Janáček’s Kát’a Kabanová reinvented in Geneva – Seen and Heard International

0
79
Janáček’s Kát’a Kabanová reinvented in Geneva – Seen and Heard International


Janáček’s Kát’a Kabanová reinvented in Geneva – Seen and Heard InternationalSwitzerland Janáček, Kát’a Kabanová: Soloists, Choeur du Grand Théâtre de Genève (refrain grasp: Alan Woodbridge), Orchestre de la Suisse Romande / Tomáš Netopil (conductor). Grand Théâtre de Genève, 21.10.2022. (ALL)

Corinne Winters (Katia) and Aleš Briscein (Boris) © Carole Parodi

Production:
Director – Tatjana Gürbaca
Sets – Henrik Ahr
Costumes – Barbara Drosihn
Dramaturgy – Bettina Auer
Videos – Kamil Polak
Lighting – Stefan Bolliger

Cast:
Katia Kabanova – Corinne Winters
Boris Grigorjevič – Aleš Briscein
Marfa Ignatěvna (Kabanicha) – Elena Zhidkova
Tichon Ivanyč Kabanov – Magnus Vigilius
Savël Prokofjevič Dikój – Tómas Tómasson
Váňa Kudrjaš – Sam Furness
Varvara – Ena Pongrac
Kuligin – Vladimir Kazako
Feklousa – Natalia Ruda

This is the third manufacturing of a Janáček Opera offered by the Geneva Grand Théâtre because the arrival of intendant Aviel Kahn. The first one was the sensible and dramatic manufacturing of The Makropoulos Affair two years in the past, adopted final yr by Jenůfa, staged by a staff together with the identical orchestra, conductor, director and lead soprano.

Unlike at Zurich Opera home, the stage in Geneva could be very vast, which generally is a pressure on the singers. Director Tatjana Gürbaca and set designer Henrik Ahr solved this problem by constructing a wood setting which served dramatic goals, just like the drowning Katia disappearing from the again of the stage, but additionally musical ones: singers might soar above the orchestra.

Janáček’s works are nice materials for robust Personenregie, and this was the case right here. Gürbaca’s manufacturing didn’t spotlight Katia’s oppression and sorrow, however proper from the beginning selected to current her as virtually ‘autistic’, unable to attach with the opposite characters.

During the love scene, Katia and Boris sang with ardour however had been bodily distant, reminding us of Bayreuth’s manufacturing of Tristan und Isolde by the late Heiner Müller the place each singers within the second act sang unbelievably intense music, however at both finish of the stage. Katia’s public confession within the final act was met with indifference from the characters on stage, every robotically repeating the identical motion.

As with many reinterpretations, this labored very effectively in some moments and fewer so in others. The huge loss was the caricature of Kabanicha, who was now not the menacing presence she might be, in addition to a voluntary lack of poetry from the younger couple, Váňa (Sam Furness) and Varvara (Ena Pongrac), which normally gives a distinction to Katia each together with her husband and her lover. But all scenes with Katia labored effectively and this was the ‘price to we had to pay’.

The casting was very robust total. Corinne Winters, who sang the half in Salzburg this summer season in a really totally different manufacturing by the Barrie Kosky/Jakub Hrůša staff confirmed her nice expertise. The voice is highly effective and safe. She has expression and depth on stage. She is the trendy Katia of our era and a singer that one needs to listen to discover many roles.

By her aspect, Aleš Briscein displayed real vocal depth as Boris. Elena Zhidkova (Kabanicha) was hampered by the manufacturing idea, which decreased the influence of her half. Tómas Tómasson (Dikój), who has usually sung in Geneva, was high quality casting. Geneva usually finds and nurtures younger singers in residence, from whence got here the Varvara sung joyfully by Pongrac, whereas Ukrainian mezzo Natalia Ruda (Feklousa) could have only some traces to sing however impressed and ought to be a reputation to comply with.

As is usually the case with premieres, the orchestra took time to seek out its mark. Usually, ensembles may be considerably loud however the reverse occurred right here, they began out a bit of too softly. The timpani that gives a leitmotif all through the work was inaudible … As the night went on, stability improved and the Swiss Romande was a powerful contributor within the final act. But these are points normally resolved with additional performances.

Readers in Brno could have the chance to listen to these musicians on November thirteenth on the Janáček Brno Festival. They and Geneva residents mustn’t hesitate to go and uncover what is unquestionably a powerful manufacturing.

Antoine Lévy-Leboyer

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here