THE OPERA LOCOS at the Peacock Theatre
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“The show is impossible to compartmentalise β part operatic revue, part vaudeville β and total pleasure”
Five sensational opera singers share the stage in this hard-to-pigeonhole musical entertainment presented by Spanish company YLLANA (Artistic Directors David Ottone & Joe OβCurneen).
If any clue is in the title (locos = crazy), the gaudily colourful costumes confirm that this show is going to be wild. Alfredo (JesΓΊs Γlvarez, tenor) enthusiastically introduces us to the ensemble dressed in a fetching bottle green fat suit. Carmen (Mayca Teba, mezzo soprano) looks like an extra from the musical Cats, Franelli (MichaΓ«l KonΓ©, counter tenor) is straight out of a Prince pop video. The menβs faces are painted white so that they resemble commedia dellβarte characters and all is enhanced by powerful lighting in dramatic reds and blues.
The five performers are part of an operatic troupe and we see them on stage and behind the scenes. Enrique (Enrique SΓ‘nchez-Ramos, baritone) gives singing lessons to Franelli, encouraging him to sing more manly whilst evading his amorous advances. Ditsy Maria (Maria Rey-Joly, soprano) has a crush on Alfredo and we watch their tentative steps in courtship. But Alfredo has troubles of his own, considering suicide as he acknowledges his fading talent and his enlarging waistline.
There is no dialogue at all. Intentions and feelings are portrayed through operatic aria, gesture, sighs, mime and more than a little clowning. The performers sing live to a recorded orchestral track and over the course of the show we hear hits from all the operatic greats: Mozart, Rossini, Verdi, Puccini, Bizet et al. But the gimmick here is that interspersed into the mix are bits of popular music too. Who knew that Rossini could segue so well into Mikaβs Grace Kelly? Or Carmen into Whitney? One doesnβt need to know all the sources of all the tunes, but certainly it increases the fun when youβre able to recognise something and enjoy the a-ha moment.
All the singers get their moment in the spotlight and everyone nails it. Enriqueβs Figaro is the highlight of the evening, although Mariaβs Queen of the Night runs him close. And itβs fitting that the climax of the story should culminate in everyoneβs favourite aria, Nessun Dorma from Alfredo.
Love, of course, will win out. Alfredo overcomes his inner demons with a lusty rendition of My Way and accepts the love of Maria. Enrique comes out of the closet to pair up with the pop-loving Franelli. Only Carmen remains uncoupled until she consummates her flirtation with a gentleman in the front row by bringing him onto the stage for the encores.
For me, the English language pop megamix which ends the show seems tagged on, and without the subtlety of what has gone before, but it brings the house down.
This multi-talented cast not only sing superbly but also act, mime, clown and boast expert comic timing. The show is impossible to compartmentalise β part operatic revue, part vaudeville β and total pleasure.
THE OPERA LOCOS at the Peacock Theatre
Reviewed on 8th May 2024
by Phillip Money
Photography by Lighuen De Santos
Previously reviewed Sadler’s Wells venues:
ASSEMBLY HALL | β β β β β | March 2024
AUTOBIOGRAPHY (v95 and v96) | β β β | March 2024
NELKEN | β β β β β | February 2024
LOVETRAIN2020 | β β β β | November 2023
MALEVO | β β β β | October 2023
KYIV CITY BALLET – A TRIBUTE TO PEACE | β β β Β½ | September 2023
ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER AT 65 | β β β β β | September 2023
DANCE ME | β β β β β | February 2023
HOUSE OF FLAMENKA | β β β β | September 2022
MACHINE DE CIRQUE | β β β β β | June 2022
THE OPERA LOCOS
THE OPERA LOCOS
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