Synopsis Based on a Schiller play, Don Carlos brings history to life with huge dramatic force. Verdi's largest most ambitious opera deals with the clash of personal and political motives at the court of Philip II of Spain, against a background of bitter religious and national conflicts.
Nicholas Hytner’s production of the five act Italian version of Verdi’s Don Carlo was new last June and, strange as it may sound, hasn’t aged well. There’s a blandness and perfunctoriness about the staging and direction that resembles an umpteenth revival in the hands of a much less-inspired director.
The cast is a mix of returning and new artists. Marina Poplavskaya’s Elisabetta has grown in the intervening time and Ferruccio Furlanetto’s King Philip is as strong as ever. Replacing Rolando Villazón as Carlo, Jonas Kaufmann swaps manic, boyish bewilderment for an ardent sensitivity, with some thrilling high points. There’s not a lot going on between this Carlo and Simon Keenlyside’s low-key Posa, though, with the latter only coming to life, ironically, during his death scene.
New also are John Tomlinson, singing his first Grand Inquisitor in the house, and American mezzo Marianne Cornetti, a late replacement as Eboli. Tomlinson is as reliable as we’d expect, his big scene with the king a fascinating sparring between veterans.
Cornetti is a formidable love-rival, enough to send Carlo sprawling on her first entrance. It is a matronly interpretation, with a matching plumminess and vibrato, better suited to Trovatore’s Azucena or Ulrica from Ballo.
Eboli revealing herself to Carlo in the garden scene raised a huge and widespread laugh from the audience on the first night, not the reaction one expects. There is unintentional comedy elsewhere – Kaufmann makes a strange lunge for Elisabeth in an early scene and all but double-takes when he meets her at the tomb for the final encounter – small flaws that Hytner really should have ironed out.
Semyon Bychkov conducts an emotionally-distant account of the score, lacking the Italianate heat and nuance of Antonio Pappano’s last year. After a magnificent Lohengrin earlier in the year, it’s something of a disappointment. Tempi are all over the place with some sections whizzing along and others dragging terribly slowly. The Veil Song lacks any sparkle.
How much you enjoy the performance will depend on your feelings about individual singers and your response to Bychkov’s precise but passionless conducting. Any enjoyment derived is likely to be in spite of Bob Crowley’s sparse and ugly designs, with the auto-da-fe scene in particular (garish gold church façade and plastic burning bodies) poised uncomfortably between realism and stylisation.
DJ is wrong on many levels, apart from one. Don Carlos is Verdi's best opera but that's not what the Royal Opera are performing as they insist on performing it in translation. Poplavskya is a good singer but she can't sing Verdi. OK - this is a wind-up DJ. Hytner's 'spectacular' production? Bob Crowley's 'lavish designs are jaw-dropping'? Do you work at the Royal Opera House? Dreary production in cheap, hideous designs maybe. Stop telling porkies - this is a dreadful production. Shame on you! - Kundry
25 Sep 09
Stunning. Don Carlo is possibly the best Verdi opera with its mix of high romance, history and religious terror, held together by a ravishing score. All the performances are first rate - especially Simon Keenlyside and Marina Poplavskaya - and the choral singing in Act III is superlative. Nicholas Hytener's spectacular production pulses with life and Bob Crowley's lavish designs are jaw-dropping, the perfect blend of high-tech theatrical expertise coupled with the lush, traditional Grand Opera that is the Royal Opera's forte. The burning corpses and parade of polka-dot and dunce capped heretics are vivid displays of the sheer vindictiveness of the Spanish Inquisition but there is also a horrifying, sinister verbal warning when Philip II tells Rodrigo he has nothing to fear from him but he might have from the Grand Inquisitor. This is strong stuff indeed, not for the lily-livered, it's rich like a full-bodied wine, thrilling, powerful and complete. - DJ
22 Sep 09
I didn't find the conducting as inspiring as Pappano's last year, but after a bit I warmed to the slow tempi. Also I thought Keenlyside showed greater understanding of the role of Posa than he did before. - Jane Ennis
19 Sep 09
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thrilling opera, containing excellent performances. Kaufmann's tender voice and personality made it flow, Keenlyside too though in other places the story felt slightly broken up as it progressed toward. Poplavskaya, Furnaletto and Tomlinson were convincing. - Su
16 Sep 09
thrilling opera, containing excellent performances. Kaufmann's tender voice and personality made it flow, Keenlyside too though in other places the story felt slightly broken up as it progressed toward, Furnaletto and Tomlinson were convincing. - Su
16 Sep 09
Last night's Don Carlos was not stunningly conducted, it was lugubriously conducted and wasn't a patch on Haitink's reading back in 1996 which was a performance of the original - i.e. Verdi's 5-acter in French. - Kundry
16 Sep 09
I know that opinions differ on stuff, but we must have been at a different performance last night. I have seen many productions of Don Carlos all over the world and this was the most stunningly conducted version of the score I have ever heard. The detail, the vivid nuances and again I disagree, the stark emotion, was illuminating. Yes, I don't like the production either, but I think all the performers worked hard and gave an excellent account. I'm going again on the last night and can't wait! - Koko
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