BBC Music Magazine

A powerful and princely production worth the wait

Though filmed a decade ago, this Paris staging of Lully’s Atys looks and sounds top notch,

- says Michael Church

Lully

Atys (DVD)

Emmanuelle de Negri, Bernard Richter, Stéphanie d’oustrac, Nicolas Rivenq; Les Arts Florissant­s/ William Christie; dir. Jean-marie Villégier (Paris, 2011) Naxos DVD: 2.110694-95; Blu-ray: NBD 0132 V 196 mins Known as ‘the King’s opera’ because Louis XIV not only chose its subject but also sang whole passages of it, Lully’s tragédie en musique, Atys, which premiered in 1676, ran on and off for a century before sinking into oblivion until the Baroque revival two centuries later. That we now have this superbly filmed account is thanks to a meeting between the period-performanc­e theatre director Jean-marie Villégier and William Christie (with his Les Arts Florissant­s company), plus added expertise contribute­d by the dance historian Francine Lancelot. Toured internatio­nally in the ’80s, this definitive production by the Opéra Comique was filmed ten years ago, but the DVD has been worth the wait.

The story from Ovid concerns prince Attis, whose punishment­s for having resisted the goddess Cybele’s love begin with being induced to murder his lover

Sangaride, and end with him being turned into a pine tree. Bernard Richter’s subtly characteri­sed Atys starts out as a fop, complacent­ly pleased with himself for having hidden his secret passion; Emmanuelle de Negri’s pulsating Sangaride is bursting with frustratio­n at having to keep their affair clandestin­e. Stéphanie d’oustrac’s magnificen­tly imperious Cybèle triggers the action in which a sedate world turns into a cauldron of rage, pain and violence. Under Villégier’s elegantly restrained direction, these excellent singer-actors tread a fine line between sincerity and send-up; the extended dances – delicately pointed toes, battements and little jumps – are like engravings come to life; the close-up camera work is powerfully expressive and Les Arts Florissant­s excel themselves. The sumptuous realm of le roi soleil is here brilliantl­y evoked. PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★ PICTURE & SOUND ★★★★★

These excellent singer-actors tread a fine line between sincerity and send-up

 ?? ?? A colourful cast: Elodie Fonnard as Flore with Bernard Deletré as Le Temps
A colourful cast: Elodie Fonnard as Flore with Bernard Deletré as Le Temps
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom