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L'Incoronazione di Poppea

L’Incoronazione Di Poppea

★★★★

Arcola Theatre

 L'Incoronazione di Poppea

L’Incoronazione Di Poppea

Arcola Theatre

Reviewed – 26th July 2022

★★★★

 

“The energy of the musicians is a delight to watch”

 

Monteverdi’s L’Incoronazione di Poppea is, most critics would agree, one of the greatest of baroque operas. It’s always a pleasure, therefore, to see young artists take on such a challenging work. Ensemble OrQuesta’s production, part of the Arcola Theatre’s Grimeborn Opera Festival, fits the bill. This company doesn’t hesitate to update Monteverdi’s morally problematic tale of the Roman Emperor Nero and his mistress Poppea in a variety of intriguing ways. Fortunately for more old school music lovers, however, director Marcio da Silva chooses a small orchestra of period musical instruments. He demonstrates a contemporary sensibility in the casting and singing of the roles instead. And audiences who come for the sublime sound of L’Incoronazione di Poppea won’t be disappointed.

Monteverdi and his collaborators created the libretto of L’Incoronazione di Poppea with moral ambiguity in mind. None of the main characters, all based on historical figures, are very sympathetic, with the exception, perhaps, of the philosopher Seneca. The historical Emperor Nero was a monster. His scheming mistress Poppea, having achieved her ambition of being crowned Empress, was then murdered by her husband, who dispatched during his reign, his mother, his former wife Octavia, and many other inconvenient friends and relations. Monteverdi gets around the problem of unsympathetic protagonists by framing the story as a competition between three goddesses. Fortune, Virtue and Love each claim they have the most power over humans, but Love claims the prize with her example of Nero and Poppea. By presenting the story of Nero and Poppea, Love shows how she conquers all, including a hostile court, a vengeful soon to be ex wife, and a moralizing moral philosopher. The fact that the two lovers in Love’s example have to wade through the blood of many victims to attain their desire is beside the point. At least in Love’s way of looking at the world. And Monteverdi’s audiences, who adored this work, saw no division between the erotics of politics, and death and desire. Quite the contrary.

Opera was still a relatively young art form when Monteverdi began writing his own. Although many of his operas are now lost to us, those that remain still convert people to passionate fans every year. They are innovative, challenging, and yet very accessible. The trick is to honour the intimacy of the small orchestra while creating a large enough space for powerful voices.

Ensemble OrQuesta’s production mostly succeeds at these contradictory aims, thanks to careful staging by Marcio da Silva. The period instruments of the orchestra never overwhelm the voices, or the studio space, and are cleverly tucked away under a platform that allows the audience to both see as well as hear them. The energy of the musicians is a delight to watch. The staging only falters when there is a crowd scene which cannot be cut, or otherwise abridged. The actual coronation of the Empress Poppea is bound to fall flat under such restrictions, even if the intimate space is perfect for the even more numerous scenes of, well, intimacy.

The modern music director has a lot of flexibility in assigning roles in L’Incoronazione di Poppea. For this production soprano Helen May plays Poppea and mezzo soprano Julia Portela Piñón is Nerone (or Nero.) Countertenors are often selected to sing the role of Nerone, but da Silva assigns his countertenor Eric Schlossberg to the role of Ottone. All three singers are both competent singers and actors—a necessity for an opera staged in an intimate space like the Studio at the Arcola. If May and Piñón do not quite capture the desire in the acting of their love scenes, they more than make up for it in the eroticism of the singing. There are some outstanding voices among the rest of Ensemble OrQuesta, in particular tenor Kieran White who manages three very different roles as Arnalta, Nero’s male lover Lucano, and the messenger Liberto. Also noteworthy is bass baritone Gheorghe Palcu as Seneca—a performance of great gravity and precision. Soprano Hazel Neighbour commands the stage with her Ottavia. It takes both energy and courage to take on L’Incoronazione di Poppea, and the entire company demonstrates convincingly that it has ample supplies of both.

L’Incoronazione di Poppea runs until July 30th and I encourage you to see it, and to get to as many offerings of the Grimeborn Festival at the Arcola Theatre as you can. If you are still a reluctant opera fan, this production, and the Festival, will convert you.

 

Reviewed by Dominica Plummer

Photography by Peter Mould

 


L’Incoronazione Di Poppea

Arcola Theatre until 30th July as part of Grimeborn 2022

 

 

Previously reviewed at this venue:
The Game Of Love And Chance | ★★★★ | July 2021
The Narcissist | ★★★ | July 2021
Rainer | ★★★★★ | October 2021

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews

 

Allesley Silas

The Allesley Silas

★★★

Belgrade Theatre

Allesley Silas

The Allesley Silas

Belgrade Theatre

Reviewed – 26th July 2022

★★★

 

“Dowse does a fine job in keeping the audience engaged, finding a delightful lyricism in the words and being a natural storyteller”

 

Following a successful outdoor staging as part of the Coventry UK City Of Culture 2021 programme last year, “The Allesley Silas” has been adapted for Belgrade’s B2 performance space, where it plays this week. An adaptation of George Eliot’s 1861 novel “Silas Marner”, the play tells the story of a linen weaver who is wrongly accused of theft and subsequently withdraws from society. His loneliness and isolation cause him to move to the quiet village of Raveloe, and become obsessed with money, with his collection of gold coins becoming the only thing in the world that matters to him. One night, his gold is stolen, and Silas is devastated. Soon after, an orphaned child with golden hair enters his life when he finds her wandering alone in the snow, and he believes God has returned his gold to him in another form. Through caring for the child (whom he names Eppie), Silas begins to feel the warmth of human contact once more, and tries to overcome the pain of his past. However, the secret of her true parentage may bring fresh heartache to the lives of others in Raveloe.

Adapted from Eliot’s original novel into a two hour abridgement by Alan Pollock and directed by Olivia Marie, “The Allesley Silas” tells Marner’s story faithfully, if not always particularly excitingly. To be fair, Eliot’s tale is heavy on talking and light on action, and this production works within the parameters of the material and creates an enjoyable experience. The show takes a while to bed in and find its feet, with Act One feeling somewhat ploddy, although Act Two is much stronger. The plot is narrated on stage by Jill Dowse, which helps to tighten up the wordier stretches of the story, and Dowse does a fine job in keeping the audience engaged, finding a delightful lyricism in the words and being a natural storyteller. The production is underscored by folk-tinged incidental music (composed by Rebecca Applin) which maintains the setting and tone of the piece, and Abby Clarke’s set design is simple but effective, using a skeletal house structure as the focal point and framing the stage with wooden boxes which also cleverly double-up as floral borders to help show the passing of time and the seasons. The play is staged in the smaller B2 space, with its intimate nature suiting the piece really well and involving the audience in the story.

Adrian Decosta goes a great job as Silas, really taking the audience on the journey from wronged man to miser to nurturing father, and is particularly impressive near the show’s end where he finally gets closure on his past. Alex Allison is also wonderful as Eppie, brilliantly puppeteering (and vocalising) two child versions of her character before playing her for real in the show’s second act. She brings a real warmth to Eppie, and as a girl who is meant to shine like the sun, Allison is spot-on. Decosta and Allison create a bond throughout the show’s second act that feels genuine and heartfelt, which is lovely to watch.

Telling a 160-year-old story in 2022 is always going to be a tricky task, deciding whether to either modernise the story for today’s world or keep it as a period piece. This production goes for the latter, and although it may lack thrills, it offers a gentle and faithful look into the past, and finds real heart on its journey. Simply told, with the cast showing real affection for the piece, “The Allesley Silas” is a pleasantly nostalgic trip back to secondary school English class for audiences looking to dip back into a classic.

 

Reviewed by Rob Bartley

Photography by Dylan Parrin (from 2021 production)

 


The Allesley Silas

Belgrade Theatre until 30th July

 

All our July reviews so far – click on the link to read:

I Can’t Hear You | ★★★★ | Theatre503 | July 2022
The Hive | ★★★ | Hoxton Hall | July 2022
Report to an Academy | | Old Red Lion Theatre | July 2022
Barefoot in the Park | ★★★★ | The Mill at Sonning | July 2022
Flat and Curves | ★★★★★ | Toulouse Lautrec | July 2022
Hungry | ★★★★★ | Soho Theatre | July 2022
Pennyroyal | ★★★★ | Finborough Theatre | July 2022
Shit-Faced Shakespeare: Romeo & Juliet | ★★★★ | Leicester Square Theatre | July 2022
Millennials | ★★★ | The Other Palace | July 2022
Fashion Freak Show | ★★★★★ | Roundhouse | July 2022
Sobriety on the Rocks | ★★★★ | Bread and Roses Theatre | July 2022
Oh Mother | ★★★★ | Soho Theatre | July 2022

 

Click here to see our most recent reviews