It’s a
29-year-old production but it hardly shows. Giles Havergal’s staging of
Rossini’s The Barber of Seville is still one of the best in Opera North’s
cupboard, and it was good to see it dusted off again at The Lowry.
Imagining
it as a performance by a travelling troupe in 19th century Italy (with
‘audience’ on stage to lead the applause at the right times, and become the
chorus where necessary) was always a clever idea, and it means we observers can
laugh both with, and occasionally at, the cavortings on stage.
Those are
good value, too. The cast is a mixture of experience and youth, with the comedy
led by Eric Roberts as Dr Bartolo (I can hardly imagine anyone else doing it)
and Alastair Miles as Don Basilio, both masters of their craft. The English
translation (Robert David MacDonald) gives Roberts funny lines which he
exploits to the full (‘I love it when she’s angry’ … ‘I just cannot believe
it’) and he presents his musical highspots to great effect (despite seeming
momentarily to hesitate in Can You Offer Such Excuses).
The richly
coloured voice of Katie Bray, as Rosina, shows that the young-and-up-and-coming
members of the cast are of exceptional quality this time around. She sings Both
The Singer And The Song (Una voce poco fa) wonderfully, and likewise in the
lesson scene – and she can get a laugh with just a facial expression, as she
does when her true love turns out to be the very eligible young Count Almaviva.
Nicholas
Watts, in that role, took a few minutes to get into his stride but was singing brilliantly
in the second act, and acting effectively.
But the
discovery of the night is surely Gavan Ring as Figaro, a young Irish baritone
who seems made for the role. He sings with assurance and catches the comedy
opportunities without exaggeration.
Victoria
Sharp’s Berta may not have more than one chance to shine as soloist, but she
really proved her worth in topping the ensemble numbers with ringing tone.
Credit,
too, of course, to Russell Craig’s set and costume design, which is one of the
delights of this show.
Under
Stuart Stratford’s direction, the performance got off to a slightly sticky
start, with a little rhythmic unease in the overture and a touch of the
perennial Lyric Theatre problem of keeping stage and pit together, but this was
very soon overcome. The final act one sextet (Spellbound And Thunderstruck) was
particularly well paced and articulated, and in the second part everything
gelled to make a very fine evening.
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