La Bohème
King’s Head Theatre
Reviewed – 5th May 2022
β β β Β½
“Matt Kellettβs baritone is rich and undulating, and soprano Grace Nyandoro is warm and bright”
La BohΓ¨me is basically the opera equivalent of Romeo and Juliet: a tragic love story, very accessible and (therefore) very overdone. If youβve seen one opera, chances are very high that itβs this one. So I completely understand the impetus to upheave the production and give the audience something entirely unexpected. Director Mark Ravenhill has tried just that, setting up, not in nineteenth century Paris, but in a doctorβs staff room at a modern-day hospital.
I find this slightly confusing, because whilst we preface the opera with a scene in which Mimi is in a hospital surrounded by healthcare professionals in scrubs, the opening act of the actual opera has everyone playing their usual roles, one an artist, the other a writer, in their shared flat. Except, theyβre still in the hospital staff room, still in scrubs. So presumably this is Mimiβs hallucination? Itβs not entirely clear. And not to go on, but if youβre going to change the setting canβt you find an equally romantic replacement? Nineteenth century bohemian Paris is hard to beat, Iβll concede, but a hospital staff room, depressingly decorated with a bit of Christmas tinsel, is especially bleak.
As has come to be expected with Kingβs Head opera, the script has been entirely re-written with only occasional nods to the original. βYour tiny hand is frozen, let me warm it in mineβ, for example, is now βRelax, your hands are freezing, we could just chill out for nowβ. Thereβs something slightly less placable about the contemporary script: where you might forgive a silly back-and-forth sung in Italian, or even a more formal English, it doesnβt sound quite so good sung in the modern vernacular: βHey mate/Whereβve you been?/I got held up.β Or rather it simply plays for laughs, which gets a bit boring after a while.
So thatβs all the naysaying, I think. The performances themselves are sublime. Weβre warned at the start of the evening that someone is singing through a cold, but I donβt quite catch who, and whilst I might have my suspicions (a few βMβs turn vaguely to βBβs) I really couldnβt say for sure because all four singers are absolutely stunning. The two tenors, Philip Lee and Daniel Koek, both particularly shine in their dulcet falsettos; Matt Kellettβs baritone is rich and undulating, and soprano Grace Nyandoro is warm and bright. Thereβs a slight lack of sexual chemistry between Lee and Koek, but their caring for one another is believable enough, so thatβll do. Kellett and Nyandoro get the biggest laughs, unafraid to be physical and silly- at one point, Nyandoro has Kellett by his lanyard, walking him on all fours like a dog.
Co-writers Eaton and Lee have also tweaked the story to be a same-sex relationship (Mimiβs real name is now Lucas rather than Lucia) which works without a hitch- I canβt think of anything lost by doing this and it’s something rarely- perhaps never- seen in old operas. But I do wish that, rather than a hyper realistic Grindr match, it had been truer to the bohemian romance of the original with a genuine meet-cute.
With opera traditionally un-miked, itβs often actually quite hard to hear what anyone is saying, so performing in a little room like the Kingβs Head is absolutely ideal to really hear the singers. The modernising of the story is slightly convoluted, and loses a lot of the aesthetic romance usually inbuilt. But it doesnβt take away from the beautiful performances, nor the heart-breaking end.
Reviewed by Miriam Sallon
Photography by thebrittainphotography
La Bohème
King’s Head Theatre until 28th May
Previously reviewed at this venue:
Tender Napalm | β β β β β | October 2021
Beowulf: An Epic Panto | β β β β | November 2021
Freud’s Last Session | β β β β | January 2022
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