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Synopsis After Scott's novel "The Bride of Lammermoor". The Heroine's brother tries to restore his failing fortunes by arranging his sister's marriage to a rich man - but she is in love with a man from another family with which there is a feud going on. Running time: 2hrs 40mins. Original production supported by a syndicate of donors.
You wait decades for Lucia di Lammermoor at English National Opera and then it’s scheduled twice in three years. David Alden’s 2008 production of Donizetti’s tragedy showed the company exactly what it had been missing, and was such a critical success that it’s already being revived.
Alden relocates Salvadore Cammarano’s libretto (itself based on Walter Scott’s novel set in an early-18th century Jacobite context) to the late 19th century. It allows him to filter the narrative through Victorian values and sensibilities, both in terms of visual aesthetics and domestic morals. Gloomy photographs stand in for departed souls – both the recently deceased Ashton mother, looming off an interior wall, and the ghosts in the Ravenswood graveyard at the end of Act III – and Lucia is presented as the victim of stifling and abusive attempts to preserve her family’s honour.
Anna Christy is disturbingly doll-like in the title role – appropriate, since she is presented here as her brother’s plaything – and her characterisation achieves the perfect balance of innocence and complexity. Christy’s soprano, too, is small, light and pure. Indeed, those hoping for muscular coloratura in the manner of Joan Sutherland, who made the role her own in the early 1960s, might have found her voice a touch too delicate here, but they could not have denied its allure.
The other protagonist was no less impressive. Barry Banks is superb as Lucia’s rough and kilted lover Edgardo. His stature is not the most commanding but he has strong charisma, and his tenor sounded wonderfully firm and intense. Brian Mulligan’s Enrico is creepy and engaging; Sarah Pring and Clive Bayley sang securely in supporting roles.
Charles Edward’s monotone sets – bleached interiors, rotting windows, peeling plaster – and Brigitte Reiffensteul’s costumes are suitably forbidding, and they provide a blank canvas on which to project the shocking bloodshed. The final scenes are truly horrifying.
Anthony Walker conducted a searing account of Donizetti’s score, but I would suggest a single instrument as the main reason to catch this particular production: the glass harmonica. It’s role in the original score was quickly supplanted by a flute but its eerie and seductive soundscape makes perfect sense, in fact it seems to encapsulate the whole piece.
Went last night. Music, wonderful of course, and voices were pure and strong. However acting was staccato, lacking movement and drama. At times it seemed as if a Welsh voice choir had dropped in, all standing to attention. People were actually leaving before the final curtain and applause was quite tame. Overall a disappointing experience given the excellent reviews in the Guardian and Telegraph. Did they see another version? - JohnB
24 Feb 10
Despite some rather lovely Lighting and nice singing, this is predominantly a horribly acted and unintentionally hilarious production. There was so much grasping at walls, wardrobes, banisters and throwing of chairs (in fact every opera acting cliche you can think of) that i was in stitches half the time. Big fat scottish man bursting through a window and covering himself with a tablecloth was so like 'acorn antiques' that i weed myself a bit. The direction was unclear and i had not much of a clue what was going on. I was told by the guy sitting next to me what the story was, because there didn't appear to be one happening on stage. - Casox
Opened by Oswald Stoll on 24 Dec 1904. The first London theatre with a revolving stage. Home of the English National Opera (ENO). 2358 seats, the largest theatre in London, built in 1904 and very sophisticated at the time. The globe at the top was meant to revolve, but this wasn't allowed and 'chaser' lights were installed instead. Home of the ENO. since 1968. Society of London Theatre member. Restoration work costing £41m started in 2001 and due to be completed by 2004 to coincide with the centenary of the Coliseum. During the restoration an artistic programme will be staged.
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