A Double Bill of Monodramas:
Argento’s Miss Havisham’s Wedding Night
Berlioz’s La mort de Cléopâtre
On Site Opera
The Harmonie Club
September 30, 2016
A bold pairing: Aurelia and Cleopatra Photo credit: On Site Opera |
It was a misty evening. The street glistened and traffic was
backed up down Fifth Avenue under an incessant drizzle. When we arrived at the
historic Harmonie Club on East 60th Street, I half expected Dorothy Parker to
greet us, or Eleanor Roosevelt to take my coat. We were ushered through the
elegant lobby and up to the second floor ballroom, where the ceiling was all
rosette studded wood inlay and the chandeliers exuded the old New York
refinement of another era. We were showed to our table that was set in grand
fashion for a multicourse dinner service. It was as though we stumbled into a
proper wedding reception. Though at the same time, something wasn’t right:
cobwebs covered the wedding cake, the mantle pieces on either end of the salon
were caked in dust, and the floral centerpieces on each of the tables were
beautifully arranged but all the flowers were withering (artfully) away.
Waiters came around with red and white wine and the feeling of excitement was
palpable. It was after all Miss Havisham’s much anticipated wedding night (with
a nod to Dickens).
A haunting stage is set and you're in it Photo credit: Allegri con Fuoco |
First up, Berlioz’s La mort de Cléopâtre – an intense
soliloquy in music. I came in wondering how they might carry it off in a space
like this. The score takes us on the whirlwind of emotions that buffets the
great fallen queen during her final moments of life.
Gaissert goes Cleopatra á la Alma-Tadema Photo credit: On Site Opera |
In the role of Cleopatra, mezzo Blythe Gaissert moved
violently yet gracefully about the room as if possessed. She embodied Berlioz’s heroine with
fervor. It’s such a moving piece especially when in the middle passages the
cellos kick in and send the emotions into the lower more guttural range of the
mezzo’s voice – deep and sad and chesty. It tore at my heart. There were at
least three moments in the twenty or so minute long piece in which I found
myself on the verge of tears, if only the tempo allowed me the catharsis.
Instead the piece pushes on and we move into the next movement of the emotional
rollercoaster that is Cleopatra’s demise. So moving, so beautiful.
Who got the snakes out? Photo credit: Allegri con Fuoco |
We were privy to Cleopatra’s in extremis breakdown. And she sang
it as if we weren’t there. Amazing. And if the moment before the suicide was not dramatic enough, Ms. Gaissert pulled out a real snake! The live-reptile move definitely helped shake up anybody in the audience who may have drifted off and served to refocus their attention on Cleopatra’s every syllable (and gesture, god forbid she lose her grip on the snake). The scene
played out like an Alma-Tadema painting. It had me tingling all over. And
left me wanting more.
Gaissert showed us her stuff. She sounded deep and powerful, like a
woman who is used to being in control. And she moved about the room with
self-assurance and pride, but on the verge of annihilation. It was frenzied, yet
totally called for.
Berlioz’s setting of this text was composed in 1829 for a competition during his apprenticeship, when he was up and coming in the music world. I have always found it dramatically satisfying. I was curious to see how they might adapt it not to a recital or a proscenium but to a site-specific ballroom space. It was intriguing. Though we were all seated in a wedding dinner fashion, it was as though we were silently eavesdropping on her. Very dramatic.
Berlioz’s setting of this text was composed in 1829 for a competition during his apprenticeship, when he was up and coming in the music world. I have always found it dramatically satisfying. I was curious to see how they might adapt it not to a recital or a proscenium but to a site-specific ballroom space. It was intriguing. Though we were all seated in a wedding dinner fashion, it was as though we were silently eavesdropping on her. Very dramatic.
Here comes the bride Photo credit: On Site Opera |
While I wasn’t worried about the musical qualities of the Berlioz,
I wasn’t sure what to expect from the second piece on the bill, this more
recent and completely unknown work by Dominick Argento, Miss Havisham’s
Wedding Night. On my way there under the rain, I had prepared to brace myself
for anything, but after Cléopâtre my guard was down and I was open to
whatever might come.
Madness sets in Photo credit: Allegri con Fuoco |
And come she did. Miss Havisham burst into ballroom where we were
all seated for her cake and champagne reception, though she was more of a
nervous wreck than her predecessor. She scurried around the room, like Cleopatra, as though we weren’t there – skittish, delusional and disturbed. Soprano Leah
Partridge sounded great, with very dynamic, at times almost syncopated singing. And even looked the part, as she vaguely resembled her
Helen Bonham-Carter incarnation from the famous movie based on the same
Dickens novel with a slight Julianne Moore thing going on there too. She was
striking both as an actress and vocally. Her instrument was happily strident to
match the shrill madness of the character but also full and expressive, pliant
and versatile so as to better flesh out the many twists and turns poor Miss
Havisham undergoes over the course of reliving her wedding night meltdown
(presumably years after the fact).
A love lost but not forgotten Photo credit: Allegri con Fuoco |
Argento’s score was surprisingly pleasant from start to finish, all while rendering musically the character's violent mood swings.
Thank God he didn’t feel the need to go over the top in
terms of the setting of the human voice against the orchestration just for the sake
of being weird. Instead I feel like he adhered much more closely the mode that
I came to appreciate in David Lang’s recent visionary operatic character study. Thanks to The Loser I came to think of Miss Havisham’s
Wedding Night as more of a dramatic monologue – this after all is the story
of one of literature’s real losers, in a manner of speaking. The orchestration
helped the soprano to achieve a sort of soliloquy that was expressive of a
range of emotions that ran the gamut from delusion to anticipation and then
from despair to the return of hope and back again. Though the overall takeaway
was schizophrenic, the music remained contained and took her state of mind
seriously throughout. Argento's approach was compassionate and humanistic and so
ultimately even more tragic which is the nature of the poor Miss Havisham
character in the novel, a woman who still nevertheless commands our sympathies
despite her overarching eccentricities. It is a very subtle setting on the part
of the composer, which was very tightly and tactfully interpreted by the
orchestra under the baton of Geoffrey McDonald.
A lavish affair Photo credit: Allegri con Fuoco |
Set dressings caked in cobwebs Photo credit: Allegri con Fuoco |
– Lui & Lei
Voce di Meche concurs. Original language please!
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