James Karas
Opera Atelier has chosen two one-act gems for its fall production. They
are Charpentier’s Actéon and Rameau’s Pygmalion, works based on Greek
myths that are wonderfully antithetical and complementary. I have a feeling
that Marshall Pynkoski and Jeannette Lajeunesse Zingg, the Co-Artistic Directors
of Opera Atelier, commissioned these works for the current season. Yes, I know
that Actéon
has been around since 1684 and Pygmalion premiered in 1748, but I
have no time to be confused by facts.
Mr. Pynkoski as a director, wanted operas and Ms Zingg as a choreographer
wanted ballets. They convinced the two composers to give them operas-cum-ballet
or perhaps the other way around to maintain gender equilibrium. Ms Zingg deserves
the concession since she is celebrating her 33rd year with Opera
Atelier.
The
company of Actéon. Photo by Bruce Zinger.
Actéon, you will no
doubt recall, is the Theban prince who loves hunting but is indifferent to the
love of women. He worships Diana (or Artemis for the purists) the virgin goddess
of the hunt who prefers the company of nymphs
and four-legged creatures in the forest to anyone else’s company. No erotic
love, please.
Actéon has heard that a bear is despoiling Diana’s forest and he goes
with his friend to get rid of the creature that is harming the goddess that he
worships. Completely by happenstance, he sees Diana bathing au naturel. That is verboten and Diana
decides to punish him. She turns the hunter Actéon into
a stag and his dogs have him for lunch. Not a happy ending.
Pygmalion is different. He is great artist and sculpts a beautiful
woman. Being a romantic, he falls in love with the statue and prays to Venus, the
goddess of love, to do something about his passion. Enter Eros who brings the
statue to life. His girlfriend Céphise
is not too pleased and storms out of his studio. The statue becomes Galatea and
is taught to dance, falls in love with Pygmalion and they live happily ever after.
The moral of the stories being that if you interact with goddesses,
forget chastity (yours or the god’s), find out how she feels about being seen
naked and go for art instead of hunting.
The production of the two gems is a visual and aural delight. Tenor
Colin Ainsworth sings Actéon, the chaste but impassioned worshipper of Diana
and the equally passionate but perfectly human Pygmalion. He modulates his
voice beautifully to the demands of Baroque opera and we enjoy every note of
it.
The splendidly-voiced soprano Mireille Asselin, (like Ainsworth, a
veteran of Opera Atelier productions) sings the roles of Diana and Eros in
beautifully executed performances.
Atelier Ballet in Pygmalion. Photo by Bruce Zinger
Soprano Meghan Lindsay sings Aréthuze in Actéon and Galatea in Pygmalion.
When a statue is given life by Eros and she tells you that her first desire is
to please you, you have a winner and Ms Lindsay convinces us that we do.
The solo vocal singing is supplemented by the Chorus of the University
of Toronto Schola Cantorum with members of the Choir of the Theatre of Early
Music and they are simply superb.
Ballet forms an integral part of Actéon and Pygmalion. The hunters
and the nymphs in Actéon and the dances performed in teaching Galatea to dance in
Pygmalion display Ms Zingg’s choreographic talent and the exquisiteness
of the Artists of Atelier Ballet.
Gerard Gauci’s sets emphasize the beauty of the mythical world as do the
costumes by Gauci for Actéon and Michael Gianfrancesco
for Pygmalion.
The Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra conducted by David Fallis brings the
full aural pleasure of the music to the fore.
In the end you are transported to, dare I say it, almost magically to
the mythical world of Ancient Greece as seen by two Baroque French composers
and brought to life, almost Galatea-like, by the artists of Opera Atelier.
____
Good assessment. Never quite understood the big testamonial to Jeanette. It is not 30 years or 40. Is she going somewhere? Are you going to see it in Chicago or Versaille?
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