The Mail on Sunday

DAVID MELLOR

-

Orfeo Garsington Festival Opera Until July 3

Monteverdi’s Orfeo (1607) is perhaps the first-ever opera. It has a lot to answer for, hasn’t it? Certainly it’s the earliest opera to be regularly performed. But in 400 years it can have received few more beguiling performanc­es than this one, where the human and the natural world combined to often magical effect.

Garsington’s award-winning, chalet-style opera house has rarely been better used than director John Caird and his team manage here, working it wonderfull­y well into the performanc­e.

The early summer sunshine provided a glorious backdrop to an opera that takes us from heaven to hell.

And even hell got a look-in outside, as the ravages of ash dieback become increasing­ly obvious on the beautiful woodlands that partially surround the late Sir Paul

Getty’s delightful cricket ground.

Robert Jones’s designs allow all the action, and the music, to take place around an enchanted lake that could easily be real.

The musicians, actors, singers and dancers are beautifull­y integrated in Arielle Smith’s sophistica­ted choreograp­hy, while Paul Pyant’s lighting allows the journey to hell to be accomplish­ed without spoiling the bucolic magic of the overall scene.

Laurence Cummings and his English Concert provide an authentic background to some fine singing by a strong, almost entirely British cast, led by Ed Lyon’s tirelessly athletic Orfeo.

I’d love to mention all the singers, but space doesn’t allow. Suffice it, then, to commend Zoe Drummond’s lovely Euridice, compelling character singing from Ossian Huskinson as

Pluto, and Frazer Scott as Charon.

A special word of praise for the veteran Diana Montague’s Messenger, who movingly conveys the news of Euridice’s demise. Cheerfully she proclaims she can only do ‘old bag’ roles these days. Well, if only all old bags put on as winning a turn as she did.

At the end, as the cast took their bows to thunderous applause, hush was called for, and one of Monteverdi’s most beautiful madrigals was performed. An entirely unexpected bit of sheer class to end a very special evening indeed.

DELIGHTFUL: Lauren Joyanne Morris as Proserpina and Ossian Huskinson as Pluto

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom