Opera, For the Fun of it

Whether you are an opera fan who couldn’t get a ticket for the original HD broadcast on Nov. 13 or a curious newcomer to opera’s strange world of orchestra, voice and often ridiculous stories, the Mahaiwe Theater’s encore performance of “Don Pasquale†offers a splendid opportunity to see this delightful work.

   Lighthearted and tuneful, “Pasquale†is Gaetano Donizetti’s comic masterpiece. And in octogenarian Otto Schenk’s four-year-old production — revived and overseen by the director himself — the show oozes charm, invention and surprise.

   And musically, the performance is about as good as it gets in any opera house in the world.

   The story is simple: Don Pasquale, a 70-year-old bachelor, decides to marry in order to disinherit his nephew, Ernesto. His physician, Dr. Malatesta — Ernesto’s best friend — suggests his sister, Sofronia, a nun, as bride. When Pasquale accepts, the game is on: Sofronia is really Norina, whom Pasquale has forbidden Ernesto to marry. Once a fake marriage contract is signed, the compliant Sofronia turns into a shrewish harridan who spends Pasquale’s money with abandon, orders him around and decrees that “husbands are to be seen, not heard.â€

   Poor Pasquale soon wants to be rid of his wife and agrees to Ernesto’s marriage to Norina in order to ditch Sofronia — at Malatesta’s suggestion, of course. All ends happily.

   Anna Netrebko, beautiful to look at and velvet-voiced, delivers a joyful, tour de force performance gorgeously sung. She is all seduction and charm as Norina, demure as the veiled Sofronia, white hot as the wife become vixen. Her singing is fluid, effortless, and she throws off runs and trills with ease. There is electricity between Netrebko and the Malatesta, the dashing baritone Mariusz Kwiecien, her good friend in real life, who is unusually young for this role.

   The American tenor, Matthew Polenzani, sings brightly and beautifully with amazingly controlled  crescendos and diminuendos.  His serenade in Act III is lyrically hypnotic. And the bass-baritone John Del Carlo, who has sung Pasquale all over the world, is singular: arthritic, lecherous, victimized, finally resigned — and all in a firm voice especially notable for its flexibility. His great patter duet with Malatesta in Act III is a thing of wonder. Such wonder in fact that the Met and Maestro James Levine allow the pair to encore the last part of the duet in front of a lowered scrim. Magical.

   Of course Levine is a genius and his orchestra and chorus surely the best in the opera world. His conducting of the overture alone is worth the price of a ticket. But everything works on this Saturday afternoon of perfect intonation, fervent singing, delightful on-stage business and a cast inviting the audience to share their good time. If I can, I’ll go to see it again.

     “Don Pasquale†will be given an encore broadcast at the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center in Great Barrington on Sunday, Nov. 21, at 1 p.m. For tickets call 413-528-0100 or go to www.Mahawie.org.

     

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