Royal Opera
theartsdesk Q&A: Director Sir Jonathan MillerThursday, 28 November 2019![]() Doctor, writer, sculptor, curator, comedian, presenter and director, Sir Jonathan Miller (1934-2019) was one of the mighty cultural and intellectual omnivores of our age. To those of a musical or theatrical bent, however, Miller was above all one of... Read more... |
Death in Venice, Royal Opera review – expansive but intimate evocationsWednesday, 27 November 2019![]() Death in Venice is usually a dark and claustrophobic affair. It lends itself to small-scale staging with minimal props and suggestive, low-key lighting. But for this new production at the Royal Opera, director David McVicar has taken a different... Read more... |
Don Pasquale, Royal Opera review - fun and frolics in stylish new productionSaturday, 19 October 2019![]() Venetian director Damiano Michieletto’s new Royal Opera production of Donizetti’s Don Pasquale is a clever and entertaining mix of old and new. The curtain rises to reveal a skeleton of a 1960s style house - there are doors, but no walls, revealing... Read more... |
The Intelligence Park, Linbury Theatre review - baroque to the point of obscurityThursday, 26 September 2019![]() Could Gerald Barry's first opera really be as enervating in the Royal Opera House's Linbury Theatre as it seemed nearly 30 years ago at its Almeida Music Festival premiere? Since then we've become accustomed to wonder at, even love, the Barry style... Read more... |
Agrippina, Royal Opera review - carry on up the CampidoglioTuesday, 24 September 2019![]() It was said of the Venetian audiences randy for the satirical antique of Handel's first great operatic cornucopia in 1709 that "a stranger who should have seen the manner in which they were affected, would have imagined they were all distracted".... Read more... |
Werther, Royal Opera review - shadows and sunsets from an unreconstructed romanticWednesday, 18 September 2019![]() Goethe’s Die Leiden des junges Werthers (The Sorrows of Young Werther) was a vital spark in the ignition of the German romantic movement. The story of a young man driven to kill himself for love of a woman, Charlotte, who loves him but marries... Read more... |
Don Giovanni, Royal Opera review - laid-back LotharioTuesday, 17 September 2019![]() Kasper Holten left a mixed bag of productions behind at Royal Opera when he left in 2017, but the best of them - though not all my colleagues on The Arts Desk have agreed - is this Don Giovanni, now back for its latest revival.Visually, the... Read more... |
La Fille du Régiment, Royal Opera review - enjoyable but questionable revivalTuesday, 09 July 2019![]() On paper, this might seem like a revival too far, a production clearly intended as a vehicle for world-class singers being tacked on the end of the Covent Garden season, and without any big names in sight. But it turns out that Laurent Pelly’s... Read more... |
Boris Godunov, Royal Opera review - cool and surgical, with periodic chillsThursday, 20 June 2019![]() Suppose you're seeing Musorgsky's selective historical opera for the first time in Richard Jones's production, without any prior knowledge of the action. That child's spinning-top on the dropcloth: why? Then the curtain rises and we see Bryn Terfel'... Read more... |
The Diary of One who Disappeared, ROH review – song cycle-as-opera is a mish-mashFriday, 07 June 2019![]() Singer Ian Bostridge once described The Diary of One who Disappeared as “a song cycle gone wrong”. But this reimagining of it as an opera, by the Belgian director Ivo van Hove at the Royal Opera’s Linbury Theatre, also goes wrong, throwing in... Read more... |
Phaedra, Linbury Theatre review - from confusing passion to blazing afterlifeFriday, 17 May 2019![]() Leaving a revival performance of Harrison Birtwistle's The Minotaur, a friend asked Hans Werner Henze, also in the audience, that dreaded question: "what did you think?" "Very competent and extremely well performed," came the answer. What snap... Read more... |
Billy Budd, Royal Opera review - Britten's drama of good and evil too much at seaWednesday, 24 April 2019![]() On one level, it's about Biblically informed good and evil at sea, in both the literal and the metaphorical sense. On another, the love that dared not speak its name when Britten and E M Forster adapted Hermann Melville's novella is either repressed... Read more... |
