Los Angeles Times

The power of ‘Tosca’ rings out with spirit

Strong singing and conducting elevates the Los Angeles Opera production.

- By Richard S. Ginell calendar@latimes.com

There are many, many interestin­g anecdotes circulatin­g about Puccini’s “Tosca” — which figures since “Tosca” is among the most performed operas in the business. James Conlon told a few of them Saturday night in his pre-performanc­e talk before Los Angeles Opera revived its 2013 production, and he had some of his listeners rolling in the aisles.

Here are a couple more: Miles Davis once told me that he yearned to record an interpreta­tion of “Tosca” with the great arranger Gil Evans. Wouldn’t that have been something to hear? Alas, the friends never got around to it. Also, a Warner Classics recording of “Tosca” from 1980 features the tiny part of the Jailer in Act 3 sung by, would you believe, Itzhak Perlman, making his debut as a basso profundo (and he’s pretty good).

There are no odd anecdotes from Saturday night’s performanc­e at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion — and that might be a good thing. It was mostly a night of powerhouse singing and strong conducting, and that will be enough for many.

Much of the hype preceding the performanc­e revolved around the Tosca du jour, the American Canadian soprano Sondra Radvanovsk­y, who reportedly wowed audiences here in 2013. She did it again Saturday, revealing the full spectrum of Tosca’s evershifti­ng mix of diva temperamen­t and devout religiosit­y. Her voice was huge and opulent, the timbre sometimes reminiscen­t of that of the supreme Tosca of the ages, Maria Callas, with a slight edge at top volume that is appropriat­e to the character. And when Radvanovsk­y ratcheted up the intensity in Act 2, crowned by an impassione­d “Vissi d’arte,” she brought down the house.

As Mario Cavaradoss­i, tenor Russell Thomas might have looked somewhat professori­al at first glance, but his rendition of “Recondita armonia” was suitably fervent and well projected; the further up he went on the three-level painter’s scaffold, the better he sounded in the big hall. The imposing baritone Ambrogio Maestri conveyed plenty of imperious power and the usual sadism but also the cunning geniality that can lift Scarpia a bit above the level of a cartoon bad-guy. Nicholas Brownlee displayed a tremulous bassbarito­ne as Angelotti and bass-baritone Philip Cokorinos sounded sturdy as the Sacristan.

Conlon said he has conducted “Tosca” more often than any other opera — this was his 69th performanc­e by his count — yet this was his first “Tosca” in Los Angeles in his 11 seasons as music director. He brought a sweeping symphonic richness to a score that is so often tossed off casually in live performanc­es, and many passages were given unusual care, like the caressing cellos near the start of Act 3. The Act 1 Te Deum — for me, the best part of the score by far — moved along but not without touches of grace and revealing dissonance­s.

John Caird returned to direct his 2013 production, with scenery designer Bunny Christie’s dark, intimidati­ng, sometimes ramshackle sets whisking the setting well into the war-torn 20th century. Act 2’s clutter of various looted sacred and profane sculptures piled on stacks of packing crates illustrate­d Caird’s notion that Scarpia is a collector in every sense of the word, kind of like Bartók’s Bluebeard.

Later on in the run, baritone Greer Grimsley assumes the role of Scarpia on Tuesday, May 5 and 7. On the last night of the run, May 13, Melody Moore is scheduled to assume the role of Tosca, Kihun Yoon will step in as Scarpia, and Grant Gershon will take over for Conlon in the pit.

 ?? Ken Howard ?? SOPRANO Sondra Radvanovsk­y ratchets up the intensity as Tosca in the L.A. Opera production.
Ken Howard SOPRANO Sondra Radvanovsk­y ratchets up the intensity as Tosca in the L.A. Opera production.

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