Secrets, deception and love: a wonderful double bill from opera holland park. | thearticle

Secrets, deception and love: a wonderful double bill from opera holland park. | thearticle


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This marvellous double bill of _Il Segreto di Susanna_, and _Iolanta_ at Opera Holland Park combines a delightful romp about a young woman whose husband doesn’t realise she smokes, and


Tchaikovsky’s far deeper drama about a girl who doesn’t realise she is blind. Beautiful productions for both, the first in a staging by John Wilkie with gloriously colourful designs by


takis, superbly lit by Mark Jonathan. As the young couple in the first opera, Richard Burkhardt made an impassioned husband (albeit keen that his wife confess about her secret lover) and


Clare Presland a spirited Susanna, exhibiting a melodious passion for the subtle caresses of her (Turkish) cigarettes. In the non-vocal role of her confidant the butler, John Savournin’s


witty acting was fully attuned to the nuances of Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari’s score, given a very lively performance by the City of London Sinfonia under the excellent baton of John Andrews. It


made a charmingly vivacious prelude to the contrasting tempo and gentleness of Tchaikovsky’s final opera _Iolanta_, written at the same time he composed _Nutcracker_. The latter is usually


thought to be far more appealing, even musically superior, but the composer himself regarded _Iolanta_ far more highly, and this simple production by Olivia Fuchs, also with designs by takis


and cleverly lit by Mark Jonathan, gave it far more power than I have previously seen in a concert performance. The grey dresses of the ladies-in-waiting helped convey to us her sense that


something is missing, and the visual obscurity of her bedroom added to the illusion that her nurse and ladies can see what she cannot. The king who has confined her in this benevolent state


of ignorance was strongly sung by Mikhail Svetlov, if a little weak on the lower register, and Ashley Riches gave a superb portrayal of the doctor he brings in to see if she can be cured.


Wonderful singing from the chorus, and strong portrayals of the gatekeeper by Barnaby Rea, and the Duke of Burgundy by Grant Doyle. His friend Count Vaudémont, who falls in love with and


awakens the blind princess, was superbly sung by David Butt Philip, and Iolanta herself was sung and portrayed most beautifully by Natalya Romaniw, who gave her a gripping power as she


responds to Vaudémont’s revelations about a world she knows nothing of. Their awakening duet was outstanding, complemented by the marvellous of conducting Sian Edwards that fully conveyed


the emotional pull of Tchaikovsky’s music. The child’s view of the world in _Nutcracker_ is superficial by comparison. This opera embodies it far more deeply, beautifully expressing the


blindness as a metaphor for the child kept ignorant of anything but the limited experiences allowed by her parents. Unmissable — see the link for the few tickets that still remain.