The Ghosts of Versailles
is a big opera by composer John Corigliano with a libretto by William M.
Hoffman. It was commissioned in 1979 by New York’s Metropolitan Opera and
premiered in 1991. It is a highly ambitious work with a complicated plot, a
large cast and huge production demands for cast, costumes and scenery.
It is partly based on
Beaumarchais’ third Figaro play The Guilty Mother with
significant additions by Hoffman. The servants Figaro and his wife Suzanna,
Count Almaviva and the Countess Rosina from The Barber of Seville and
The
Marriage of Figaro as well as Cherubino from the latter opera appear as
do a host of other characters. I count 31 roles in the program plus dancers.
(Center) Jonathan Bryan as
Beaumarchais and members of the ensemble.
Photo: Karli Cadel/The Glimmerglass
Festival
The ghosts are members of the
French royal family with Queen Marie Antoinette and King Louis XVI being the
most important ones. Beaumarchais plays a key role because his ghost is in love
with Marie Antoinette’s ghost and he has written an opera that will change
history. The characters from The Marriage of Figaro mentioned
above and a few others will appear in the opera. The complications and turns of
events are very numerous and not very exciting to be recited in a review. Let’s
just say the complicated plot adds nothing to the opera.
Let’s give credit to the creators
of the production starting with Director Jay Lesenger who handles the large
cast, numerous scene changes, entrances and exits with aplomb. James Noone’s
sets are visually stunning. Nancy Leary’s costumes take us back to 18th
century grace and splendour that only massive wealth could have produced then
and no doubt do not come cheaply today but that is irrelevant to the splendour
they add to the production. No one can take issue with the production values
that the Glimmerglass Festival has marshalled for this opera.
I did not like the rest of the
production at all. Corigliano’s modern music sounded jarring, dissonant and
frequently unpleasant. There are some arias, duets and quartets that were
almost melodic but they were some distance from being completely enjoyable. I
realize and admit that Mozart’s music kept playing in my head. I appreciate the unfairness
in hearing other music instead of what is played in front of me but so be it. At
one point Rosina, the unhappy wife of Count Almaviva, sings an aria expressing
her misery and seeking the lost years of her youth. That is similar to “Dove
sono” from The Marriage of Figaro where
the Countess seeks the pleasant past. Corigliano’s music sounded jarring
compared to the sumptuous beauty of Mozart. Unfair comparison? Perhaps.
The Ghosts takes potshots
at comic opera and there are few laughs in it. Beaumarchais wants to free Marie
Antoinette from her present condition – remember she was beheaded and is now a ghost
- change the course of history and enjoy life with her in Philadelphia – “if
you can call that life!” is the last comment on the suggestion We have a sword
fight only to discover you cannot stab to death someone who is already dead.
(From left) Brian Wallin as Count
Almaviva, Emily Mirsch as Florestine,
Joanna Latini as Rosina, Kayla Siembieda
as Susanna, and Ben Schaefer
as Figaro. Photo: Karli Cadel/The Glimmerglass
Festival
There is a great party at the
Turkish embassy which goes on for too long and ceases being amusing long before
it is over. Lesenger makes generous use of the aisles of the theatre and you
see French royalty walking by you. At one point one of the cast mumbles the
comment “is this thing still going on? It is so boring” or words to that
effect.
Let’s give credit to the cast who
work hard and I do not hesitate to express my adulation for their work. Of the
ghosts, the main ones are Yelena Dyachek as Marie Antoinette, Jonathan Bryan as
Beaumarchais, Peter Morgan as Louis XVI and Zachary Rioux as the Marquis.
The opera-within-the opera that
Beaumarchais “composes” has some nineteen characters including Figaro (Ben
Schaefer), Susanna (Kayla Siembieda), Rosina (Joanna Latini), Count Almaviva
(Brian Wallin), Begearss (Christian Sanders), Cherubino (Katherine Maysek)
Pasha (Wm. Clay Thompson) and Samira (Gretchen Krupp).
With the exception of Dyachek,
the entire cast are members of the Young Artists Program.
There are aspects of The
Ghosts of Versailles that people find entertaining, admirable and even
wonderful. I find myself on the side of those who did not enjoy the opera at
all.
_______________
The Ghosts of Versailles by John Corigliano (music)
and William H. Hoffman (libretto) is being performed eight times between July 13
and August 23, 2019 at the Alice Busch Opera Theater, Cooperstown, New York.
Tickets and information (607) 547-0700 or www.glimmerglass.org
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