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Synopsis Marking the return of award-winning director Deborah Warner and conducted by leading Handelian Laurence Cummings, Messiah features top tenor John Mark Ainsley, as well as a major role for the incomparable ENO Chorus. For almost a quarter of a century, from Nicholas Hytner’s Olivier Award-winning Xerxes to Christopher Alden’s Olivier Award-winning Partenope in 2008, ENO has been the undisputed ‘House of Handel’. With its powerfully emotive stagings of Bach’s St John Passion and Verdi’s Requiem, ENO has also won a reputation for bringing sacred masterworks to vivid dramatic life. Now, to mark the 250th anniversary of the composer’s death, ENO says ‘Hallelujah’ to Handel by welcoming his greatest and most popular oratorio onto the London Coliseum stage. Supported by the English Opera Group. Running time 3hrs 15mins
There are so many musically rewarding and genuinely dramatic Handel operas which are never performed by English National Opera. So I'm puzzled why they've chosen instead to stage the inherently unstageable Messiah. Its three sections - birth, death, resurrection - might recall a three act drama, but that's as far as it goes.
There is no character-based action, no narrative thread. Its qualities are largely descriptive, not theatrical. And sure enough, Deborah Warner's new production offers no more insights than the usual concert-style performance. Perhaps the overture scene's suspended forest of gilded lilies metaphorically acknowledges the futility of the exercise. The music alone suffices.
But there's a stage to be filled, and it's populated by ordinary-looking people going about their everyday business, their numbers boosted for the finale by genuine members of the local community. Vast video backdrops alternate cityscapes with pious artworks, the only hint of the work's religious element. The opening 'Comfort ye my people' sees hymn sheets laid out in an empty church then gathered up, unused. An accurate picture of modern society perhaps but a warning that Handel's biblical texts will not be taken at face value.
There's a hospital bed for the saviour's birth, a school nativity play for the nativity scene, there's a picnic and even a spot of ironing. Kim Brandstrup's sinuous choreography transforms the scourging and crucifixion into elegant dances that obscure the real meaning. A small child bombs around the set for no apparent reason other than upping the cuteness factor.
Warner's attempts to bind the fragmentary texts by engineering non-existent narrative connections only make matters worse. ‘I know that my Redeemer liveth’ is affectingly sung by Sophie Bevan as a dying woman in a hospital bed. But a farcical minute later she's on her feet waving a petrol station bouquet with a chorus of resuscitated corpses. And because a properly furious 'Thou shalt break them' would jar against the joyful Hallelujah Chorus which follows, John Mark Ainsley's ironic delivery reduces it to a joke.
The performances were better than the production deserved, with a searingly truthful 'He was despised' from Catherine Wyn-Rogers the evening's high spot. John Mark Ainsley was underpowered but compelling, and Brindley Sherratt worked hard in a part that's high and fast for him.
The ENO chorus enunciated Handel's multi-stranded lines crisply enough, but lacked gusto, a criticism that could also be levelled at the low-octane and often sluggish conducting of Laurence Cummings. With luck, the musical side should come together more as the run progresses. The production though is beyond redemption.
Finally, people are starting to realise that Laurence Cummings is one of the least distinguished figures on the British musical stage!
When will the diminutive darling of Knighstbridge geriatria finally fall from his molehill? So-so at conducting, and plain incompetent at the keyboard, he rises through cute scarves and the deafness of those around him. Britain and the Royal Academy certainly deserve better. - taust
15 Dec 09
Warner's staging was a drab and dispiriting failure. - semele
02 Dec 09
What's the point. What is, indeed, the point of staging an oratorio. It's never really come into my head until today, and having seen both Warner and Katie Mitchell do this very thing before i'm surprised it hasn't made me think it... err.. before. But then, i think those other productions seemed to have a point, unlike ENO's MESSIAH, which seems not to have a point. Rather like my grammar. Yes it's quite beautiful to look at (Tom Pye's set is rather lovely and has some very beautiful moments) It's rather reminiscent of a happy Rothko collaborating with Anish Kapoor whilst looking at lots of Russian Icons.. only to be ruined by the cast dressed as.. well.. themselves. There's a bit of dance, there's some death, there's some children doing a nativity play and there's some glitter... but i couldn't help but feel underwhelmed by the whole experience. I wanted it to be so much more, or at least to capture the excitement that the music gives us, but we're given a contemplatative reflective set of tableaux's that sort of give of the aura of 'Whats the point'.. 'what am i'...... so there we go.. Pretty but nothing more. - Cassox
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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