The Scotsman

Lacking fire and passion but may yet burst into flame

Scottish Opera: Katyá Kabanová Theatre Royal, Glasgow

- KEN WALTON

THERE’S a chilling paradox expressed in Stephen Lawless’s new production of Janacek’s Katyá Kabanová which informs both its strengths and its weaknesses: it’s the sense that this is a tale that changes everything, yet changes nothing.

As the action gets going, the grey inhabitant­s of an isolated Soviet town (the original Russian setting is advanced to the 1970s) scuttle soullessly across an enormous steel bridge, like figures in a Lowry painting. Underneath, amid the reeds and mudflats of the River Volga, the human tragedy of the Katyá (Laura Wilde) unfolds. Then, at the climax of the piece, a link is inferred as Katyá hurls herself from the bridge’s rusting girders and into the waters beneath, an act of resigned escape from a suffocatin­g community. The curtain descends; the soulless resume their disinteres­ted existences. Life goes on.

The sense of isolation is visibly and effectivel­y maintained in Leslie Travers’ split-screen set, the rising and tilting of the bridge allowing the emphases to wax and wane. And by and large, the storytelli­ng is clear and consistent.

Wilde’s Katyá commands affection and sympathy at the hands of the mercilessl­y matriarcha­l Kabanicha, but she is almost too nice, too accepting. There was one moment in the final act of this opening performanc­e when she opened up vocally, evoking real heartache, but too late for her ensuing death to invoke little more than a dismissive “who cares?”

Patricia Bardon is steely and thoroughly unlikeable as the icy Kabanicha, but overdoes things to the point of caricature. Pity her son Tikhon, portrayed with loathsome obei-

sance by Samuel Sakker. Paul Whelan’s medal-flaunting Dikoy is styled with idiot pomposity, while the love interest, Boris, offers little in the way of seduction.

All in all, the passion is strangely underplaye­d, except for Vanya and Varvara, whose ripe performanc­es by Trystan Llŷr Griffiths and Hanna Hipp inject a juiciness and lust.

If the motorised energy of Janacek’s music was intended to breathe fire into this production, the performanc­e by Scottish Opera Orchestra simply wasn’t tight and electrifyi­ng enough under Stuart Stratford’s direction, more reactive than proactive in recognisin­g the score’s elemental bite and visceral modality as a driver of the opera.

It was the weakest element in a production that has much going for it, and which may pick up as the run matures. If that happens, then we might see a Katyá Kabanová that really sings.

 ??  ?? We don’t care enough about Laura Wilde’s Katyá, who is almost too nice, making us less sympatheti­c than we should be
We don’t care enough about Laura Wilde’s Katyá, who is almost too nice, making us less sympatheti­c than we should be

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