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Success Is Found In Norma's Simplicity

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  • Success Is Found In Norma's Simplicity

    SUCCESS IS FOUND IN NORMA'S SIMPLICITY
    By Alan Conter

    The Globe and Mail, Canada
    Sept 20 2005

    Vincenzo Bellini: Norma
    L'Opera de Montreal
    Bernard Labadie, conductor
    At Place des Arts in Montreal

    L'Opera de Montreal set the bar awfully high in launching its
    26th season with Vincenzo Bellini's Norma. While Bellini's 1831
    masterpiece sits pretty solidly in the pantheon of great opera, only
    a few productions really live up to the extraordinary demands of the
    work. The company last staged it 23 years ago.

    The challenge of Norma is not that it's especially intricate; in fact,
    it's the reverse. Bellini took a bold step in composing a score where
    the singers are left very much on their own, supported by a small
    orchestra that plays beautiful yet relatively simple melodies.

    Norma succeeds or fails on the range and colour of the voices.

    Bellini asks a lot of his singers as musicians and actors. Felice
    Romani's libretto is intensely tragic where love, passion, duty and
    deception are interwoven.

    On Saturday night, l'Opera de Montreal pulled it off. Anyone who's
    ever seen a production of Norma in a post-Maria Callas world knows
    that the audience is on pins and needles until the Druid High
    Priestess finishes Casta Diva early in Act One. Will she bring the
    right simmering intensity and have the power to climb the heights of
    this aria with ease? If she can do it, you know the evening will be
    all right. If she can't, well, that's a tragedy of another order.

    As the final chords of Norma's invocation dissipated in Salle Wilfred
    Pelletier at Montreal's Place des Arts, the audience roared its
    approval of Hasmik Papian as Norma.

    Papian, an Armenian soprano, is not new to the role. In fact, she has
    spent a good part of the last 10 years making it her own throughout
    Europe and now, increasingly, on this side of the Atlantic.

    Her interpretation of the powerful and tormented spiritual leader
    of the oppressed Gauls is full on. She has bold and richly textured
    voice, and can act. Act Two can unravel into a series of ill-considered
    melodramas with a less capable lead. Norma's internal struggle over
    whether to spare her children infamy and enslavement by murdering
    them or sparing their lives and committing them to an uncertain fate
    was entirely believable.

    American mezzo-soprano Kate Aldrich was a fine Adalgisa, the younger
    priestess who is seduced by the Roman pro-consul Pollione then
    discovers he is the father of Norma's children. She and Papian sang
    wonderfully together.

    Another American, Antonio Nagore, was Pollione, the Roman with
    severe commitment problems. He is clearly a talented actor with a
    solid and broad vocal range. However, on Saturday night, he seemed
    to be suffering a bit; a slight hoarseness crept insidiously into
    his singing from time to time.

    The Polish bass Daniel Borowoski was an imposing Oroveso, the high
    priest who ultimately must sacrifice his daughter and her foreign
    lover.

    Two up-and-coming Canadian singers rounded out the cast. They're both
    members of the company's Atelier lyrique. Thomas Macleay, who has been
    building a career singing early and contemporary music in Europe,
    the United States and at home, is now showing up more frequently on
    the opera stage. His Flavio, a friend to Pollione, was clean and crisp.

    Beverly McArthur's Clothilde, servant to Norma, fit well with the
    remarkable singing of the star sopranos.

    As you may have read in yesterday's Globe and Mail, l'Opera de Montreal
    cancelled an upcoming production, Igor Stravinsky's Oedipus Rex,
    because the company is experiencing a financial shortfall. It would
    be have been a largely homegrown production.

    Norma, on the other hand, is largely an import.

    The beautiful costumes and sets were by John Conklin for the
    Metropolitan Opera in New York. American Steve Pickover worked with
    British director John Copley on the stage direction, also for the
    Met. Montrealer Luc Prairie lit all of it stunningly. The music
    direction was the work of Bernard Labadie.

    The orchestra and chorus were also local -- the Orchestre metropolitain
    will be in the pit for the entire season, given the labour dispute
    at l'Orchestre symphonique de Montreal.

    Certainly the audience on Saturday night loved the show, and the next
    opera, Emmanuel Chabrier's L'Etoile, will be largely homegrown.
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