Don-giovanni-la-opera-2012* Notes *
 
Peter Stein’s production of Don Giovanni (Act II pictured left with Soile Isokoski as Donna Elvira, David Bizic as Leporello, Roxana Constantinescu as Zerlina, Joshua Bloom as Masetto, Julianna Di Giacomo as Donna Anna, and Andrej Dunaev as Don Ottavio; photograph by Robert Millard) for Lyric Opera opened at Los Angeles Opera yesterday. The direction, from Gregory A. Fortner, is sensible, but entertaining. The entrances and exits of various characters on stage are clearly motivated. Relying heavily on drawn curtains to change scenes, Ferdinand Wögerbauer’s set is stark and serviceable. Moidele Bickel’s costumes share this neat simplicity.

James Conlon had the orchestra zipping along, often ahead of the singers. The brass sounded exposed at one point in the overture, but was otherwise satisfactory. The chorus members made for cheerful peasants in Act I, and sang heartily in Act II.

The cast has many charming singers. Joshua Bloom is convincing as Masetto, oafish and silly, but with a pretty voice. Roxana Constantinescu is a lusty, vivid Zerlina, yet sang “Batti, batti” with tender appeal. Soile Isokoski has a mellifluous voice, but could sound perfectly hysterical as Don Elvira, as the role requires. Ievgen Orlov could have sung The Commendatore with more authority, as his voice seems fairly strong. Andrej Dunaev impressed as Don Ottavio, singing both his arias with good volume. Julianna Di Giacomo (Donna Anna) sounded bright but silvery. In fact, all the female voices were very distinct from one another.

David Bizic’s Leporello was more charismatic than Ildebrando D’Arcangelo’s Don Giovanni. Bizic and D’Arcangelo sounded somewhat similar, perhaps because the latter is a bass-baritone. D’Arcangelo lacked appeal in “Là ci darem la mano,” and sang “Fin ch’han dal vino” without verve. He was extremely funny in Act II whilst pretending to be Leporello, and he did sing “Deh, vieni alla finestra” with beauty and sweetness.

* Tattling * 
There was a tiresome amount of talking, singing, and snoring in the Grand Circle. The couple in Row P Seats 30 and 31 spoke to each other without regard to music or singing.

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7 responses to “LA Opera’s Don Giovanni”

  1. The Grammarian Avatar
    The Grammarian

    Could have sung, not could have sang.
    Grammar, please.

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  2. Mr Guizot Avatar
    Mr Guizot

    Last night even the Serenade (“Deh vieni alla finestra”) wasn’t that compelling. Rather slow and wooden, so slow he had to take breaths in the middle of short phrases. Certainly not the melting vocal gold that Siepi and many lesser singers can produce. Tempos and recitative delivery at the beginning of Act II lagged badly, imho.
    Things improved later in the Act with the Ottavio and the Anna especially impressive. Soile, one of my favorite sopranos, seemed a little below par in Mi Tradi but was otherwise impressive.

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  3. Mr Guizot Avatar
    Mr Guizot

    Also, you are spot on–the Leporello in some ways (vocally at least) bested his master.

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  4. rosy Avatar
    rosy

    I can`T believe it. Nobody seems to have noticed that Mr. d’Arcangelo did NOT sing!
    Does anyone know who the substitute was?

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  5. Mr Guizot Avatar
    Mr Guizot

    That would explain a lot–I merely record what I hear from the Wed Oct 3 radio broadcast on KUSC. It could have been a sub Don G, but the intermission commentary didn’t mention it…however I was driving part of the time.

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  6. Christian Avatar
    Christian

    I agree totally with your opinion. I’m wondering what all the hubbub about this production and D’Arcangelo is all about? I found the performance boring, always the same boring tone no color.

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  7. Christian Avatar
    Christian

    D’Arcangelo was singing. What are you talking about? I was there.

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