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![]() Semele (photo: Reg Wilson) |
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![]() Semele perishes at the sight of Zeus |
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Nelson, Battle,
Horne, Ramey |
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| .. The Cambridge Companion to Handel (Cambridge Companions to Music) (1997) Donald Burrows, editor Handel (1996), Christopher Hogwood .. |
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What better sort of character to make the heroine
of an opera? Semele was a Theban princess and the only mortal to be the parent of a god,
that God none other than Dionysus/Bacchus, offspring of Semele's union with Zeus/Jupiter.
Of course, Zeus' wife Hera/Juno was less than pleased with the goings on, so she schemed
Semele to a nasty end, consumed in flames from the lightning that radiated from her lover.
Dionysus, a heaven-sent son, rescued his mother from Hades, made her a goddess, and set
her up in style on Mount Olympus, a very good address indeed.
Handel wrote Semele (to a libretto by William Congreve, in
turn based on Ovid) as an opera, but in its early productions it was staged as oratorio;
styles had changed in London and oratorios were a lot easier on the budget as well. Opera
or oratorio, there is a certain static quality to these baroque works, constructed of a
series of set pieces; modern audiences are generally more accustomed to a less stylized
dramatic flow. But Handel oratorios can play well as fully staged opera (see our review
of Saul) and Semele is rich in elegant
music affording ample opportunities for virtuoso singing and telling characterizations.
Handel begins with Semele abandoning her betrothed, Athamas, in favor
of her celestial lover and ends with her death. (Dionysus has been left out, though in the
Copley production he is given a token appearance in the final tableau.) This Semele,
initially motivated by passionate love, later becomes dissatisfied, coveting the
immortality of the gods. Her presumption and vanity are in the classic model of hubris,
so that her fate - death resulting from exposure to the full godliness of her lover -
constitutes a fitting and ironic resolution in the traditional classical mode.
San Francisco Opera has imported John Copley's 1982 production from
Covent Garden and managed to assemble Mr. Copley to direct, Charles Mackerras to
conduct (some performances) as he did for the 1982 production, and Ruth Ann Swenson for
the eponymous role, reprising her London success in the 1996 revival.
Copley has found just the right tone to bring Semele to a
modern audience, treating the music with great respect, but drawing out much surely
intended humor and gently satirizing the form as well. The sets are in the style of the
early 18th century, even to mimicking the effects of the stage machinery of the
period. In the midst of classical columns and outsized vases, the lead women wear
elaborate, layered gowns in the 18th century style, but highly theatricalized - there is
an abundance of crinolines, brocades, nettings, trains, beading, tassels, jewels. It is an
amusing excess, evincing thoughts more of upholstery than of haute couture. The men and
the choruses are garbed more in the Grecian manner, the whole in a range of smoky colors,
from pale beiges to soft pinks to faded lavenders, with the occasional highlights of red
and gold. The period is rococo, but the look here somehow feels infused with a Victorian
sensibility.
It is the women who dominate the proceedings and it is hard to conceive
these roles better served than by Ruth Ann Swenson and Sarah Connolly, the latter in the
dual roles of Juno and Semele's sister, Ino. From start to finish Swenson is a source of
pure pleasure, producing limpid tones and effortless fioriture. In the astounding aria
"Myself I shall adore" she combines bravura singing with laugh-out-loud humor
and, when you think she's surely got to run out of steam, launches into yet one more
display of exquisite coloratura. It seems that Diva Swenson doesn't have to breathe as
mere mortals do.
Connolly, in an auspicious San Francisco debut, sang impeccably with
her burnished and precisely placed mezzo, displayed a great gift for comic acting, and
radiated star quality of her own. In the much smaller role of Iris, Juno's messenger,
Christine Brandes added yet another fine voice and lively personality to the mix. Amongst
the men, John Relyea, played dual roles as Cadmus (Semele's father) and Somnus (the god of
sleep). In solid voice, Relyea also displayed a Gilbert and Sullivan sort of comic talent
as Somnus, complete with clouds of dust and a taste for underage girls. Brian Asawa as
Athamas seemed strained and uncomfortable. As Jupiter, John Mark Ainsley did not seem to
be operating in the same league as the women; last night, in any event, he did not produce
pleasing sounds, but a consistently thin and unappealing tone. John Copley's direction
drew relaxed and natural performances from his leads, particularly in the comical bits,
and he kept the onstage processions moving smoothly along.
It's probably a good guess that this Semele was staged due to
Ruth Ann Swenson's relationship with San Francisco Opera. There's nothing at all wrong
with that. What seems a little sad is that without Ms. Swenson Semele might never
have been considered at all. It surely will be remembered as a highlight of the season.
San Francisco, November 15, 2000 - Arthur Lazere