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              SEEN 
              AND HEARD OPERA REVIEW
               
              
              Tchaikovsky, Eugene Onegin: 
              
              Soloists, Orchestra and Chorus of the Royal Opera House. 
              Conductor: Jiří Bělohlávek. Royal Opera House, Covent Garden 
              10.3.2008 (MB) 
               
              This was a splendid night in the theatre. The late Steven 
              Pimlott’s production – its revival dedicated to his memory – is 
              set firmly in nineteenth-century Russia, so may be considered 
              ‘traditional’ in that sense, albeit without scenery that is 
              opulent for its own, rather than the drama’s, sake. However, this 
              does not preclude thought-provoking dramatic engagement. Each of 
              the principal characters is allowed to develop rather than being 
              shoehorned into an irrelevant concept. Tatyana’s progress, if 
              progress it be, from country girl to Princess Gremin is splendidly 
              handled, as are Lensky’s descent into mental instability and 
              Onegin’s more complex path. Yet the lack of irrelevant concept 
              does not betoken a lack of concept tout court. Key to the 
              entire production is the reintroduction of Tatyana’s dream, 
              present in Pushkin but excised – at least in explicit terms – from 
              the opera. By portraying this, replete with fantastical 
              animal-guests, on stage, during the entr’acte to the second act, 
              we gain a real sense of the realist/anti-realist dichotomy 
              pervading the opera. How much of the following ballroom scene, 
              into which the dream so unnervingly yet convincingly merges, is 
              ‘real’ and how much Tatyana’s – or even our – projection? 
              Tchaikovsky’s score has of course been doing this all along, with 
              its web of foreshadowing and reminiscence, formed from the 
              dramatic kernel of Tatyana’s Letter Scene. Psychoanalysis beckons, 
              as was made clear in a programme note by the late Malcolm Bowie. 
               
              That said, there was a structural sense of everything radiating 
              from the undeniable ecstasy of the Letter Scene, in which the 
              orchestra sounded at its unforced best. Hibla Gerzmava, a couple 
              of short-breathed phrases notwithstanding, shone here as Tatyana. 
              She was superior in every way to her predecessor, Amanda Roocroft, 
              whose flawed vocalism in particular had proved a fly in the 
              ointment during the production’s first run. Gerzmava, by contrast, 
              sounded just ‘right’: secure and focused, yet passionate where 
              required. Much the same could be said of Ekaterina Semenchuk’s 
              fine Olga, who really came into her own during the ballroom scene. 
              If only the character did not disappear so abruptly from the 
              action. Diana Montague and Elizabeth Sikora both impressed as 
              Madame Larina and the old nurse respectively. Hans-Peter König 
              delivered a marvellously secure account– in terms of both music 
              and character – of Gremin’s aria. Choral and dance contributions 
              were all of an appropriately high standard too. 
               
              And then there was Gerald Finley’s Onegin. His was a wonderful 
              portrayal, encompassing gracelessness and gracefulness, withdrawal 
              and sexual charisma, loyalty and betrayal. If Finley lacked the 
              Slavic quality of Dmitri Hvorostovsky, his predecessor at Covent 
              Garden, then Tchaikovsky is too big to be confined to national 
              boundaries. Musically I do not think he could have been faulted, 
              but the identification was such between musical and dramatic 
              means, that the question only presented itself to me in 
              retrospect. Score and performance gave the lie to a claim made in 
              a programme note by Mark Fitzgerald, that that wonderful moment at 
              which Onegin, now realising his complex predicament, reprises 
              Tatyana’s music from the Letter Scene, suggests ‘a shallowness of 
              character and a person unworthy of the attentions of the exalted 
              Tatyana’. Where Fitzgerald discerned shallowness in the altered 
              orchestration, Finley and 
              
              Tatyana – Hibla Gerzmava
              Olga – Ekaterina Semenchuk
              Madame Larina – Diana Montague
              Filipievna – Elizabeth Sikora
              A Peasant Singer – Elliot Goldie
              Lensky – Piotr Beczala
              Eugene Onegin – Gerald Finley
              M. Triquet – Robin Leggate
              Trifon Petrovich – Jonathan Fisher 
              Zaretsky – Vuyani Mlinde
              Guillot – Richard Campbell
              Prince Gremin – Hans-Peter König
              
              Steven Pimlott (producer
              Elaine Kidd (revival director)
              Anthony McDonald (designs)
              Peter Mumford (lighting)
              Linda Dobell (choreography)
              Orchestra and Chorus of the Royal Opera House
              Renato Balsadonna (chorus master)
              Jiří Bělohlávek (conductor)
              
              
              
              The subtlety of musical reference was well served by Jiří 
              Bělohlávek’s conducting, attentive to the implications of memory 
              without feeling the need to hammer this home. Occasionally I 
              missed a greater sense of urgency and a little neurosis – this 
              is Tchaikovsky – would not have gone amiss, but Bělohlávek’s 
              relative understatement had its own compensations. After a 
              slightly shaky start, the orchestra was excellent, although I 
              could not help but wish that it had been given its head a little 
              more often. Allowing the singers to be clearly heard, as they 
              always could be, is fine in itself, but the orchestral score is no 
              mere accompaniment, especially given its crucial role here in 
              Freudian Traumdeutung. Bělohlávek’s conducting was of 
              course too subtle to sound simply as accompaniment, but ecstasy 
              and anger need to be heard too.
              
              
              
              However, despite the lamentations of more than a few critics, this 
              opera is Eugene Onegin, not Tatyana Larina. Another 
              fine aspect of the production was its recognition that, viewed as 
              a whole rather than simply from the perspective of the first act, 
              Onegin is at least as important as Tatyana and becomes more so. As 
              crucial as their relationship,  is that between Onegin and 
              Lensky. Tchaikovsky may identify most closely with Tatyana, but 
              his homosexuality pervades the work in another more subtle way,  
              than simply as a projection of his own character and experience 
              onto hers, important though this remains. The romantic friendship, 
              jealousy, and the tragedy of societal convention are a far more 
              complex affair than a dour, literalist reading of the text would 
              suggest. There is, moreover, no contradiction between this and the 
              centrality of Tatyana’s dream-projection, quite the opposite. Both 
              production and score hint rather than render explicit, which seems 
              quite appropriate, given the experience of the nineteenth century. 
              (This is not to say that a more overt approach would not work, but 
              it is not the only way. However, to ignore the issue seems to me 
              at best unimaginative and at worst repressive.) I assume that this 
              was the undertow of the suggestive scenic backdrop at the opening: 
              Hippolyte Flandrin’s study in male beauty, Jeune 
              
              
              
              
              Mark Berry
              
              Pictures © Clive Barda
              
                                                                                                    
                                    
			
	
	
              
              
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