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The music of Verdi's I Vespri
Siciliani opens majestically and alternates in turn with playful and emotionally dark
interludes. Coming after
Washington National Opera opened its fiftieth anniversary season with
this grand opera of passion and revenge. Under the baton of maestro Placido Domingo, the
first notes of the overture seemed uncertain. Shortly thereafter the musicians settled in
and the satisfying music of Verdi flowed. The opera is set in and near
Director Paolo Micciche marshals an international cast of considerable
talent with soprano Maria Guleghina as Elena, tenor Franco Farina as Arrigo, and baritone
Lado Ataneli as Monforte. Outstanding performances include Vitalij Kowaljow as rebel
mastermind Procida, declaring his love for his country in "O tu Palermo," a bass
aria some consider the most beautiful in that register. The duet between Ataneli and
Farina as his rebel son, in which the hated governor reveals he is Arrigos father,
is both sympathetic and oddly comic. Verdis music lends a light touch that both
Ataneli and Farina use to advantage.
Guleghina as the grieving but angry duchess Elena (the French killed
her brother), and the object of Arrigos love, demonstrates her impressive vocal
skills in the duet with Arrigo when he comes to beg her forgiveness. Arrigo is responsible
for Elena and Procidas imprisonment because, as Arrigo reveals to her, he could not
let them kill his father.
Paris Opera commissioned I
Vespri Siciliani, which was originally written in French by the leading French
librettist of his day Eugene Scribe. Scribe's libretto was recycled from one he wrote for
Donizetti who failed to finish his opera before an early and sudden death. In the libretto
negotiated with Verdi, the time, country and, of course, the situation changed. This might
account for the odd interpretation by Director Micciche who has imposed nineteenth century
costumes (similar to the dress of Verdis time) and Renaissance art on a story that
takes place in 1282.
Micciche uses projections as the main element for sets. Most effective
is the footage of Sicilian cliffs and waterways that move as if seen from a boat. These
images heighten the nationalism expressed by the Sicilian rebels. Images of paintings such
as The Rape of the Sabine Women tend to
over-sentimentalize what grand opera and its big passions are all about. One particularly
distracting image occurs when Monforte shows his son a letter written by Arrigos
mother that proves Monforte is Arrigos father. While Arrigo reads the letter,
impressionist script scrolls across the backdrop in an unnecessarily literal display.
The WNO production omits the ballet celebrating the four seasons which
was originally in the third act. The ballet was part of Paris Operas standard
requirements at the time Vespri was commissioned. However, given that the
five-act opera as produced by WNO runs over three hours, the production seems satisfyingly
paced without the extravagant ballet.
Washington, DC, September 20, 2005 - Karren L. Alenier