
he expresses his love for Marzia and his disagreements with Cato. He was
outstanding.
Mezzo-soprano Megan
Samarin played what we would call the conflicted Marzia who is damned by her
father for loving his enemy. Samarin showed great vocal and physical agility.
She is one Glimmerglass’s Young Artists with a lovely voice that holds much
promise.
Thomas Michael Allen as Cato, Eric Jurenas as
Arbace and Megan Samarin as Marzia in The Glimmerglass Festival's 2015
production of Vivaldi's "Cato in Utica." Photo: Karli Cadel/The
Glimmerglass Festival
Mezzo-soprano Allegra
De Vita as Fulvio and countertenor Eric Jurenas as Arbace are Young Artists as
well that performed well. Both are getting early exposure that stands them and
the Festival in good stead.
Tenor Thomas Michael
Allen was a disappointing Cato. Baroque opera does not appear to be his forte
and he seemed uncomfortable in the role and the arias assigned him came out
unsatisfactorily.
The set by John
Conklin consisted of what looked like a Roman ruin with an archway opening to
the back. The opening provided a space for variations in lighting and vignettes
of open sky and monuments.
The opera can be
almost completely static with the singers stepping up to the lights, as they
used to say, and singing their arias between recitatives. Director Tazewell
Thompson reduces the static effect by making the singers move around the stage
and interact with each other. It works.
The fine performance
of the Glimmerglass Orchestra conducted by Ryan Brown was an essential
ingredient in bringing to a full run an opera with a missing limb.
_____
Cato in Utica by Antonio Vivaldi opened on July18 and will be
performed nine times until August 22,
2015 at the Alice Busch Opera Theater, Cooperstown, New York. Tickets and
information (607) 547-0700 or www.glimmerglass.org
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