Rigoletto, Royal Opera House, review: Every note is convincing
Aleksandra Kurzak’s debut as Gilda is sensational
The orgy with which David McVicar opens his production of Rigoletto – now on its seventh outing – was always that show’s one big fault: the scene should be about droit de seigneur, not a comically-heaving Soho sex-party.
But in every other respect this strongly-cast revival, conducted with eloquent expressiveness by Maurizio Benini, is superb.
Aleksandra Kurzak’s debut as Gilda is sensational: hitherto we’ve known this Polish soprano as a consummate comedienne, but this is a revelation.
Every gesture and every note is convincing, and there’s no vanity in her coloratura, just the most delicate beauty; her ecstatic reverie ‘Caro nome’ has a breath-taking perfection.
Saimir Pirgu’s Duke exudes manly charisma, and Sebastian Holecek’s Monterone and Brindley Sherratt’s Sparafucile are both powerfully delineated; as Rigoletto, Simon Keenlyside is not completely easy with his character’s physicality, but he sings with great warmth and authority.
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