Opera Holland Park continues to go from strength to strength with a Wolf-Ferrari and Leoncavallo double bill

United KingdomUnited Kingdom Wolf-Ferrari and Leoncavallo: Soloists, Children from Pimlico Musical Foundation, Chorus of Opera Holland Park, City of London Sinfonia / John Andrews (conductor, Wolf-Ferrari), Francesco Cilluffo (conductor, Leoncavallo). Opera Holland Park, London, 17.7.2024. (CC)

Clare Presland as Susanna and Richard Burkhard as Count Gil in Il segreto di Susanna © Ali Wright

Wolf-Ferrari – Il segreto di Susanna

Production:
Director – John Wilkie
Designer – takis
Lighting designer – Mark Jonathan

Cast:
Clare Presland – Countess Susanna
Richard Burkhard – Count Gil
John Savournin –Sante
Naomi Kilby & Kirsty McLean – Maid

Leoncavallo – Pagliacci

Production:
Director – Richard Lloyd-Evans
Designer – Bridget Kimak
Lighting designer – Mark Jonathan
Intimacy and Fight director – Haruka Kuroda

Cast:
David Butt Philip – Canio
Alison Langer – Nedda
Robert Hayward – Tonio
Zwakele Tshabalala – Beppe
Harry Thatcher – Silvio

A double helping of applause for the programming here: on the one hand, it is good to see Leoncavallo’s Pagliacci de-coupled from Mascagni’s Cavalleria rusitcana, and as we shall see, the choice of Susanna’s Secret offers much rich exchange of ideas; on the other, it is fascinating to see the Wolf-Ferrari again with a different partner (previously, in 2019, it shared an evening with Tchaikovsky’s wonderful Iolanta). That set of performances was to be, it turned out, Opera Holland Park’s last pre-lockdown.

This new coupling worked brilliantly, and lt is also incredibly relevant. Addiction met domestic violence (an insert within the programme booklet sought to give advice for those ‘affected’ by issues in Pagliacci by pointing in the direction of the National Domestic Abuse Helpline – very much a sign of the times). Both takes on the concept of sexual jealousy, in full-blooded verismo fashion for Pag, and with a far gentler hand in Susanna.

For Il segreto di Susanna, Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari’s brilliantly deft one-acter (first performed in Munich in 1909), we heard the score in a reduction by Dan Jenkins (performed in arrangement with the publishers Josef Weinberger Limited). Reductions are becoming a regular part of the operatic scene these days, and they seem to crop up a lot at OHP and Wolf-Ferrari’s score loses some of its lushness as a result, but luckily under the expert guidance of John Andrews, the loss felt minimal. Andrews seemed to have the perfect tempi throughout.

Director Jon Wilkie’s production is brilliant. Costumes match items on the set giving a nice sense of visual coherence, and the lighting designs from taxis support the idea of a comedy-drama within a nobleman’s house beautifully. A Comedy of Errors with more than a touch of Upstairs, Downstairs is the vibe. The Countess Susanna’s secret is, of course, that she smokes; but her husband suspects she has taken a lover. Three silent characters are added in John Wilkie’s production: a butler (John Savourin) and two charming, giggly maids (Naomi Kilby and Valerie Wong).

The OHP stage space is used well: we can even glimpse the ‘offstage’ piano around Count Gil’s ‘Evitiam che un domestico’. It is all brilliantly slick, and the same could certainly be said of the City of London Sinfonia’s contribution under Andrews.

Cast and conductor were broadly the same as in 2019 (one of the maids, Kirsty McLean, was replaced here by Valerie Wong). Savournin’s butler was fabulously funny, but it was Richard Burkhard’s Gil that stole the show

Clare Presland was announced as having been ill in the days previously, and the assumption was somewhat sub-that of 2019, occasionally too quiet and edgy. And yet her concluding aria, ‘O gioia la nube leggera’, was truly touching, enshrined in a halo of strings and celesta, expertly marshalled by Andrews. Moments of magic.

It was though the Count of Richard Burkhard that dominated, Perhaps his most lovely moment was ‘Il dolce idillio’ (he initiates a glorious duet with the Countess). Andrews inspired the orchestra to their best (it was a close-run thing, but they sounded better in the Wolf-Ferrari than in the Leoncavallo); even the cruelly high and rapid violin lines succeeded; Andrews’s gestures confirmed his in-depth knowledge of the score.

And so to Pagliacci. Set in twentieth-century Italy (around the 1940s), the set conversion was clearly involved – hence the 35-minute plus interval (quite a late finish for those heading across London). The reduction this time was by ‘Tony Burke @ Pocket Productions,’ which inevitably detracted a little from the power of the opening (those who know Serafin’s classic 1954 account will know what I mean here). Nevertheless, conductor Francesco Cilluffo found much subtlety in the scoring (ironically, he comes fresh from a Mascagni production at Wexford, although not Cav: instead, Le maschere). If the City of London Sinfonia was a touch less ignited under his direction than under Andrews, there was much to enjoy, and, like, Andrews, his tempi seemed perfectly chosen (more room for rubato in Pag, and Cilluffo judged it well).

Richard Lloyd-Evans’s production plays with the idea of staging and audiences, which is logical as, like Richard Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos, we get both backstage and opera performances in one piece. So, the Prologue (Sì può) is performed to the onstage audience. Later, the ‘real’ audience gets dragged into the action – the murder is performed off the OHP stage and within the audience space, adding to the sense of verismo.

Robert Hayward as Tonio and Alison Langer as Nedda in Pagliacci © Ali Wright

It is surely luxury to have Robert Hayward as Tonio, properly threatening in his demeanour, his vocal strength undeniable (let us not forget his recent Alberich in Gotterdämmerung at the Royal Festival Hall). Sporting a stick to indicate his disability, Hayward commanded the stage, his brutish actions visceral.

It takes a lot to top that but enter David Butt Philip (who had actually sung in the 2019 Iolanta, as Count Vaudemort, but here had the perfect chance to shine as Canio/Pagliacci). Butt Philip has it all: a range that implies there is more than a hint of the latter-day ‘baritenor’ about him, plus burnished high notes that must have been heard as far as Knightsbridge. Add to this superlative diction, and a ‘Vesti la giubba’ for the ages, and you get a performance to treasure.

Nedda was brilliantly portrayed by Alison Langer, who was the stand-out performer, as Gilda, in OHP’s 2023 Rigoletto. The Silvio, Harry Thatcher, took a while to warm into the role, but found his feet (luckily in time for a truly spine-tingling ‘Tutto scordiam’ with Langer), while Zwakele Tshabalala was a strong Beppe.

Opera Holland Park continues to go from strength to strength. After a miraculous, revelatory Puccini Edgar earlier in the season (review), this coupling continued the trend of vivid, spine-tingling opera. Next up on their schedule, Handel’s Acis and Galatea.

Colin Clarke

Featured Image: David Butt Philip as Canio in Pagliacci © Ali Wright

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