Birmingham Post

DON GIOVANNI

WELSH NATIONAL OPERA AT WALES MILLENNIUM CENTRE, CARDIFF

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Welsh National Opera’s current revival of its original 2011 production is quite simply the best Don Giovanni of the many I have seen in nearly 60 years. John Caird’s direction unfolds the drama of this comeuppanc­e parable with clarity and originalit­y, whilst at the same time preserving precious values of not interferin­g with the composer’s and librettist’s intentions, and staff director Caroline Chaney has brought everything up shiny and new. Except all is not sparkling, with not much cliched Spanish sunshine. Lighting and set design are heavy and dark, with a nocturnal skyscape looking down on everything. This is a wonderful team performanc­e from the WNO squad, lighting designer David Hersey complement­ing the original designs, both costume and set, of John Napier.

The set is simply stunning, a huge sombre marmoreal wall which will divide into multifario­us sections creating doorways, alleyways, balconies, and so much else, above all the terrifying gates of hell, surrounded by hooded, sinister monks. No spoilers here, but Don Giovanni’s dragging into the inferno is brilliantl­y achieved.

As for Mozart’s music, the WNO Orchestra plays beyond the top of its impressive form under Tobias Ringborg, supporting a cast which is continuous­ly engaging and involving.

Duncan Rock was a swaggering but initially likeable Don, and Joshua Bloom sympatheti­c as his grumbling manservant Leporello. They even looked alike, making the scene where the Don makes Leporello make up to Donna Elvira while he himself gets off with a servantgir­l elsewhere all the more realistic.

Meeta Raval brought an extra psychologi­cal dimension to the seduced and now delusional Donna Elvira. Her “Mi Tradi” was spectacula­rly delivered. The self-pitying outbursts of Donna Anna, yet another seduce, were powerfully voiced, with Kenneth Tarver giving stoic support as her fiancée, Don Ottavio.

The country bumpkins

Zerlina (Harriet Eyley) and Masetto (James Atkinson, who made more of this usually onedimensi­onal role than anyone I have previously experience­d) made an engaging contrast to all this heavy drama.

At Birmingham Hippodrome on April 21 and 22.

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