Mozart, Don Giovanni, English National Opera

3.00

In one respect at least Rufus Norris' new ENO production of Don Giovanni might truthfully be described as electrifying.

They are tinkering with the circuits before a single note has been sounded. "They" are the Don's devilish alter egos; the object of their attention suggests a gigantic crown of thorns. Irreligious? Certainly. Sacrilegious? Perhaps. Sparks will fly, lightening will strike, the Commendatore will be reanimated Frankenstein-like, and the end will surely be shocking - in the most literal sense. But does all this amount to more than an unpredictable power-surge?

The overture suggested we'd experienced an unexpected power-cut. Fuzzy around the edges, poorly articulated, lacking incisiveness and drive, Kirill Karabits' conducting was at once the very antithesis of everything Norris clearly wanted to achieve with the staging - specifically a sense of the opera's reckless drive: a hectic and hallucinatory dark night of the soul played out in an impenetrable black space. Designer Ian MacNeil presents us with ugly and distressed snapshots of urban decay whizzing us from one location to the next with pieces of scenery manhandled by those masked devils in Jesus T-shirts.

All of which effectively highlights the moments of stasis: Robert Murray's tenderly reflective rendition of Don Ottavio's substituted act one aria "Dalla sua pace", translated here as "When she is happy", delivered holding a heart-shaped balloon while myriad couples emerge slow-dancing from the shadows; or Donna Elvira's eleventh hour "Mi tradi" which so clearly becomes an anthem on behalf of abandoned and abused women everywhere. Sarah Redgwick, a late but confidant substitution for the indisposed Rebecca Evans, had the look and the breathiness of Judy Garland here but generally sang with real incisiveness. Katherine Broderick's Donna Anna (with a neat line in Irish dancing) needs to work on keeping the voice focused but there's plenty of it. And Sarah Tynan was a delectable Zerlina.

Most of the jokes arrived courtesy of Jeremy Sams' wilfully wacky translation. Leporello's "catalogue" was now a spreadsheet with Brindley Sherratt much encouraged by the rise, so to speak, in Iain Paterson's shagging statistics. Paterson was a blokish beery Don for whom Cupid's arrows would have nothing on a double-top.

But did this most grubby and urban of stagings generate the requisite electricity? Or was the wiring faulty? A bit of both, I'd say.



Independent Comment
blog comments powered by Disqus
News in pictures
World news in pictures
Arts & Ents blogs

Review of Glee ‘Sweet Dreams’

The episode begins with Finn (Cory Monteith) at college, partying and accidentally participating in ...

Doctor Who ‘The Name of the Doctor’ – Series 7, episode 13

What a wonderful way to end this momentous series in the 50th year of Doctor Who. From the start of ...

Friday Book Design Blog: Blurb special

Let's talk book blurbs, those quotes you get, usually from other writers, that are meant to entice y...

       
Independent
Travel Shop
South Africa
15 nights from only £1,899pp Find out more
Paris and the Cote d’Azur city break
Seven nights from £579pp Find out more
Seville, Granada and Malaga break
Seven nights from £549pp Find out more

ES Rentals

    'There is a battle going on inside us that is never discussed'

    Masculinity in crisis?

    'There is a battle going on inside us that is never discussed'
    Have US shock jocks gone too far?

    Have US shock jocks gone too far?

    An incendiary remark from Rush Limbaugh may be the beginning of the end for outspoken right-wing US broadcasters
    The ‘Beverly Hills’ of Surrey pays more income tax than big cities of the North

    The ‘Beverly Hills’ of Surrey

    Elmbridge pays more income tax than big cities of the North
    Heavenly Bodies

    Heavenly Bodies

    Michael Landy's artistic marriage made in heaven... and hell
    'He will always be a friend': Jackie Stewart backs Polanski

    'He will always be a friend'

    Jackie Stewart backs Roman Polanski
    The price of pacifism: Refusing to go to war is finally being recognised as a brave act

    The price of pacifism

    From the Second World War refusenik to the 19-year-old Israeli, Holly Williams talks to five people who risked shame and suffering to take a stand as conscientious objector.
    'It was mass hysteria': Jason Isaacs on groupies, theatre bores and snogging James Bond

    Jason Isaacs: Groupies, theatre bores and James Bond

    To millions, Jason Isaacs is one of Harry Potter's arch enemies – but his wife prefers him as a Scottish TV detective.
    Notes from a small island: Is Sealand an independent 'micronation' or an illegal fortress?

    Sealand: 'Micronation' or illegal fortress?

    Thomas Hodgkinson spent a week at the tiny platform off the Suffolk coast to find out.
    Not a bad bone: Mark Hix cooks with cutlets and ribs

    Mark Hix cooks with cutlets and ribs

    If you ignore cutlets and ribs, you'll risk missing out on some delicious and easy meals, says our chef.
    The experts' guide to summer: From getting fit for the beach to recreating that Olympic buzz

    The experts' guide to summer

    From getting fit for the beach to recreating that Olympic buzz
    Sex, drugs and fast cars: The legend of James Hunt has set Hollywood hearts racing

    Legend of James Hunt has set Hollywood hearts racing

    Early glimpses of Ron Howard's film Rush suggest it will portray Hunt as a high-living lothario, with an insatiable appetite for partying.
    Macklemore: 'I don't have moderation when using drugs and alcohol. It was hurting my life'

    Macklemore: 'I don't have moderation'

    The next Vanilla Ice or the next Eminem? Macklemore doesn't have a record contract – but he does have the UK's biggest-selling single of the year.
    Don't be shy: Bill Granger's Sri Lankan recipes

    Don't be shy: Bill Granger's Sri Lankan recipes

    Sri Lankan cuisine is light, sunny, wonderfully spiced – and so easy to cook from scratch. Just as soon as you've broken into the coconut, that is.
    Sir James Dyson’s latest project: Cleaning up hospitals

    Sir James Dyson’s latest project: Cleaning up hospitals

    Doctors are hailing the revamp of a Bath neonatal unit, where babies sleep more and feed better, as the model for patient care
    One man returns to Argentina's town that drowned

    One man returns to Argentina's town that drowned

    Epecuen was submerged under 10 metres of water in 1985. Now the floods have gone – and 83-year-old Pablo Novak has moved back in