Sfopera-partenope-acti-2014* Notes * 
Christopher Alden’s delightfully humorous production of Partenope opened at San Francisco Opera last night. The stylish set (Act I pictured left, photograph by Cory Weaver), designed by Andrew Lieberman, was enhanced by Adam Silverman’s lighting. Costume designer Jon Morrell did a wonderful job evoking 1920s Paris and Man Ray. The staging matches the absurdity of the plot rather well, embracing silliness with use of bananas, dancing, and hand shadow puppetry. It was refreshing to see something a little less sedate than the other offerings of the 2014-2015 season so far.

The reduced orchestra of only 39 musicians sounded fresh and vital under Maestro Julian Wachner. The horns had a rough start but in the end managed to sound sublime. The continuo was played beautifully by the conductor and Peter Grunberg on harpsichord, cellist David Kadarauch, and theorbist Michael Leopold.

The most of the singers employed much physicality in their performances. Philippe Sly danced foppishly and sang with warm effortlessness. His outrageous costume in Act III involved a puffy pink flowered gown, red evening gloves, and a Pickelhaube festooned with bananas. Anthony Roth Costanzo was an endearing Armindo who managed to sing his first aria (“Voglio dire al mio tesoro”) while falling down or hanging on to stairs. He also tap danced during “Ma quai note di mesti lamenti” in Act III. The clarity of his voice came through despite all these antics.  Alek Shrader’s tenor sounded robust, and as Emilio he put on a hand puppet show that was amusing and engaging.

* Tattling * 
Our neighbors in Box I introduced themselves and shared a chocolate strawberry with us. There was a confrontation between a man at the back of Box H with a woman who showed up in the middle of Act II. He suggested that she did not have a ticket for Seat 4 and mentioned she had not been there for the first third of the performance.

Posted in , , , , , , ,

10 responses to “SF Opera’s Partenope”

  1. Vajra Avatar

    Sometimes a night at the opera is as evanescent as champagne, the libretto is just a trampoline, and the music brings a smile to your lips. That was Partenope last night: ridiculous if given too much thought, but just what the sommelier ordered.
    Danielle de Niese was a wonderful foil to all the antics on stage. While I thought Daniels, Costanza, and Shrader were the most striking voices, both de Niese and Mack, brought musicality and sexuality to their role. It was totally believable that there were more confusing relationship in this opera than anything in A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Maestro Wachner brought everything together. All in all a delightful evening.

    Like

  2. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    Definitely loved this. Thanks for your comments!

    Like

  3. Axel Feldheim Avatar

    By all accounts, this looks delightful. I’m looking forward to seeing it. You mentioned a harpsichord & a theorbe. Were there other period instruments, or was the orchestra basically modern?

    Like

  4. Ruth Robertson Avatar
    Ruth Robertson

    The night I went, De Niese was not in her vocally best form: Her voice was breathy and she sounded tired. The Chronicle mentioned this as well the next day. The rest of the cast was solid and I loved the new production!

    Like

  5. vladimirsofronit Avatar
    vladimirsofronit

    Too bad danielle can’t sing. If anyone wants a copy of her Christie Handel CD i’d be glad to share I could only listen to it once. I understand that she is not cast for her singing but really?

    Like

  6. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    I believe the horns are period instruments.

    Like

  7. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    Agreed. Her high notes were not pretty.

    Like

  8. dountoothers Avatar
    dountoothers

    Poor you, so happy to jump on the band wagon of the Chronical’s totally biased review. Have you read the other 8 amazing reviews on DdeN? You are just vicious. DdeN has been around for 20 years despite negative folks like you and is still only 35. Let me tell you honey, you can’t survive that long in the opera wold if you cannot sing.

    Like

  9. Evyn Avatar
    Evyn

    i do not think the person was being vicious nor being biased.It was his/her opinion.And Although- Dden has been around for we all know 20 years, and is only 35.That is not new news.
    Oh, sure you can survive in opera if you cannot sing.Gone are the days when that was the only requirement to getting on the Met Stage. Dden is not a bad singer but she is not the greatest compared to people like Fleming-Bartoli and the late great Lorraine Hunt Lieberson. What Dden is good at is being lively and moves well on stage. But the come on now..let’s be honest- Her voice is not the greatest.

    Like

  10. shaun Avatar

Leave a reply to vladimirsofronit Cancel reply