The Love for Three Oranges – RSAMD

oranges-828014The Love for Three Oranges is the strangest of works. Surreal in fact.

So what could be more natural than a staging which took is visual reference points from surreal and pop art. Dali, Magritte, Duchamp and Warhol were all referenced in this wittily directed production. Indeed, it was a very visual production in which the war between Fata Morgana and Tchelio was expressed by a mad painting competition. Dollops of Pollockesque paint were flung around with crazy abandon, hitting the set full on through the medium of video projection. Later in the production, the blasts of confetti showed for the strength of the wind and showered down and across the stage. Beauty caught in the limelight.

The Love for Three Oranges raises the question of whether we can affect our passage through the world through being able to adopt an outlook based on good humour rather than bad humour. Right and wrong get sublimated into a quest for happiness. The king’s son has terminal hypochondria. Nothing will save him except laughter, yet nothing that is put on for his entertainment gives him pleasure.

In the end, he is healed, perhaps rather disturbingly, through witnessing the suffering of another and then by being cursed with a desire to find Three Oranges. His quest is successful in the end. True love emerges out of one of the oranges, but not until a great deal of struggle has been entered into.

There was some lovely singing on stage, but in the end, it was the sheer energy and vitality of the chorus and orchestra which made this an evening to remember. The processions of the King’s Court were particularly memorable; every body on the stage completely engaged in the action.

A great night out. Last performace on Saturday night at the Festival Theatre in Edinburgh. Highly recommended.

Rating: ★★★★☆

Other reviews here and here and here.

The Secret Marriage – Scottish Opera

Hands up how many people know the Secret Marriage and can whistle some of the tunes.

I thought so; only those who have been working on it with Scottish Opera recently. Yet the strange thing is, as one sits there in the dress circle tapping one’s smile in time with the music,  one has the feeling that although the work is not widely known, the tunes are already somehow in your head.

Mr Cimarosa’s work seems at one and the same time familiar and unfamiliar. Does this describe a work which is predicatable? Well, perhaps so. Yet not particularly any the less enjoyable for that.

Scottish Opera’s programming is sometimes surprising. Did they consciously want us to compare this work to the Two Widows of several weeks ago? The music last night was very different, but the plot, such as it was seemed oddly familiar. Once again we were back in a well designed drawing room with a story that hung only by the flimsy cotton thread of someone changing their mind about whom they would love. Having said that, the Secret Marriage carried its wit on its voluminous sleeves much more comfortably than Mr Smetana’s piece so recently did.

Amongst other good singing, Rebecca Bottone’s Carolina stood out as being particuarly good. The clarity of both her words and her cheek shone out from the stage. It was not difficult to see what Paolino saw in her –  as though Kylie Minogue had been dressed up in fifties A-line and dipped in a sweet buffa coating. In the end though, this was a strictly ensemble piece and no-one let the side down.

A sparking libretto, a clever set and a jolly, if light, score made this another delightful evening out. Scottish Opera know how to please us. Do they know how to challenge us? Do they know how to surprise us?

Time will tell.

Rating: ★★★★☆