VENUE LISTING
| Address | St Martin's Lane London WC2N 4ES | | | | Telephone | 020 7632 8300 | | Station | Leicester Square (LT) |
| Description | 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. |
WHAT'S ON
(Opera or Operetta )
Synopsis
A Tuscan village, early 19th century. Inspired by the story of Tristan and Isolde, the shy young Nemorino buys potion from a quack, Dulcamara, in the hope of winning Adina. She seems to prefer Belcore, a sergeant of the garrison, and irritated by Nemorino's now apparent indifference towards her, she promises to marry Belcore immediately. Convinced that the elixir will take effect within 24 hours. Nemorino begs her to wait, but she refuses. Nemorino joins the army, using his enlisting bonus to buy another bottle of elixir. Finding himself suddenly surrounded by village girls , he presumes the elixir is working, unaware of the rumour that his uncle has died leaving him a large fortune. Adina feels intense envy and realises that it is Nemorino she really loves. Learning of his sacrifices, she redeems him from the army and the couple are married. Dulcamara capitalises on the apparent success of his elixir and does a roaring trade. Scenery and costumes provided by New York City Opera and originally created for the Royal Swedish Opera. Running time: 2hrs 25mins
| Whatsonstage.com Promotions |
 | | Photo: Tristram Kenton | |
Date: 13 February 2010 Light as cotton candy, sparkling as soda pop, frothy as vanilla malt, Donizetti’s irresistible confection is on sale for a limited period in Jonathan Miller’s tumbleweed diner, now open for business at the London Coliseum. Happily, little damage is done to love’s elixir by shifting the action of this crowd-pleaser from peasant Europe, circa 1800, to the American Midwest in the nineteen-fifties. The cultural familiarity of such a filmic locale helps ground the piece for a modern audience; besides, our hero, Nemorino, will be a gullible hick wherever he lays his hat, or wherever quacks like Dulcarama peddle their wares. There is a dustbowl naturalism to Isabella Bywater’s set (notwithstanding the motionless cattle on the backdrop), and when a period gas-guzzler rolls up at Adina’s eatery in a little deuce coup de théâtre, we know we’re in a proper movie. The principals are a good team, too. John Tessier reprises his Nemorino from New York City Opera and wows the house with a heart-stopping ‘Una furtiva lagrima’. Sarah Tynan matches him vocally, some fleeting lapses of intonation aside, and brings lissom wit to Adina, whom she plays as a bel canto Marilyn Monroe. David Kempster’s characterful ‘Sergeant’ Belcore is a bass-baritone boor who can sing, walk and chew gum at the same time, and Andrew Shore is in show-stealing form – witty, articulate and hilarious – as the charlatan Dulcarama. Things are less happy in the pit, where Pablo Heras-Casado regularly allows the ENO Orchestra to overwhelm the voices in tutti passages. His conducting is prosaic at best: there is a sense of drag in his pacing (fatal in such a lightweight score) and each of the two acts ends on a distinctly underwhelming chorus. Even so, Heras-Casado cannot shoulder sole responsibility for the evening’s overall flatness. Miller has developed some directorial ticks of late: there is a pointless lavatory sequence, as there was in last year’s La Bohème; the chorus of women mug to excess, and (paradoxically) the humour of Tessier’s role arrives packaged more for Chekhov than for comic opera. Even more disappointing is the lack of visual comedy. With a few low-level exceptions, creative invention is at a premium. The most serious problem of all, though, is Kelley Rourke’s rendering of Romani’s libretto into colloquial American. In New York this production was given in the original Italian, and audiences could enjoy the harmonious confluence of music and language. London hears Donizetti’s elegant score through the vernacular filter of “If he doesn’t shut his trap he’ll get a knuckle sandwich”, Belcore’s multiple repetitions of of “Begone, you meathead, get outa here” and, in a nod to Sondheim, “An elixir with a kick, sir”. It’s a constant distraction. Nevertheless, all credit to Miller for allowing American characters to sing in American accents. It works perfectly well, not least when Shore does his Elvis impersonation during a proto-karaoke episode (shades of the Duke’s juke box in Rigoletto?). It’s unclear why the use of accent and dialect has previously been such a taboo at ENO, but here is proof that idiomatic diction need not compromise musical integrity. The Queen’s R.P. in the land of the free? Never again please. - Mark Valencia | Score | Comment | Date |      | Beautifully sung. stylish, orchestral tuttis could be toned down, bit still a hugely entertaining night out - Dalesider | 01 Mar 10 |  | Pointless and deeply unfunny. - Cassox | 24 Feb 10 |      | hugely entertaining, a great night out......everything that the frankly laughable "Lucia" was not - Leonard Klahr | 16 Feb 10 | | | Click here for more user reviews and to post your own |
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Swan Lake - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 30th March 2010 to 4th April 2010 Spring Dance - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 30th March 2010 to 2nd May 2010 Ballet Nacional de Cuba - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 6th April 2010 to 11th April 2010 Mark Morris Dance Group (USA) - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 14th April 2010 to 17th April 2010 Sleeping Beauty - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 20th April 2010 to 24th April 2010 Birmingham Royal Ballet - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 21st April 2010 to 22nd April 2010 Elegy for Young Lovers - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 24th April 2010 to 8th May 2010 Ballet Nacional de Espana - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 27th April 2010 to 2nd May 2010 Tosca - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 18th May 2010 to 10th July 2010 The Pearl Fishers - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 1st June 2010 to 29th June 2010 Idomeneo - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 18th June 2010 to 9th July 2010 Swan Lake - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 13th July 2010 to 25th July 2010 Giselle - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 15th July 2010 to 16th July 2010 Mikhailovsky Ballet - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 17th July 2010 to 24th July 2010 Mikhailovsky Ballet - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 18th July 2010 to 18th July 2010 Mikhailovsky Ballet - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 20th July 2010 to 21st July 2010 Carlos Acosta - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 28th July 2010 to 7th August 2010 Cinderella - Click here for tickets and info Dates from 11th August 2010 to 15th August 2010 |