Midsummer night’s magic at glyndebourne | thearticle

Midsummer night’s magic at glyndebourne | thearticle


Play all audios:


As part of Benjamin Britten’s festival at Aldeburgh in 1960, he and his partner Peter Pears created an opera libretto from Shakespeare’s _Midsummer Night’s Dream_. Britten then wrote the


music and conducted the opera at its first performance, with Pears singing the role of Flute the bellows-mender, one of the “rude mechanicals”. In earlier operas such as _Peter Grimes_ and


_Turn of the Screw_, Britten had already shown a striking musical ability to interleave scenes of innocent joy with others of dark and mysterious intensity, so he was ideally suited to


turning Shakespeare’s immortal play into an opera. Staying true to the original is, in my opinion, vital to success for any Britten opera. At Glyndebourne in the 1980s, Peter Hall rose


brilliantly to the challenge. His production with its moving trees and bushes and gently swaying branches shows the forces of nature creating the magic that Britten’s music captures so well.


John Bury’s designs and Paul Pyant’s lighting foster an atmosphere where the desires of the lovers and the temerity of the mechanicals can be touched by the natural enchantment personified


by Oberon, Tytania, Puck and the fairies. After the forest darkness of the first two acts, the third act allows us a clearer view of the woodland enchantment. We see first Oberon and


Tytania, then Puck, silhouetted in front of the rising sun as it slowly moves higher on the backdrop before vanishing in the daylight. After the lovers are reunited, and the mechanicals have


boldly presented their play to the Athenian Court, the final entrance of the fairies into the palace at night time appears entirely in keeping with what has gone before, as the natural


world takes over from human agency. This magical production with its subtle lighting was matched by wonderful singing. As Oberon himself, the counter-tenor Tim Mead was a compelling


presence, whose strong purity of voice belied his scheming intentions. Liv Redpath sang angelically as Tytania. The Trinity Boys Choir sang and acted superbly as the fairies, with Oliver


Barlow as an impish and assertive Puck.  The vocal qualities of the performance were sublime, with the lovers, Lysander (Caspar Singh), Hermia (Rachael Wilson), Demetrius (Samuel Dale


Johnson) and Helena (Lauren Fagan) all singing beautifully. The mechanicals formed a terrific crew, with the excellent bass-baritone Brandon Cedel a superbly engaging Bottom whom one could


almost imagine Tytania falling for. In the final act Dingle Yandell’s patrician presence as Theseus was matched by fine singing from him and Rosie Aldridge as his queen Hippolyta. And


throughout this opera with its differing styles of music for fairies, lovers and mechanicals, the Ukrainian conductor Dalia Stasevska exhibited a fine lightness of touch, conjuring up


musical magic. First performed at Glyndebourne in Peter Hall’s superb production some forty years ago, this revival by the original choreographer Lynne Hockney is sheer joy. A MESSAGE FROM


THEARTICLE _We are the only publication that’s committed to covering every angle. We have an important contribution to make, one that’s needed now more than ever, and we need your help to


continue publishing throughout these hard economic times. So please, make a donation._