Carmen_2* Notes *
A new co-production with the Norwegian Opera of Carmen opened at the Royal Opera House opened last month and runs until February 3, 2007. All the performances are sold out, but 67 tickets are held to be sold the day of the performance as day seats. Last Thursday I tried this, getting to the entrance situated under the covered arcade in the corner of Covent Garden Piazza at 7:15 in the morning. The queue was already 20 people long, but getting tickets wasn’t a problem, we got bench seats in the Stalls Circle. The ticket seller seemed surprised and said it wasn’t always so crowded.

The production, directed by Francesca Zambello, was not perfectly congruous. The costumes were traditional, but the set was just a few large walls placed at different angles for each act. There were props such as an orange tree and a statue of the Virgin Mary that were in keeping with the costumes but not the set. Also featured were an abundance of live animals, including a donkey, a horse, and chickens. Another crowd-pleaser was Arthur Pita’s choreography in the form of acrobatics and dancing.

None of the singing was particularly good. Anna Caterina Antonacci had her Royal Opera House debut with the title role, which she is sharing with Marina Domashenko. Antonacci is a strong actress, she was sultry and a bit mean, perfect for the role. Her voice is nice within a certain range, but has some unpleasant qualities outside of that. She gasped a few times and was occasionally flat. I appreciated that this production had the castanets played by a percussionist in the pit, but it would have been nice if they had Carmen at least mime the playing instead of having her alternately stamp the rhythm in her feet or bang together mugs in her hands. Jonas Kaufmann was strained as Don José, his voice is small and slightly nasal. He was quite underpowered compared to Marco Berti, with whom he is sharing this role. Ildebrando D’Arcangelo looked uncomfortable as Escamillo, quite stiff. His voice sounds constrained somewhere in his throat, it has a husk-like feel. He sang half of "Toreador en Garde" on horseback, which was silly but the audience enjoyed it. Norah Amsellem was an insipid Micaëla, she was shrill, out of tune, had too much vibrato, and was even off from the music a few times.

* Tattling *
People talked during the overture, but were fairly quiet the rest of the time. There was some cellophane being unwrapped during Act I, which was hushed quite vigorously, and not by me for once.

Antonacci flashed her undergarments several times during the course of the opera, impressive given that her skirts were all ankle length.

The performance was only 3 hours and 10 minutes long with one intermission, even though they did the longer spoken dialogue version of the opera. They cut "A deux cuartos" from the beginning of Act IV, so that may have contributed to the brevity of the performance.

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8 responses to “Carmen at ROH”

  1. strangebean Avatar
    strangebean

    her panties were white.

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  2. Charlise Tiee Avatar

    How could I have forgotten to mention that! Thank you, will rectify my review.

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  3. Dodaro Avatar
    Dodaro

    At least Atonacci’s Carmen wasn’t sunny and wholesome.

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  4. Charlise Tiee Avatar

    This much is quite true.

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  5. Beans Avatar
    Beans

    You must have beans in your ears, describing Jonas Kaufmann’s voice like this. Read the reviews which he got and is still getting for the upcoming DVD and the showings in cinemas. If there was anything worth on this Carmen it’s Jonas Kaufmann.

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  6. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    I was jetlagged and I had heard 5 performances of Carmen within that month with Marco Berti (who is very loud), so that probably has something to do with my impression of Mr. Kaufmann. I wish I had beans in my ears, because Antonacci was flat and Amsellem was wildly out of tune. Really, in that sense Kaufmann was impressive in that he was actually singing the correct notes. I definitely had a hard time hearing him, but it is possible I was not in the best location for that theatre.
    Recordings are not the same as live performance, so I don’t doubt that the DVD is very good, they choose the best performance, or can even put a montage of the best arias from each singer together. :/

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  7. Beans Avatar
    Beans

    You must have had a really bad seat. I have several friends who did in-houses from high in the ampitheatre from performances with the A cast and there was no problem to hear him. I myself saw the first night and the second performance and it was a huge success for Jonas Kaufmann.
    I didn’t write about the other singers.
    Marco Berti was in the B cast later in January and the Telegraph wrote:
    Anna Caterina Antonacci’s Carmen and Jonas Kaufmann’s José had lit up the first run of performances. Viktoria Vizin and Marco Berti can’t match them: Vizin sings firmly and cleanly, but has no sexual mystique or personal charisma, while Berti is a loud, lumpen tenor of the second rank and an unprepossessing actor to boot.
    The DVD (and telecast) shall be only from one performance, January 6, 2007 if I remember right. But there was also a broadcast of the performance on December 19 2006.

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  8. Beans Avatar
    Beans

    Some remarks from critics on JK ans ACA:
    “Kaufmann is the finest José to be heard for ages.”
    “a tenor to die for”
    “… Jonas Kaufmann, who gives as complete a performance as Don José as one could ever expect to hear….”
    “It’s almost impossible to describe the virtues of his interpretation, for they were so plentiful.”
    “New to the part, Kaufman immediately made a perfect fit.”
    “…his final encounter with Carmen had one on the edge of one’s seat through his dramatic intensity…”
    “…the most involving pair of principal antagonists the Carmen of Anna Caterina Antonacci and the Don José of Jonas Kaufmann that London has seen in living memory…”

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