Synopsis In the brooding atmosphere of the 15th Century Ottoman Court the tyrannical Tamerlano holds prisoner the defeated Bajazet and his daughter Asteria. As their story unfolds Handel's vividly descriptive music is inspired by the emotional conflicts inherent in Tamerlano's position of absolute power over Bajazet while at the same time being in love with his daughter. Resolve, faithfulness, rage, adoration, defiance, revenge and despair are all present, expressed through music of exceptional power and beauty.
There can be few people in London with even the mildest interest in opera who are unaware that Plácido Domingo has had to withdraw from the new production of Tamerlano, due to the need for preventive surgery. The question has switched from can the star tenor sing baroque to could the production hold up without him.
Unfortunately, the answer is that in his absence there’s a gaping hole. It’s no disrespect to his replacement, Kurt Streit, but it’s as though the beating heart is missing. How much Graham Vick’s production was built around Domingo is difficult to say but it’s a dull affair without him.
Streit is to be admired for bringing forward his performance (he was supposed to appear some eight days after the first night) and he cuts a dashing figure, with strong and stylish singing, but the evening cries out for Domingo’s charisma, presence and incomparable beauty.
Some weaknesses elsewhere in the cast don’t help. Handel’s Tamerlano isn’t exactly Christopher Marlowe’s magnificent monster but he needs more rough edges than Christianne Stotijn brings to him. She never quite rises to the challenge and reflects a blandness that runs through the production.
Richard Hudson’s designs have a simplistic elegance but its proof that a white, empty space can’t just be an exciting dramatic arena. With little going on inside it, it’s not.
Colour only relieves the starkness with the arrival of a row of blue elephants which, like ducks in an arcade, might have you wanting to take pot-shots. Further visual ornamentation is a group of turbaned supernumaries who, in awkward stylised movements, mirror the mood of the principals. As they progress slowly round the upper gallery, you’ll find yourself again reaching for the shotgun.
Globes adorn the stage at various times and a revolve turns almost imperceptibly like the orbit of an outlying planet. The tone is picked up by the orchestra – a welcome visit from the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment – with Ivor Bolton’s tempi incredibly slow for much of the time.
While there’s a lack of natural Handelians among the cast, an excellent line-up of international stars brings some fine singing. In particular, Christine Schäfer (Asteria) and Sara Mingardo (Andronico) excel and Renata Pokupic makes an impressive house debut as Irene.
We have become used, in recent years, to jazzed-up Handel – David McVicar’s dazzling Guilio Cesare and Agrippina and Christopher Alden’s ENO Partenope, for instance – but it would be a shame if that’s the only way we can take his demanding operatic output. If Vick’s pedestrian Tamerlano, delivered straight and po-faced, is anything to go by, it needs something to pep it up.
At the risk of offending Handel purists (if I haven’t already), some cutting of the endless recitative and even whole arias would help. The third act is the most interesting, dramatically and musically, but at four and half hours running time, it’s an awful long time coming and the clinical approach of this production has by then long since anaesthetised its audience.
Very very disappointing, bland scenery, bland singing, why were there not castrati plenty of seats empty after 1st interval that said it all! - Vivienne
22 Mar 10
This was death by Opera. With so many cast substitutions, the strongest singer was Vito Priante as Leone. The perambulation of the shooting gallery elephants provided some welcome light relief - especially when one fell over and had to be rescued by hapless stage crew on hands and knees. That produced the only moment the audience responded as one. Shame we were all sniggering. - Sally Thomson
21 Mar 10
It's a wonderful opera and the playing (if too slow at times) was fine.
The production was dull (with some nice touches).
The singing was, for the most part, just unacceptable.
The music easiy kept me going to the end, but the singing - oh dear. Arguably it got worse (if thaty were possible) as the evening wore on. The final act duet was embarassing. Streit butchered the "dear daughter" aria, one of Handel's most moving.
I hope the opera can be restaged with some singers who can deliver Handel's music ; it does not deserve this oblivion. - martin
16 Mar 10
We left during the first interval along with a lot of other people judging by the line at the cloakroom....dreary, dreary, dreary..... - John
12 Mar 10
I also left at first interval. Such a dull opera would not even have been saved by Domingo. The staging gave the audience nothing to look at while the interminable droning took place. Some of the singing was strained. Streit was clear and clean, but there just isn't enough in this work to warrant over 5 hours of effort. Went home and watched a good DVD. - Dee Edwards
10 Mar 10
Left at the first interval. Some of the singing (particularly Stotijn) was awful. I can't decide if the fault is with Stotijn or just a bad decision to cast a woman in the castrato role. I saw Artaxerces in the Linbury a few months ago and the same approach worked fine there. It felt like this whole production would have been better off in the Linbury and might have been there if it wasn't for Domingo's initial involvement. - Paul Murray
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