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Der Vampyr

Opera with Teeth

by Heinrich August Marschner, arranged by Kelly Lovelady, libretto adapted by Julia Mintzer and Charles Ogilvie

Gothic Opera, part of the Grimeborn Festival at Arcola Theatre, Dalston until 17th August

Review by Patrick Shorrock

This year’s Grimeborn Festival gets off to a splendid start with this revival of Gothic Opera’s production of Marschner’s Der Vampyr.   Marschner is described as a missing link between Weber and Wagner, but is a lot closer to the former than the latter. That said, the tartan, the enforced wedding, the lavish coloratura, and big ensembles remind me less of Der Freischütz  and more of Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor, which didn’t receive its first performance until seven years after Der Vampyr.

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The Barber of Seville

Sharp Practice

The Barber of Seville

by Gioachino Rossini, libretto by Cesare Sterbini after Pierre Beaumarchais

West Green House Opera, Theatre on the Lawn, Hartley Wintney, until 28th July

Review by Mark Aspen

The whole cast needs to be very sharp in The Barber of Seville, for it is amongst the busiest of operas.  Patter songs come thick and fast, and it is foremost a frenetic farce, furiously paced.   Rossini intended his Il Barbiere di Siviglia, and it is presented here in Italian, to be pure fun, with none of the darker undertones of Beaumarchais’ plays, which are evident behind the comedy in Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro, which is effectively its sequel.   Even sober-sided Beethoven enjoyed Il Barbiere, although he was sniffy about Rossini’s more serious works.

Director Victoria Newlyn, who also had great fun with Donezetti’s L’elisir d’amore  on the lake in 2022, fittingly lets West Green’s production let rip as a rowdy romp, played for laughs.  

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My Plan For Tomorrow

Match Set

My Plan For Tomorrow

by George Abbott

Enrose Ramos and Spare the Rod Theatre Company at the Golden Goose Theatre, Camberwell until 3rd August

Review by Heather Moulson

With a voice-over that is Nixon-esque, Piers enters the stage.  The environment appears to be a teaching room.  He switches off the CD player and addresses us, his pupils on a Jobseekers course. (It seems that’s what we’ve paid for!).  We have entered the surreal world of My Plan For Tomorrow, director George Abbott’s well-written play exploring, and questioning, the value of success and failure.

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Suor Angelica

Piercingly Sublime

Suor Angelica

by Giacomo Puccini, libretto by Giovacchino Forzano

West Green House Opera, at the Theatre on the Lawn, Hartley Wintney, 26th July

Review by Mark Aspen

Never was there a composer who could write such tear-jerking melodies as Giacomo Puccini.  His tragic sopranos are etched into the opera-goers memory.  Somehow, whenever they are spoken of, their names are prefaced with the adjectives “poor little”.   Think Cio-Cio San waiting for the faithless Pinkerton in Madama Butterfly, the consumptive Mimi in La Bohème dying in Rodolfo’s garret while their friends wait impotently by, Liu in Turandot taking her own life to protect her aged father and save the Prince whom she loves.

But if you need a tissue for these heroines’ fate, you will need a whole box for Angelica in Suor Angelica.  Handkerchiefs?  I got through my one-for-blow and my one-for-show.  However, this is not shallow sentimentality.  It is bare emotion rubbed raw. 

West Green House Opera’s one-off performance of Suor Angelica was by far the best and most affecting I have seen.  At its conclusion the audience were stunned into silence, before it recovered enough to give a long and loud ovation. 

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Under the Greenwood Tree

Golden Bough

Under the Greenwood Tree

by Paul Carr, libretto by Euan Tait, after Thomas Hardy

Dorset Opera at the Coade Theatre, Bryanston, Blandford Forum until 27th July  

Review by Claire Alexander

From its earliest days under the personal ambition and inspiration of the late Patrick Shelley (then Director of Music at Sherborne School), Dorset Opera Festival (now under the equally inspirational artistic directorship of Roderick Kennedy since 2003) has grown and flourished into one of the UKs most successful summer opera festivals and always supporting young and emerging artists.  Somewhat further out of London than more well-known names, and now in the beautiful expansive grounds of Bryanston School near Blandford, for a week every year it brings equally stunning top class opera to Dorset and surrounding counties.  This year it proudly celebrates fifty illustrious years – how proud would those earliest musicians be!

Under The Greenwood Tree (from the Thomas Hardy novel of the same title) by Paul Carr has been especially commissioned for this occasion and could not have been better chosen.  There was palpable anticipation in the audience as it assembled for this, the World Premiere.

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Falstaff

Bulk Bye

Falstaff

by Giuseppe Verdi, libretto by Arrigo Boito

West Green House Opera, Theatre on the Lawn, Hartley Wintney, until 21st July

Review by Mark Aspen

What makes a rogue a lovable rogue?  If Sir John Falstaff is the epitome of the loveable rogue, maybe we should ask those Elizabethan play-goers who wanted Shakespeare to resurrect him from the dead after Henry IV.   Or perhaps we should ask Signor Verdi, who, although not speaking English, loved Shakespeare and is said to have always kept an Italian translation of The Merry Wives of Windsor at his bedside. 

Verdi was in his eightieth year when he wrote Falstaff.  His first attempt at a comic opera, Un giorno di regno, was when he was in his twenties.  Its poor reception disheartened him and tragic opera became his forte for the next six decades.  It was his librettist, Arrigo Boito who re-kindled the dormant Shakespeare comedy idea, when he dropped an outline for Falstaff on his desk.  Boito knew of Verdi’s bardolatry; there had already been a Macbeth and an Otello, plus Verdi had long toyed with the notion of a King Lear.  That would have been quite something.

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Red Speedo

In at the Deep End

Red Speedo

by Lucas Hnath

David Adkin and OT Productions, at The Orange Tree Theatre, Richmond until 10th August

Review by Harry Zimmerman

Ray lives to swim.  He is within touching distance of Olympic glory and a life-changing sponsorship deal.  But everything changes when performance-enhancing drugs are discovered in the club’s refrigerator.  As tensions run high, Ray’s brother wants them destroyed, his coach wants to call the authorities, his ex-girlfriend doesn’t want to know, and Ray wants the drugs back.

 Written by Lucas Hnath, directed by Matthew Dunster and receiving its’ UK premiere at The Orange Tree Theatre, Red Speedo is a taut construct of power, political manoeuvring and moral ambiguities played at the breakneck pace of an Olympic sprint.  At its heart, the play tackles the unforgiving weight of success in a world where the only crime is getting caught.

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Opera Gala Concert

Sublime Balm for a Hot Evening

Opera Gala Concert

West Green House Opera, at the Theatre on the Lawn, Hartley Wintney, 19th July

Review by Mark Aspen

Gleaming white decorated canvas of the dining pavilions by the glittering lake and Marylyn Abbott’s gardens, swollen with blooms in all their glory, form the setting for the opening event of West Green House Opera’s new season.  It is the hottest day of the year (“so far”, add the meteorologists) and there is quite a party atmosphere as the champagne corks pop.  And pop they do, as ice-pack sleeves don’t stay frozen long at 32°C.  Bacchus smiles out, appropriately, from the programme cover. 

It is that same Bacchus that smiles out from the central rondel of the façade of West Green House, which forms the backdrop in the Theatre on the Lawn, itself a generously proportioned pavilion, sans upstage wall, affording a view across the sheltered greensward towards the handsome house.

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Humble Boy

What’s the Buzz?

Humble Boy

by Charlotte Jones

Barnes Community Players, at the OSO Arts Centre, Barnes until 21st July

Review by Claire Alexander

Humble Boy, written by Charlotte Jones in 2001, falls into a genre of contemporary plays confronting unspoken long held family misunderstandings and secrets, exposed by grief and loss.  Apologia (Alexi Kaye Campbell) and Albion (Mike Bartlett) spring to mind.  Like Albion, Humble Boy is set in a garden, replete with glorious flowers as if to emphasise the lack of life and nourishment for the family that inhabits it.  And throughout there is the allusion and parallel to the bees – beloved of Flora Humble’s recently dead husband, Jim.  The now empty hive, a prominent part of the set, is a constant reminder to us, as the audience, of how bees’ behaviour can sometimes reflect our own.  This makes for a clever and absorbing mosaic of a play that works on many different levels.

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Cyrano de Bergerac

The Best? Who Nose?

Cyrano de Bergerac

by Edmond Rostand, adapted by Glyn Maxwell

Richmond Shakespeare Society at the Fountain Gardens, York House, Twickenham until 20th July

Review by Salieri

Cyrano de Bergerac, presented by the Richmond Shakespeare Society for its annual Open-Air Production is one of the most fascinating theatrical evenings I have spent.  Probably the best of its previous such productions to date, it reduced the large area of the Fountain Gardens to a Theatre in the Round with the audience around its perimeter.  This undoubted created an atmosphere of intimacy and led to a brilliant display by the actors, who inexhaustibly portrayed a number of different characters as the First Act proceeded.  The pace was excellent and the energy of the cast was well up to the demands made upon them.  One carp I had was the use of microphones, which I feel was unnecessary in such a small acting area and was not always kind to some of the female members of the cast.

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