Niva Eshed Frenkel (Courtesy Jerusalem Opera) |
Gabriele Ribis (Courtesy Jerusalem Opera) |
A wheelbarrow of flowering plants, a
sun umbrella, two chairs and a table - a serene, springtime rural setting.
"La Contadina" opens with the somewhat effete Lucindo proposing to
Scintilla. Niva Eshed Frenkel wastes no time in portraying the wily, crafty
ways of the coquettish country girl, Eshed's sparkly, fresh, creamy vocal timbre
and fine vocal technique serving her easeful stage manner as she shows how Scintilla wraps all and
sundry around her little finger. Enter Don Tabarano (Ribis) with his servant
Corbo (Rotondo). Ribis, his fluent, luxuriant voice and stage presence familiar
to Israeli audiences, gives a droll portrayal of the dim but wealthy farmer who
is madly in love with Scintilla, as the silent Corbo (also enamoured by her)
tries to deter him through a gamut of muscular, theatrical gestures. Meanwhile,
Scintilla flatters the Don to pressure him into
furnishing her with gifts to enable her to elope with Lucindo.
The second act (or intermezzo)
incorporates some comical disguise, a characteristic of the intermezzo
genre, as the Don and Corbo appear as Turks (the musicians too, who
throw in a phrase of Mozart's Rondo Alla Turca!) to stop the young lovers
making off to elope. However, instead of the tumultuous meeting taking place at
the quay, as in the original storyline, the location here is a bus stop of the Israeli Egged bus company! The
storyline ends with a bizarre twist: Scintilla admits to never having really loved
Lucindo: she and her sugar daddy Don Tabarano now become the evening's latest
"item", as Rotondo finally breaks his silence to sing the opening of
"O Sole Mio" in fine bass voice.
A lightweight,
farcical scenario? Indeed! But Hasse matches the libretto's spirited wit
and earthy high jinks with an outstanding score of brisk, bubbly tableaux,
offering both challenging and memorable arias and delectable instrumental
music. Karshon's direction resulted in a precise, clean and vibrant performance
of the instrumental score, (adding some attractive keyboard gestures to the
action-packed recitatives) bringing singers, actors and instrumentalists
together in a mirthful and invigorating evening's music and entertainment.
Kudos to Carmel Quartet players Rachel Ringelstein, Tali Goldberg, Yael Patish
and Tami Waterman, who meet every new challenge with ardour and excellence.
Yizhar Karshon (Yoel Levy) |
Cast and musicians (Yoel Levy) |
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