|

|
|
|
|
|
Resources |
|
|
|
BAM's Magnificent Maiden Effort
| Article
# : |
15213 |
|
|
Section : |
THE ARTS
|
| Issue
Date : |
8 / 1989 |
2,094 Words |
| Author
: |
Lawrence O'' Toole Lawrence O'Toole writes on the arts for Entertainment Weekly
and other national publications. |
It is extremely gratifying, in an age when opera directors are wont to impose their own egos and neuroses on the works of composers, to see and hear a production that allows an opera to simply be. Such was the case of the Welsh National Opera's rendition of Verdi's Falstaff that prodigiously began the Brooklyn Academy of Music's (BAM's) first excursion into an opera season, which also included Jean Baptiste Lully's Atys and Kurt Weill's Little Mahagonny.
The director for the Welsh Falstaff was Germany's Peter Stein, the maverick theater director and cofounder of West Berlin's famous Schaubuhne Company. When the Cardiff company nabbed him, many people expected radical stagings of opera. Nothing, however, could be further from it: For Falstaff, Stein has been content to pay scrupulous attention to Arrigo Boito's libretto and Verdi's quicksilver score, the composer's most musically complex and sonically ravishing.
Falstaff doesn't need "interpretation"; its fulsomeness is inherent in Verdi's score and the libretto's tightly knit action, taken from Shakespeare's Henry plays and The Merry Wives of Windsor. It's a comedy, to be sure, but Verdi, like Shakespeare, has found a ragged grandeur in the outsized figure of the ale-quaffing, fowl-chewing Sir John Falstaff.
Protean Portrayal
Most of Stein's directing concentration, it would seem, has gone into Donald Maxwell's protean portrayal of the rotund carouser. Maxwell, who as a clear, unforced baritone large enough for the role, holds his mammoth gut as if it were a scepter. He is a comic
... (1993 of 12274 Characters)
Read Full Article
|
|