Eugene Onegin, Glyndebourne

It is astonishing to me that this production is 20 years old, as it is timeless. Minimal, with great use of curtains and strategically placed sheaves of wheat, it places the emphasis firmly on the performers. The costumes are particularly beautiful and receive due emphasis thanks to the lack of scenery. I am not the kind of person who usually notices lighting particularly, but the lighting in this production was beautiful and cast emphasis precisely.

The other way in which this production is very successful is that it puts the emphasis on the performers’ singing (and dancing). And what singing it was. Beautiful throughout, with Ekaterina Scherbachenko a soulful, well-acted Tatyana, Ekaterina Sergeeva a petulant Olga and Diana Montague and Irina Tchistjakova well cast as Madame Larina and Filipyevna.

But for me, the night belonged to the men. Andrei Bondarenko was a stirring Onegin. It’s an extremely difficult character to play, as I find it difficult to muster any sympathy for Onegin whatsoever. Perhaps it would be different if I could read Russian, but in English both the book and the opera leave me with no feeling for him whatsoever. However, Bondarenko’s singing was very beautiful, with an open, glittering tone, and his acting excellent.

The two performances I enjoyed most were Edgaras Montvidas as Lensky and Taras Shtonda as Prince Gremin. Montvidas is Latvian and Shtonda Ukrainian, so it stands to reason that their Russian would be excellent. I found Montvidas’s Lensky heartbreaking, and his final aria before the duel astonishing in its clarity and beauty. Shtonda, as well, had a deep richness of tone that made his Prince Gremin a dignified, eloquent figure.

The ballet dancers in the Polonaise came as a surprise to me, and a delightful one. It set the tone admirably for what followed. What this production does so well is emphasise the economy with which Tchaikovsky tells the story. Each act is perfectly self-contained, and there is quite literally never a dull moment. The music is rich and the plot relentless. It is a wonderful opera, and this production shows it to its best advantage.

The audience was generally knowledgeable and very appreciative of the quality of the performances. However, there was a woman three or four rows behind me who whispered throughout. It was not too annoying where we were, but if I had been a couple of rows further back I suspect I would have said something. Given that the usual crowd at Glyndebourne does not generally hold back from pointing out bad behaviour, I am rather surprised that no one did. However, it did not detract from what was an absolutely stunning evening.

As a postscript, I don’t go to Glyndebourne every week. I have compressed my visits into the period of time before and after the World Cup, because during that time my partner will be entirely devoted to the football. He enjoys his Glyndebourne visits, but for him the ruling passion comes first.

Der Rosenkavalier, Glyndebourne

My first review is of a production that has received a great deal of media attention, Der Rosenkavalier at Glyndebourne. Glyndebourne is a stunning venue in rural Sussex. You are surrounded by fields, and inquisitive sheep often placidly venture to observe the opera-goers. Operas begin early (after a stroll in the beautiful grounds) and there is a long interval lasting around 80 minutes, at which people eat dinner. Hardier visitors picnic in the grounds, but I tend to prefer the restaurant, at least when the temperature is as cold as it was yesterday.

Yesterday’s production was Strauss’s Der Rosenkavalier, which has caused a minor media storm because many London critics had harsh words for the Irish mezzo-soprano Tara Erraught’s body size and shape, which they considered unsuitable for the role of Octavian. She sang utterly beautifully, with a warm, rounded mezzo voice of considerable brilliance, and was extremely well received by the audience. Her German was of particularly excellent quality, which one would expect from her training in Germany.

A few notes on her appearance: she was ill served by the two costumes that have received the most publicity, the bathrobe in scene 1 and the blue suit in act 2. The other masculine costumes, in acts 1 and 3, were darker and better tailored, and made her look sufficiently male, and in my opinion she looked similar to the actor Jonah Hill. The other problem was that the two costumes in which she was meant to be a man pretending to be a woman, in acts 1 and 3, were too flattering and simply made her look like what she is, an attractive curvy woman. Frankly, the costume designer needed to make her look more dumpy, not less, in those scenes.

The other aspect that may have contributed to the critics’ words was that she had very good facial acting, but she did not have male body language. Women are socialised to take up as little space as possible, and she did that even in her masculine guise, which contributed to her femininity. She stood up straight, but did not stick her chest out. She always stood with her legs precisely together, never even shoulder length apart. She sang one scene seated, but kept her legs together at all times, which a man would rarely do. So I think I understand what the critics were trying to get at, but criticising her body type and shape was simply unnecessary and insulting.

The production itself was rather bizarre, a mish-mash of decorative styles. One of our party remarked that the second act set was so 70s that you expected Michael Sheen to enter, in his David Frost character. But the singing was beautiful throughout. Kate Royal’s Marschallin was well done, with a silvery, flexible soprano. Teodora Gheorgiu’s Sophie looked and sounded young, but it worked in the production. She had a somewhat small but crystal clear voice. One of the highlights, for me, was Lars Woldt’s Baron Ochs. Beautifully sung, with a delightful colloquial German accent, he was younger than the usual Baron Ochs but greatly enjoyable. His aggressive masculinity also contrasted with Erraught’s femininity and may also have contributed to the critics’ views. A very enjoyable evening, in a very beautiful place.