Barber-of-seville-laopera * Notes * 
Last Sunday Il Barbiere di Siviglia opened in a matinée performance at Los Angeles Opera. The orchestra sounded unfocused under Michele Mariotti, often not with the singers. As Fiorello, José Adán Pérez sounded fine, as did Kerri Marcinko (Berta). Andrea Silvestrelli was an amusing Don Basilio, his throaty, resonant tones were spot on. Bruno Praticò looked and acted convincingly as Doctor Bartolo, but could not always be heard over the orchestra. both lacking heft and fullness.

Nathan Gunn (Figaro) moved so well, and he really has the physicality to pull off the humorous choreography in this production. His voice seemed just a little thin, especially for a baritone. Juan Diego Flórez was perfectly sweet as the Count, never straining. He started off slightly quiet, but seemed to warm up as the afternoon progressed. On the contrary, Joyce DiDonato (Rosina) was wonderful from the beginning. Full of sass, she sang with a gorgeous ease and good volume, but not overwhelming anyone else.

Emilio Sagi's production, directed by Javier Ulacia, was certainly informed by The Wizard of Oz, starting off monochrome and ending in lurid colors. The scenic design, from Llorenç Corbella, was perhaps overly precious. It was all terribly cute, especially Doctor Bartolo's tiny dog.

* Tattling * 
Everyone on the left side of Handrail Obstructed Balcony B was quiet, no talking, hardly any whispering. Unfortunately there was talking from the center, and of course, cellular phones rang during Act II, some more than once, even though we had all been reminded to turn off our electronic devices.

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6 responses to “The Barber of Seville at LA Opera”

  1. y2k Avatar
    y2k

    Thanks for the review. What’s up with the LA audience and their cellphones?!
    I love this production – which was first shown at Teatro Real in Madrid – and on DVD Decca’s label. I think it’s perhaps even more entertaining than Bartlett Sher’s production at the Met!

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  2. Sarah Avatar
    Sarah

    Joyce Didonato is Rosina incarnate. I saw her in Wichita – she did two performances last April there – and she made it a team effort, not overwhelming anyone else. What a generous performer.

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  3. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    The production is very adorable.

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  4. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    She was absolutely wonderful, indeed.

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  5. y2k Avatar
    y2k

    I’m back home after my trip to LA and saw this past Sunday (Dec 6th) performance. The production is even better than the DVD – more comic moments inserted and just “better polished”. I enjoyed everyone’s singing, except for Andrea Silvestrelli’s Don Basilio. His voice is too booming for me, quite a mismatch for the rest of the cast. He also looked too unkempt like a mad scientist, rather than a cleric/music teacher.
    Anyway, just hearing JDF’s Cessa di piu resistere alone was worth the admission. He does it so effortlessly that you forget how difficult that aria actually is.

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  6. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    It is a remarkable cast, and I am glad it continues to be great.

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