Photo * Notes *
Natalie Dessay had her long awaited debut at San Francisco Opera last night in the opening of Lucia di Lammermoor. Her voice has a marvelous incandescent quality, but also has a hard edge that borders on vulgar. Her movements are light and her acting is strong. She was completely convincing in her mad scene, and the use of
glass harmonica rather than flute here certainly was effective.

Tenor Giuseppe Filianoti's debut was less impressive, though at least he looked fine paired with Dessay, as she is rather petite. His portrayal of Edgardo started off fairly well, his voice bright and reedy, though with a certain whining quality. The famous Act II sextet was his strongest moment, sounding particularly good with Gabriele Viviani (Enrico). However, he was nearly shrieking in Act III, "Fra poco a me ricovero" was not good. Viviani made for a threatening villain, his voice is not especially beautiful but is serviceable enough. Though his diction was precise, his intonation was not, which was clear in the duet "Se tradirmi tu potrai." Oren Gradus faired better as Raimondo, his light but warm tones were lovely.

As for the smaller roles, Cybele-Teresa Gouverneur (Alisa) did not distinguish herself. Her little shaky voice was hysterical at first, and inaudible in the sextet. Matthew O'Neill (Normanno) sounded fine, though he was a hair off from the orchestra at one point. Andrew Bidlack was a restrained and suitably stiff Arturo, and sang well in the sextet.

The chorus was excellent, though they were a bit fast near the end, or else the orchestra was somewhat slow. They were not, in any case, exactly together. The orchestra did sound crisp and in tune under debuting conductor Jean-Yves Ossonce.

Other production teams could really learn a thing or two from director Graham Vick and designer Paul Brown. The set was gloriously quiet, and only made one cracking noise between the second and third scenes of the last act, and this was when there was no music to interrupt. Despite the silence of the set, the visual impact was utterly stunning. The gloomy elegance of the moving walls, the storm scene, and Lucia's entrance in the mad scene using a platform covered with heather (Calluna vulgaris) painted red were all gorgeous. Some of the effects with shadows were too much like caricature, they reminded me a bit of Kara Walker's work sans the incisive political commentary.

* Tattling *
The War Memorial looked quite full, and no rush tickets were available. Standing room was crowded, and is bound to become even more so. I'm sure this is the production that brings in so many people that there will be fainting in standing room, hopefully it will distract them so I can hear Ariodante in peace.

I only heard one mobile phone ring, and it sounded like it was coming from outside the hall, in the lobby. There were no watch alarms heard in the orchestra, and I didn't notice anyone talking.

Dr. Marcia Green's amusing pre-opera talk focused on the music of Lucia in film, of course bringing up The Fifth Element and the blue alien diva.

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11 responses to “Dessay’s Debut at SF Opera”

  1. Sarah Avatar
    Sarah

    I see from your info on how standing room works that there are 200 tickets per performance. Wow – that’s a lot to fit into the balcony and the orchestra entrance. I noticed the orchestra standees last year – they looked pretty tired. The lucky ones could lean on the “counter” during the performance. You’d have to really want to see the show . . . I think I am getting too old for that!

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  2. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    Usually standing room isn’t terribly full, so you can generally get a spot on the railing and it’s a lot easier to do if you can be supported. Sometimes I just sit on the back bench in the balcony and read the score. The oldest standee at SF Opera (I know of) is 80!

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  3. Doug Gary Avatar
    Doug Gary

    So the season is a wrap. Any tattler-worthy scoop on what the 2010-11 season is likely to include? I’m hoping the ENO Bostridge Death in Venice makes it here along with the Met’s Nixon in China. Thanks!

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  4. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    Sounds like the whole Ring Cycle will be presented in 2010-2011. Gockley has mentioned Nixon in China, so that’s a possibility. Also perhaps Rusalka, that’s one he’s mentioned more than once. Since they are planning Peter Grimes for 2009-2010, I sort of doubt they will put on Death in Venice soon, especially since we had that opera relatively recently.

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  5. Doug Gary Avatar
    Doug Gary

    Thanks. The Peter Grimes is news to me. You tattle so well!

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  6. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    Glad to help! Here’s some earlier 2009-2010 Season tattling:
    http://operatattler.typepad.com/opera/2008/01/la-fanciulla-de.html

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  7. cedichou Avatar

    It’s funny, what you did not like in Edgardo, I kinda appreciated. The whining quality totally suits this character: he’s weak, he’d rather kill himself than his enemy, he never carry through his vow of vengeance. You don’t want bluster here. And the frayed voice in the last Act was not particularly pretty to hear, but was appropriate with the kind of emotional behavior he exhibits at the time.
    Same with Dessay, to some extent. For some of the high notes, she would concentrate into producing the note (with the face strained to reach the right pitch), which in general would annoy me (it should appear effortless!) but here was nice (she’s crazy and would not care how contorted her face looks).

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  8. bean Avatar
    bean

    That’s all very good… but where is the rembrandt?

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  9. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    Cedichou: I did like Filianoti in the first half, you are right, that whining quality does suit his character. The frayed voice just didn’t seem very bel canto to me, but of course, I’m not a big fan of that form, so I also don’t know much about it.
    Bean: I know, such a dearth of Rembrandt. It’s really intolerable.

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  10. Olivia Avatar

    I like the idea of substituting the glass harmonica. I bet it worked well. It has a very unsettling sound. I am not the biggest Dessay fan as her voice always sounds a bit hard to me. But, I can see how others would think that suits her keyed up character here.

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  11. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    The glass harmonica was so eerie, it was great. Dessay was incredible in the mad scene. I think I have to hear her a few more times to really figure out what is going on, especially since I don’t know the music well. But she struck me as the most interesting of the 4 most famous sopranos right now.

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